Mohammed VI Tower
The Mohammed VI Tower (Arabic: برج محمد السادس) is a 55-storey, 250-metre (820 ft) skyscraper in the city of Salé, bordering Rabat, the capital of Morocco. It is the tallest building in Morocco and the third tallest in Africa. It is a project by the Moroccan businessman Othman Benjelloun and led by the company O'Tower.[1] HistoryIt is a project launched by billionaire Othman Benjelloun, chief executive officer of Bank of Africa. In 2013, the Bank of Africa group (formerly BMCE group) signed an agreement with the Anfa urbanization and development agency (AUDA) to construct the tower in the new Anfa business district. In 2014, Benjelloun presented the model of the BMCE tower:
Its objective was to build a rocket-shaped tower in Casablanca that will house the new headquarters of the banking group.[3] Benjelloun claims that the rocket shape would be inspired from his experience in the United States:
Originally planned for Casablanca Finance City, the initial plan for the bank's headquarters was slated to be 135 metres (443 ft) high and completed in 2016. Benjelloun then decided to raise the projects height to 190 metres (623 ft).[citation needed] In March 2016, 10 additional floors were added to the plan and it was announced that the tower would instead be built in the city of Salé. The building, now renamed the Mohammed VI Tower, would house a mix of components for hotel use, offices, residential and retail. The project began on 9 March 2016, when King Mohammed VI laid the first stone of the new skyscraper, at a cost of 357 million euros (or US$422 million.)[5] Construction was carried out by the Moroccan company TGCC,[6] the China Railway Construction Corporation (CRCCI) and Belgian group BESIX, which built the Burj Khalifa in Dubai. The architects of the tower are Spanish architect Rafael de la Hoz and Moroccan architect Hakim Benjelloun. Construction started in July 2017. The tower is designed to be visible from a distance of 50 kilometres (31 mi) all around.[7] Its budget is 3.5 billion MAD.[8] With 55 floors, it will include a luxury hotel, offices, high-end apartments and an observatory located at the top of the tower. The south facade of the tower houses photovoltaic panels.[9] See also
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