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Ryugyong Hotel
North Korea's massive "hotel of doom"
Category Outsider Architecture
This 300-meter-high skyscraper would be an imposing presence in any city's skyline. In Pyongyang, North Korea it dwarfs every other structure in sight, dominating not only the skyline but the city itself. It is North Korea's largest building, and yet it remains for the moment, unfinished.
In 1986, a South Korean Group completed the construction of the 226-meter-tall Westin Stamford Hotel in Singapore, at thee time the most ambitious construction project ever undertaken by a Korean company. The communist leadership of the North wanted to prove that its own engineers were capable of constructing a building on an even more grandiose scale. Baekdu Mountain Architects & Engineers started construction in 1987.
The building consists of three triangular sections, each 100 meters long. The sections converge at the summit, giving an overall pyramidal outline to the structure. It is a gigantic building containing roughly 360,000 square meters--roughly 67 football fields--of floor space. At the very summit of the hotel is a 40-meter-tall, eight-floor conical structure, which was supposed to house seven revolving restaurants. The hotel's original plans called for 3,000 rooms, as well as plenty of space for additional commercial venues.
According to the original plan, the hotel was supposed to open in 1989, however construction problems forced the government to postpone its opening several times. In the early 1990s multiple problems hit the project. Poor quality materials, electricity shortages, and a widespread famine in the country all became serious obstacles to the completion of the building. Expected foreign investments never materialized. Finally, in 1992, construction was halted. Japanese sources estimate that over the course of its construction, the project swallowed over two percent of North Korea's GDP, or roughly 750 million US dollars.
The hotel's empty shell was left standing empty for 16 years. Due to the financial burden the project placed on the already starving nation, and the drab and menacing look of the naked concrete structure, foreign media dubbed the hotel the "World's Worst Building" and the "Hotel of Doom." Nevertheless, work resumed in 2008, and a slick glass facade is currently being installed. The new official date for the opening of the Hotel has been set for 2012, on the 100th anniversary of the birth of the Great Leader Kim Il Sung.
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- Hours Construction in progess, not open for visitors. Can be observed from a far.
- Address Pyongyang, North Korea
Comments
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Anonymous
February 21, 2012
Interesting and nice information you have... -
It's a very sad visual reminder to the people of North Korea who literally starved whilst their government was building this wretched monolith. What I don't understand is this - who did they think was going to come and stay in a 3,000 room hotel in Pyongyang? Baffling.
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Anonymous
December 14, 2009
Socialism failure? I wont say it is the perfect system but remember the end of last year in capitalism? Not its greatest hour I might say. However it was socialism that bailed it out. That whole 700 billion thing that we will be repaying for the next few generations. -
Anonymous
December 13, 2009
3 million or so citizens starved to death so North Korea could have this while their leaders lived in luxury? And Kim Jung Obama has a similar ideaology - people should work for the betterment of the state while the government takes care of all their needs. Socialism = failure. -
Anonymous
September 21, 2009
That has to be one of the biggest follies in the world, on a par with Ceausescu's Palace in Bucharest, Romania. -
Anonymous
August 11, 2009
Is it hiding a massive nuke! -
Tyrell Corporation HQ
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The true headquarters of Dr. Evil.


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