Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
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.
World Trade Center Mumbai: 156 metres (512 ft) 35 1970–2009 Planet Godrej: 181 metres (594 ft) 51 2009–2010 Lodha Bellissimo: 222 metres (728 ft) 53 2010–2010 Imperial Towers: 256 metres (840 ft) 60 2010–2020 World One: 280.2 metres (919 ft) 76 2020–2022 Palais Royale: 320 metres (1,050 ft) 88 2022–present
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]
On 20 March 2014, a Mumbai sessions court convicted all five adult accused in both cases on 13 counts. On 4 April 2014, the court awarded the death penalty to the three repeat offenders in the photojournalist rape case. For the other two accused, one was awarded life imprisonment while the other accused turned approver in the case.
Palais Royale in Mumbai had structurally topped out in 2018 as the tallest building in the country with a height of 320 meters, but the building is still under construction. Lokhandwala Minerva , also in Mumbai, with a height of 301 metres (988 feet) and 78 floors, [ 3 ] [ 4 ] is the tallest completed building in the country. [ 5 ]
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.
Gupta, Kapil, "Urban flood resilience planning and management and lessons for the future: a case study of Mumbai, India", Urban Water Journal, Volume 4, Issue 3, 2007 Parthasarathy, D, "Social and environmental insecurities in Mumbai: towards a sociological perspective on vulnerability", South African Review of Sociology, Volume 40, Issue 1, 2009
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]