The Petronas Twin Towers (GPS: 3.15806, 101.71161) are the tallest pair of buildings in the world from 1994 until 2003. They are also the tallest buildings by the end of the 20th century, each standing at 451.9 meters tall. However, since then, it is now the third tallest skyscrapers behind Burj Khalifa and Taipei 101. It was surpassed by Taipei 101 on 17 October, 2003.
The Petronas Twin Towers were designed by Argentine architect César Pelli, who also designed New York'sWorld Financial Center and London'sCanary Wharf. The towers are 88 storeys high, and constructed of reinforced concrete holding a steel and glass façade with motifs derived from Islamic art. The land on which they stand was the former Selangor Turf Club. Due to the depth of the bedrock where the buildings were located, the Twin Towers were built on the world's deepest foundation going down 120 meters.
Petronas Twin Towers, as seen from Jalan P. Ramlee. (12 August 2019)
Petronas Twin Towers from Jalan Ampang, at the intersection with Jalan P. Ramlee and Jalan Yap Kwan Seng. (14 June, 2017)
Petronas Twin Towers from Jalan Ampang (14 June, 2017)
One of the Petronas Twin Towers as seen from Jalan P. Ramlee. (14 June, 2017)
Petronas Twin Towers at sunset (11 July, 2016)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Ceiling decoration at Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Two different construction companies were hired to build each tower, and they competed to complete the towers. Eventually the builders of Tower 2, Samsung Constructions, won the race, although they started construction a month behind Tower 1, built by Hazama Corporation, and even though Tower 2 ran into problems when the structure was found to be 25 millimeters off from vertical.
I photographed the Twin Towers after nightfall, when the lights of the city lit up the low-hanging clouds. I used a long shutter speed of several seconds to get this bright lighting.
Due to a lack of steel and the huge cost of importing steel to Malaysia, the Petronas Twin Towers were constructed using the cheaper super high strength reinforced concrete. The result of using high-strength concrete is that the tower were better able to withstand sway. The concrete cores were 23 meters by 23 meters. The support provided by the core and the outer super columns allows the tower to stand tall and yet provide 1300 to 2000 sq meters of column-free space on each floor.
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
When completed in 1998, the Petronas Twin Towers were the tallest buildings in the world. The exterior is clad with 33,000 piece of stainless steel and 55,000 laminated glass panels. Each tower is served by 29 double decker high speed lifts, 6 heavy duty service lifts and 4 executive lifts.
A double-decked skybridge links the two towers on the 41st and 42nd levels, 170 metres above street level. Spanning 58.4 metres, the bridge weighs 750 tonnes and was fabricated in Korea by Samsung. 800 visitors are allowed to tour the skybridge every day, free of charge. Visitation tickets are given out on a first-come, first-served basis.
Below the twin towers is Suria KLCC, an upmarket shopping mall, and Dewan Filharmonik Petronas, the home of the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra.
Petronas Twin Towers (7 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (7 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (9 October, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers (6 June, 2004)
Petronas Twin Towers, flanked on the left by Petronas Tower 3 and on the right by Menara Maxis and Four Seasons Hotel (16 June, 2017)
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Dear visitor, thank you so much for reading this page. My name is Timothy Tye and my hobby is to find out about places, write about them and share the information with you on this website. I have been writing this site since 5 January 2003. Originally (from 2003 until 2009, the site was called AsiaExplorers. I changed the name to Penang Travel Tips in 2009, even though I describe more than just Penang but everywhere I go (I often need to tell people that "Penang Travel Tips" is not just information about Penang, but information written in Penang), especially places in Malaysia and Singapore, and in all the years since 2003, I have described over 20,000 places.
While I try my best to provide you information as accurate as I can get it to be, I do apologize for any errors and for outdated information which I am unaware. Nevertheless, I hope that what I have described here will be useful to you.