| TOWERBLOCK | Structure of flats many storeys high (5,5) |
| CONANDOYLE | Writing as a doctor, he offered report of homes with many storeys |
| HIGHRISE | (Of a building) having many storeys |
| STAIRCASES | Structures enclosing flights of treads and risers between floors or storeys; or, chains of locks on canals or rivers, appearing as if in steps (10) |
| SEANLOCK | Stand-up comedian; co-writer and star of BBC TV series 15 Storeys High (4,4) |
| TWOTIER | Tower, it could be only a couple of storeys high! (3,4) |
| PENTHOUSES | Flats or maisonettes built on to the top floor or roof of a block of flats (10) |
| GRASSCOURT | Fog, perhaps, over block of flats, a feature of Wimbledon? |
| WONDERLAND | Aussie saga about the residents of a block of flats |
| CONCIERGES | Caretakers of blocks of flats, hotels, etc (10) |
| IMON | "All at once am I several storeys high; Knowing ... the street where you live," sang Andy Williams i |
| STEREOTYPE | No right cultivating Peter Storey's image (10) |
| APARTMENTS | Had a role for players, at times, in blocks of flats (10) |
| PAGODA | Hindu or Buddhist sacred building, usually a many-tiered tower with storeys of diminishing size (6) |
| FANLIGHT | What goes between storeys, including a new kind of window (8) |
| ATTICS | Highest storeys of a house |
| TALL | With a number of storeys as stories can be (4) |
| ENTRESOL | Floor between the two main storeys of a building (8) |
| MAISONETTES | Dwellings that are on two storeys of a larger building (11) |
| BRAVENEWWORLD | Novel which opens with "A squat grey building of only thirty-four storeys" |