Kirya Tower

Kirya Tower
(HaYovel Tower)
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The Kirya Tower
General information
Status Complete
Type Offices
Location Tel Aviv, Israel
Coordinates
Construction started 2001
Opening 2005
Cost $450 million
Height
Roof 158 m (518 ft)
Technical details
Floor count 42
Floor area 110,000 m2 (1,200,000 sq ft)
Design and construction
Architect Peleg Architects
Developer Africa-Israel,
Minrav

The Kirya Tower (also known as the HaYovel Tower) is a skyscraper in Tel Aviv, Israel. At 158 m (42 floors), it is the sixth tallest building in Israel. Construction was completed in 2005 on land previously belonging to the IDF HaKirya base. The tower is located opposite Tel Aviv's tallest buildings, the Azrieli Center complex, and is occupied largely by government offices. The consolidation of many of these offices in the tower, which were previously spread out all over the Tel Aviv district, allowed the release of a considerable amount of high-value government land to private development, as well as introducing efficiencies from housing many government functions under one roof. The tower has a helipad on its roof. It was originally planned to have 28 floors for government functions only, with the additional 14 floors being approved during construction. 13 of these top floors were approved for use by private sector offices, and the top 11 floors have floor-to ceiling windows. An external elevator serves the uppermost floors, and an underpass connects the building with the tower's underground parking. The tower was designed by Peleg Architects. The rent being paid by the government is for $16/sqm per month for the next 20 years.

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