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World One is a 280.2 m (919 ft), 76-floor skyscraper in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. [5] As of 2024, it is the second tallest completed building in India and the third tallest overall. [ 6 ] It is on the 7.1-hectare (17.5-acre) site of the defunct Shrinivas Mill.
After a billion-dollar pre-launch, Lodha Group launched the Lodha Park project in September and secured bookings worth ₹ 2,500 crores (₹ 25,000,000,000) on day one. [12] The launch was spread across Mumbai, Dubai, New Delhi, Kolkata, Pune, Ahmedabad and Surat. [13]
Mumbai's Lower Parel skyline The skyline of Worli and Dadar as viewed from Bandra Mumbai's skyline across Back Bay. Mumbai, the commercial and financial capital of India, has the highest number of skyscrapers and high-rise buildings in India. More than 200 skyscrapers and 4,000 [1] high-rise buildings have already been constructed in the city ...
Planet Godrej is a residential skyscraper located on a plot of 9-acre (3.6 ha) at Mahalaxmi, Mumbai, Maharastra, India. [7] [8] The tower stands 181 m (594 ft) tall and is 51 floors [4] high. It has about 300 residential apartments. Only 5% of the total land was used to build the skyscraper, resulting in extensive open space.
Three Sixty West is a skyscraper complex in Mumbai, Maharashtra, India. [9] It comprises two towers, joined at ground level by a podium. Tower B, the taller of the two, rises to 260 metres (853 ft) with 66 floors [10] and Tower A rises to 255.6 metres (839 ft) with 52 floors. [11]
Image of the compound from one of the buildings. Campa Cola Compound Case is based on the judicial process, and the controversy over the Campa Cola Compound, an apartment complex in the southern part of Worli in South Mumbai, India. [1] [2] [3] [4]
After competing his master's degree in 1953, Jones was awarded a Fulbright Scholarship to study architecture in Germany under Egon Eiermann. [4] While in Europe, he designed the modernistic headquarters building for Olivetti in Frankfurt, Germany. [1] In 1954, Jones returned to Oklahoma where he would complete many of his most notable works.
One of its standout features is the world’s tallest residential atrium, soaring to an incredible height of 212 meters (696 feet). Palais Royale is a pioneer in construction innovations. It is the first residential tower in India to use M80 grade concrete, which is typically used in nuclear power plants, ensuring unmatched strength and durability.