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Gran Torre Santiago vs. Tokyo Sky Tree - Comparison...
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Gran Torre Santiago


Height: 300m
Location: Santiago de Chile
Year: 2013
Gran Torre Santiago

Tokyo Sky Tree


Height: 634m
Location: Tokio
Year: 2012
Tokyo Sky Tree

Gran Torre Santiago vs Tokyo Sky Tree


Gran Torre Santiago
Tokyo Sky Tree
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Gran Torre Santiago

Gran Torre Santiago

Height

300m
Floors64
Year2013
CitySantiago de Chile

Informations

The Costanera Center Torre 2, better known as Gran Torre Santiago (Great Santiago Tower), and Formerly known as Torre Gran Costanera, is a 62-story tall skyscraper in Santiago, Chile, the second tallest in Latin America.

It is the fourth-tallest building in the Southern hemisphere by highest architectural feature (supporting New Zealand's Sky Tower, Australia's Q1 Tower and Australia 108) and third-tallest by highest occupied floor (after Australia's Australia 108 and Eureka Tower).



It was designed by Argentine architect César Pelli, Chilean architects Alemparte Barreda & Asociados, and from the Canadian firm Watt International.

Source: Wikipedia
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Tokyo Sky Tree

Tokyo Sky Tree

Height

634m
Floors32
Year2012
CityTokio

Informations

Tokyo Skytree (????????, T?ky? Sukaitsur?, stylized TOKYO SKYTREE) is a broadcasting and monitoring tower in Sumida, Tokyo. It became the tallest construction in Japan in 2010 and reached its full height of 634.0 meters (2,080 ft) in March 2011, making it the tallest tower in the world, displacing the Canton Tower, and the second tallest structure on earth following the Burj Khalifa (829.8 m/2,722 ft).The tower is your primary television and radio broadcast website for the Kant? region; the elderly Tokyo Tower no longer provides complete digital terrestrial television broadcasting protection because it is surrounded by high-rise buildings. Skytree was completed on Leap Day, 29 February 2012, with the tower opening to the public on 22 May 2012. The tower is the centrepiece of a large business development financed by Tobu Railway (which owns the complex) and a group of six terrestrial broadcasters led by NHK. Trains stop at the adjacent Tokyo Skytree Station and nearby Oshiage Station. The complex is 7 km (4.3 mi) north-east of Tokyo Station.

Source: Wikipedia

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