Le Parc Figueroa Alcorta complex | |
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Record height | |
Surpassed by | Torre Renoir II |
General information | |
Location | Buenos Aires, Argentina |
Coordinates | |
Construction started | 2006 |
Completed | 2009 |
Height | |
Roof | 172.8 and 120 m (567 and 390 ft)[1] |
Top floor | 172.8 and 120 m (567 and 390 ft) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 45 and 29[2] |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Estudio Aisenson |
References | |
[3] |
Le Parc Figueroa Alcorta is a residential complex comprised by the Alcorta and Cavia towers. The tallest one (Cavia) is 173m (567 ft) tall, and the Alcorta tower is 120m (394 ft) tall.
The towers were designed by the Lanuzzi studio and are under construction in the Palermo neighborhood of Buenos Aires, Argentina. The residential complex is the third of its type the Raghsa Group of Buenos Aires is developing in the city, after Le Parc Residential Tower (1995) and Le Parc Puerto Madero (2006). Raghsa has developed numerous commercial real estate projects in Buenos Aires, as well.
This complex is one in a series of such developments announced in major Argentine cities since the Argentine economy began to recover in 2003 from a serious financial crisis. Following their successful development of three residential towers in their Le Parc Puerto Madero project, Raghsa announced in 2006 the construction of two premier residential buildings on Buenos Aires' upscale Figueroa Alcorta Avenue.[4]
Façade and engineering was provided by Obras Metálicas S. A.
The tallest tower in the complex, Cavia, was originally planned to be the tallest building in Buenos Aires, surpassing the previous proposed record-holder: Renoir II in Puerto Madero, with 171m (561 ft). Following this announcement, however, DYPSA, the developers of the Renoir complex, decided to add one more level and extend Renoir II's height to 175m (574 ft). Should DYPSA complete Renoir II to these specifications, the Cavia Tower will be the tallest building in Buenos Aires for just one year. Le Parc Figueroa Alcorta broke ground on the intersection of the Figueroa Alcorta Ave. and Cavia St. in 2006, joining the development of numerous competing projects, many of them scheduled for completion on or before 2010, the year of the Argentine Bicentennial.
List of tallest buildings in Argentina | |||||
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Heights are to highest architectural element. |