| برجي الدار البيضاء Casablanca Twin Centre | |
| Information | |
|---|---|
| Location | Casablanca, Morocco |
| Status | Complete |
| Constructed | 1999 |
| Use | Office |
| Height | |
| Roof | 115 m |
| Technical details | |
| Floor area | 93. Casablanca (in Standard Arabic: الدار البيضاء ad-Dār al-Bayḍāʼ; Moroccan Arabic: dar beïda الدار البيضا Morocco (المغرب "al-Maghrib" officially the Kingdom of Morocco (المملكة المغربية is a country located in North Africa Year 1999 ( MCMXCIX) was a Common year starting on Friday (link will display full 1999 Gregorian calendar) 000 m²[1] |
| Elevator count | 28 |
| Companies | |
| Architect | Ricardo Bofill
|
The Casablanca Twin Centre (Arabic: برجي الدار البيضاء) (French: Tours Jumelles de Casablanca) is a complex of two skyscrapers located at Casablanca, Morocco. Arabic (ar الْعَرَبيّة (informally ar عَرَبيْ) in terms of the number of speakers is the largest living member of the Semitic language French ( français,) is a Romance language spoken around the world by 118 million people as a native language and by about 180 to 260 million people A skyscraper is a tall continuously habitable Building. There is no official definition or a precise cutoff height above which a building may clearly be classified as a skyscraper Casablanca (in Standard Arabic: الدار البيضاء ad-Dār al-Bayḍāʼ; Moroccan Arabic: dar beïda الدار البيضا Morocco (المغرب "al-Maghrib" officially the Kingdom of Morocco (المملكة المغربية is a country located in North Africa The two structures, the West Tower and the East Tower have 28 floors each. [2]
The architect was the Spanish Catalan Ricardo Bofill Levi. Catalonia (Cataluña Catalunya Aranese: Catalonha) is an Autonomous Community in the northeast part of Spain. Ricardo Bofill (born December 5, 1939) is a Spanish Architect born in Catalonia of Jewish descent