Ryugyong Hotel (incomplete) (Pyongyang)
Korea (North) /
Pyongyang /
Pyongyang
World
/ Korea (North)
/ Pyongyang
/ Pyongyang
World / North Korea / P'yŏngyang
hotel, skyscraper, interesting place, 2011_construction, unfinished / unbuilt
Construction began in 1987 and was halted in 1992. It resumed in March 2008, with was halted again in 2011, after the exterior had been completed.
The hotel juts over Pyongyang's skyline at 105 stories that measure some 330 m (1,080 feet) which make it a supertall skyscraper and one of the world's twenty tallest buildings. The project was developed in a joint venture between a DPRK SOE (Paektusan Architecture and Engineering) and a French engineering firm.
The original design envisioned a finished structure that would have become its own arrondisement with 3,000 odd hotel rooms, a hospital, a bowling alley and seven revolving restaurant/night club[s]. Final plans for the Ryugyong and its surrounding environs have not been disclosed, aside from the tower's use in a mobile telephone network named Koryolink. Koryolink is an expansion of the DPRK's budding cellular network. Currently, sanctioned mobile (cellular) telephone usage is restricted to executive DPRK government officials and UN program personnel, and reception is spotty.
In June 2008 it was reported in The Korea Times that the Egyptian telecommunications and construction company the Orascom Group would gradually invest the approximately $300 million (USD) necessary to complete the project. The Orascom Group also owns a 50% share in the DPRK SOE Sangwon Concrete Company, which supplied the original building materials for the Ryugyong. The DPRK will also supply Orascom's construction company with project labor for the company's projects in the Middle East. Orsucom Telecommunications has a contract to construct a 3GW mobile telephone network in the DPRK and it seems part of its infrastructure will be kept at the Ryugyong.
Also known as the "105 Hotel" or simply "The 105", the Ryugyong consists entirely of concrete formed and molded by hundreds of cement masons. The labor on this project were the elite of the North Korean building trades who had worked on other Pyongyang landmarks. Contrary to rumor, it has structural elevator shafts. The Ryugyong, or capital of willows, was intended to resemble a blossoming flower from above. From a street view, however, the Ryugyong is shaped like a mountain's peak and could refer to either of the pan-Korean sacred mountains, Kumgangsan or Paektusan.
For sixteen years, the Ryugyong stood as an uninhabited shell, with a crane on its top levels to present the appearance of ongoing construction. The ongoing construction story was also conveyed by tour guides as an official response to the queries of visitors. Eventually, tour guides demurred or ignored questions about the immense, vacant structure.
Construction resumed in Spring 2008. Laborers for the Orascom Group stabilized the perimeter, foundation and the main building (which had appeared to sway), added steel window frames and windows to the top six levels and wired those same levels with mobile telephone signal towers and cables. There is also a lot of safety equipment hanging from the bottom to the top of the building, including harnesses, ladders and safety nets.
In honor of World Workers' Day on 1 May, 2009, the Korean Workers' Party sponsored an extravagant fireworks display which was launched off the the side and base of the Ryugyong Hotel.
www.emporis.com/en/cd/cm/?id=101019
honourablerekhyet.wordpress.com/2008/06/29/ryugyong-is-...
SSC thread:
www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=769546
The hotel juts over Pyongyang's skyline at 105 stories that measure some 330 m (1,080 feet) which make it a supertall skyscraper and one of the world's twenty tallest buildings. The project was developed in a joint venture between a DPRK SOE (Paektusan Architecture and Engineering) and a French engineering firm.
The original design envisioned a finished structure that would have become its own arrondisement with 3,000 odd hotel rooms, a hospital, a bowling alley and seven revolving restaurant/night club[s]. Final plans for the Ryugyong and its surrounding environs have not been disclosed, aside from the tower's use in a mobile telephone network named Koryolink. Koryolink is an expansion of the DPRK's budding cellular network. Currently, sanctioned mobile (cellular) telephone usage is restricted to executive DPRK government officials and UN program personnel, and reception is spotty.
In June 2008 it was reported in The Korea Times that the Egyptian telecommunications and construction company the Orascom Group would gradually invest the approximately $300 million (USD) necessary to complete the project. The Orascom Group also owns a 50% share in the DPRK SOE Sangwon Concrete Company, which supplied the original building materials for the Ryugyong. The DPRK will also supply Orascom's construction company with project labor for the company's projects in the Middle East. Orsucom Telecommunications has a contract to construct a 3GW mobile telephone network in the DPRK and it seems part of its infrastructure will be kept at the Ryugyong.
Also known as the "105 Hotel" or simply "The 105", the Ryugyong consists entirely of concrete formed and molded by hundreds of cement masons. The labor on this project were the elite of the North Korean building trades who had worked on other Pyongyang landmarks. Contrary to rumor, it has structural elevator shafts. The Ryugyong, or capital of willows, was intended to resemble a blossoming flower from above. From a street view, however, the Ryugyong is shaped like a mountain's peak and could refer to either of the pan-Korean sacred mountains, Kumgangsan or Paektusan.
For sixteen years, the Ryugyong stood as an uninhabited shell, with a crane on its top levels to present the appearance of ongoing construction. The ongoing construction story was also conveyed by tour guides as an official response to the queries of visitors. Eventually, tour guides demurred or ignored questions about the immense, vacant structure.
Construction resumed in Spring 2008. Laborers for the Orascom Group stabilized the perimeter, foundation and the main building (which had appeared to sway), added steel window frames and windows to the top six levels and wired those same levels with mobile telephone signal towers and cables. There is also a lot of safety equipment hanging from the bottom to the top of the building, including harnesses, ladders and safety nets.
In honor of World Workers' Day on 1 May, 2009, the Korean Workers' Party sponsored an extravagant fireworks display which was launched off the the side and base of the Ryugyong Hotel.
www.emporis.com/en/cd/cm/?id=101019
honourablerekhyet.wordpress.com/2008/06/29/ryugyong-is-...
SSC thread:
www.skyscrapercity.com/showthread.php?t=769546
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ryugyong_Hotel
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 39°2'11"N 125°43'50"E
- Hungbu Guest House 2.6 km
- Yanggakdo International Hotel 4.4 km
- Ryanggang Hotel 4.8 km
- Paekhwawon Guest House 6.8 km
- April 25 Hotel 9 km
- Taedong Guesthouse 11 km
- Ryonggang Hot Springs Resort 48 km
- Wulongshan Service Area 183 km
- Fengcheng service area 210 km
- Tongyuanpu service area 252 km
- Kyonghung-dong 0.2 km
- Sojang-dong 0.4 km
- Potonggang-guyok 0.8 km
- Sochon-dong 1.2 km
- Potongmun-dong 1.5 km
- Mansu-dong 1.9 km
- West Pyongyang Railway Station 2.2 km
- Moranbong-guyok 2.4 km
- Chung-guyok 2.7 km
- Sosong-guyok 3.2 km
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