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หาเพิ่มเติมจาก http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Antilia_(building)
Antilia is a twenty-seven floor (560 ft or 173 m) building completed in Mumbai for Indian businessman Mukesh Ambani, Chairman of Reliance Industries. The family will occupy about 400,000 square feet, making it the largest home in the world.[7] There will be 600 full-time members staff to maintain the building.[8] Antilia is named after the mythical island in the Atlantic, Antillia.
It is designed by Chicago based architects, Perkins & Will. The Melbourne-based construction company Leighton Holdings began constructing it[9] but it has been finished by another company. The construction is inspired by the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.
The skyscraper will have 3 helipads including air traffic control area at top.[10] The building is equipped with amenities such as a health spa, and small theatre with a seating capacity for 50 on the eighth floor. [11] Other features include multiple swimming pools, three floors of hanging gardens, and a ballroom. Included in the tower are six floors of parking - the seventh floor is for in-house vehicle maintenance.[12] It has been reported in the media to have cost between US$1 billion[13] and $2 billion, making it the most expensive residential building in the world.[14][15][16] Reliance, however, said it cost U$50-70 million.[17]
Location
It is situated on a 4,532 square metres (48,780 sq ft) plot at Altamount Road on the famed Cumballa Hill South Mumbai, India, where land prices are upward of US$10,000 per square meter
Residents
Mukesh Ambani and his family are expected to move in to the residence in late October 2010
Specifications
parking space for 160 cars 9 elevators in the lobby designed to survive 8-richter scale earthquake
Cost and Valuation
It cost $77 million to build, but because of increases in property prices in Mumbai, the building is valued at $1 billion.
Controversies
In 2007 the Maharashtra government said the structure is illegal because the land's owner, the Waqf Board, had no right to sell it.[8] Mukesh then obtained a No Objection Certificate from the Waqf Board for Rs 16 lakh and began construction.[8]
The Indian Navy said it will not allow the construction of helipads on Mumbai buildings.[8]
The Environment Ministry said the helipads violate the noise laws.[8]
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cry_mandy
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17 ต.ค. 53 21:12:47
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