Two buildings of different height
or
Two buildings of different heights
Thanks for your help.
Answer
Both are fine, but they have slightly different connotations. This is due to different usages of the word height, and may not be central to your question.
In you second example, each building has its own height. Height is an attribute, and as such can be counted in the same manner as the attribute's owner.
In the first sentence, height is being used as a concept, not an attribute. The buildings are being compared on the basis of height.
There are a lot of sensible attributes than can also function as concepts. So you really have to decide how you want the reader to handle the idea.
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