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The skyscraper is located between 71–75 Yusuf Lule Road and 24–26 Clement Hill Road, on Nakasero Hill, in the Central Division of Kampala, Uganda's capital city. [1] The geographical coordinates of the Uganda Inspectorate of Government Towers are: 0°19'10.0"N, 32°35'26.0"E (Latitude:0.319444; Longitude:32.590556). [2]
Uganda joined the first two international space law treaties, ratifying the Partial Nuclear Test Ban Treaty on March 24, 1964, and acceding to the Outer Space Treaty on April 24, 1968. It was not, however, a party to the later Rescue Agreement of 1968, the Liability Convention of 1972, the Registration Convention of 1976 or the Moon Treaty of 1984.
The government partnered with OpecPrime Properties Uganda, to develop the sites into a modern satellite city, with first consideration given to sitting tenants. [9] After many delays, [10] including a lawsuit, [11] construction finally began in February 2015. [1] The project construction is planned to span ten years. [12]
Rank Name Image Height m/ft Floors Year Notes 1 Kampala Intercontinental Hotel — 34 TBD Also referred to as Kingdom Hotel Kampala, the development will include a 250-room, 34-story hotel tower, a conference center that can accommodate over 3,000 delegates, parking space for over 1,500 vehicles, and rentable retail and office space measuring in excess of 90,000 square metres (970,000 sq ft).
In addition, the building will provide upscale rentable office and retail space in this rapidly-expanding neighborhood of Uganda's capital city. When completed, in 2020 as expected, the 300 metres (980 ft) tower will become the tallest building on the African continent , surpassing the Carlton Centre in Johannesburg , South Africa , which, at ...
Pages in category "Government buildings in Uganda" The following 8 pages are in this category, out of 8 total. ... Mobile view ...
The JLOS House Project, is a three-component government office development project under construction in Uganda's capital city of Kampala.The buildings are intended to house the offices of the Justice, Law and Order Sector (JLOS).
The tarmac road, Walusimbi Lane, from Nakawa to the new building, has been completed at a cost of USh2.57 billion (approx. US$680,000), funded by the Ugandan government. [8] The URA House itself was budgeted at USh140 billion (approx. US$37 million), in construction costs.