The Pinnacle (Nairobi)

Skyscraper under construction in Nairobi From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Pinnacle, also Pinnacle Towers, is a building on hold in Nairobi, the capital and largest city of Kenya. When completed, the skyscraper is expected to become the second tallest building in Africa after Egypt's Iconic Tower, and the third tallest building in the Southern Hemisphere, at 70 stories and over 1,000 feet (300 m) in height.[1]

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The Pinnacle
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Alternative namesPinnacle Towers
Hotel chainHilton
General information
StatusUnder construction, which might be resumed in November 2025
TypeMixed Use Commercial
LocationUpper Hill
Town or cityNairobi
CountryKenya
Coordinates01°17′48″S 36°49′05″E
Groundbreaking23 May 2017
CostSh20 billion (Est)
Height
Architectural1,050 feet (320 m)
Top floor1,000 feet (300 m)
Observatory916 feet (279 m)
Technical details
Floor count70
Grounds2.5 acres (1.0 ha)
Design and construction
Architecture firmArchgroup Consultants
DeveloperWhite Lotus Group / Jabavu Village
EngineerMeinhardt
Quantity surveyorBECS Consultancy
Main contractorChina State Construction Engineering Corporation
Other information
Number of rooms257
Website
www.thepinnacleofafrica.com
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Location

The skyscraper is located in Upper Hill, on a 2.5 acres (10,000 m2) piece of property, approximately 4 kilometres (2 mi), south-west of the city centre of Nairobi, the capital city of Kenya.[2]

Overview

The development consists of two adjacent towers. The shorter tower, at 46 floors will house the 257-room, five-star Upper Hill Hilton Hotel, the third Hilton franchise in Nairobi and the 50th on the African continent.[3] The taller tower, with 70 floors, will feature eleven floors of commercial office space, nine floors of upscale rental retail space, and 46 floors with 210 upscale 1, 2 and 3-bedroom, serviced residential apartments. Other amenities include conference facilities, a gymnasium, luxury spa and an infinity pool. The taller tower will have a rooftop helipad, to allow chopper directly from/to Jomo Kenyatta International Airport, 16 kilometres (10 mi) away.[4]

Ownership

The development is a joint venture by Hass Petroleum an East African petroleum products distributor and the White Lotus Group, a Dubai-based investment firm.[5][6]

Construction and funding

The budgeted construction cost for the Pinnacle Towers is US$200 million. Of that, the developers contributed US$50 million and the balance was borrowed, from Afreximbank and some Kenyan banks.[7] The main contractor is China State Construction Engineering Corporation (CSCEC). Commissioning of the building is expected in 2020.[8]

Delays and land ownership dispute

A dispute has arisen over ownership of part of the land being used for construction.[9] The High Court has issued arrest warrants for the directors of White Lotus Projects, Poosapati Ramachandra Raju Sita and Mohamud Mahat Noor.[9] The dispute began when legal action was taken against Hass Petroleum by Ugandan tycoon James Mugoya and a trust formed by former United Arab Emirates leader Sheikh Zayed Bin Sultan Al Nahyan.[9]

See also

References

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