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The National Monument (Indonesian: Monumen Nasional, abbreviated Monas) is a 132 m (433 ft) obelisk in the centre of Merdeka Square, Central Jakarta. It is the national monument of the Republic of Indonesia , built to commemorate the struggle for Indonesian independence .
BUMN Tower Nusantara: 707 155 2040 Also known as Menara Kebanggaan Indonesia (Indonesian Pride Tower) Signature Tower: Jakarta: 638 114 2032 Proposed Pertamina Energy Tower: Jakarta: 523 99 2030 Proposed MC Tower Jakarta: 450 80 – Proposed EX Tower Jakarta: 441 98 2020 Never Built (The site was Occupied by Indonesia-1 Tower) Peruri 88 Jakarta ...
Today, the square is more popular with its nickname Lapangan Monas. [11] The Merdeka Square is crossed by four diagonal streets which form an "X" with the National Monument at its center. The street is called Jalan Silang Monas and separates the square into four parts: North, East, South, and West parks. Soon after construction works of the ...
Indosiar TV Tower: 395 metres (1,296 ft) 2006 Guyed mast: Jakarta: Autograph Tower: 382.9 metres (1,256 ft) 2022 Skyscraper: Jakarta Luminary Tower: 304 metres (997 ft) 2023 Skyscraper Jakarta Gama Tower: 288.6 metres (947 ft) 2016 Skyscraper Jakarta RCTI TV Tower 275 metres (902 ft) [1] N/A Guyed mast Jakarta TVRI Tower: 144 metres (472 ft) 1977
The second tower, named Luminary Tower, has 62 floors and is 304 meters tall. [ 12 ] [ 13 ] As with the Autograph Tower, the lower and middle floors are used for offices, while the upper floors are used for two hotels operated by Pan Pacific Hotels and Resorts , the 180-key Parkroyal Serviced Suites Jakarta and the 158-key Pan Pacific Jakarta.
The Monas incident was an incident in Merdeka Square in Jakarta in Indonesia on 1 June 2008. It occurred at the National Monument (Monas) in an attack against a public protest by the activist group National Alliance for the Freedom of Faith and Religion (AKKBB) that coincided with the anniversary of Pancasila .
The Tokyo Skytree in Tokyo, Japan has been the tallest tower since 2012.. This list includes extant structures that fulfill the engineering definition of a tower: "a tall human structure, always taller than it is wide, for public or regular operational access by humans, but not for living in or office work, and which is self-supporting or free-standing, meaning no guy-wires for support."
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