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How Jayesh Saini and a Dubai firm Abcon would have put Nairobi on top of Africa

In a project that has now been put on hold, a Dubai real estate developer had planned to build Africa’s largest and tallest skyscraper in Nairobi.

Jayesh owns DINLAS Pharma EPZ Limited, a 30-million dollar pharmaceutical firm focusing mainly on the Africa market for drug supply.

According to sources close to the Dubai developer, the project was to cost more than  Ksh5.5 billion.

Most of the tallest buildings in Kenya are found in Nairobi, the capital and largest city in the country. In Nairobi, there are 18 buildings that stand taller than 80 metres (260 ft) and several under construction.

How Jayesh Saini and a Dubai firm Abcon would have put Nairobi on top of Africa

The tallest building in the city is the new 32-storey, 200 meters (660 ft) Britam Towers. The second-tallest building in the city is the 43-storey, 184 metres (604 ft) GTC Office Tower. The most recent skyscrapers to be constructed are Prism Tower, Le’Mac and FCB Mirhab Tower.

Nairobi’s history of towers began with the IPS Building (1967), the Hilton Nairobi (1969), the NSSF Building (1973), and the Kenyatta International Conference Centre in 1974.

Buildings in the city remained relatively short until the late 1960s when the city experienced its first skyscraper boom. From 1960 to 1980, Nairobi witnessed a major expansion of skyscraper and high-rise construction.

Many of the city’s office towers were completed during this period, such as the New Central Bank Tower. A near twenty-year lull in building construction came after this expansion, though Nairobi has experienced a smaller second building expansion beginning in the late 1990s and continuing into the present. As of 2015, Nairobi had 50 completed high-rise buildings, with 6 more under construction, and another 6 proposed.

Abcon International LLC, a construction and drugs company, is seeking regulatory approval for the construction of the towering complex that comprises a shopping mall, office block, and a hotel modeled on Singapore’s Marina Bay Sands Hotel.

The stunning, yet-to-be-named skyscraper in Nairobi’s Upper Hill district will be a notch taller than the recently completed 163-meters-high UAP Tower, which is set for occupation from June.

Abcon has joined forces with six local investors – among them Hass Consult – to form a consortium known as Greenfield Developers Ltd., which will develop the property on a 3.6-acre piece of land that it acquired in 2012 at a price of Sh650 million.

The Dubai firm is the majority shareholder of the consortium with a stake of 62.6 percent followed by Signature Development Ltd (a Kenyan firm) at 18 percent, Hass Consult at 8.6 percent, with Elise Adan, the owner of Nairobi-based fashion company Tullia Ltd., holding a 2.6 percent stake.

Other shareholders include Jayesh Saini, the chairman of Clinix Healthcare – with a 0.66 percent stake, Ilmi Investments Ltd, and Bliss GVS Pharma Ltd.

Bliss Medical Centre is a leading integrated healthcare network in Kenya providing complete outpatient cover. It provides accessible, affordable, and quality healthcare. Started in 2012, with just a few clinics, it is now the largest and fastest-growing network of healthcare providers in Kenya.

“It is going to be a landmark piece of architecture, whose cost estimates could rise,” said Sakina Hassanali, head of research and marketing at Hass Consult.

The 35-storey tower will also feature luxury apartments that will occupy 17 floors – with office spaces occupying 22 floors and 1,320 parking spaces sitting on six basements and ground floors.

Africa's tallest building - Issuu

Between 1973 and 2019 the tallest skyscraper in Africa was Johannesburg’s Carlton Centre, which stands 223 metres (732 ft) tall. Since 2019 the tallest skyscraper is The Leonardo, also in Johannesburg, which is 234 metres (768 ft) tall.

Top 5 tallest skyscraper in Africa

The Leonardo 234 m (768 ft) 55 2019  South Africa Johannesburg
Carlton Centre 223 m (732 ft) 50 1973  South Africa Johannesburg
Britam Tower[1][2] 200.1 m (656 ft) 31 2017  Kenya Nairobi
Commercial Bank of Ethiopia Headquarters[3][4][5] 198 m (650 ft) 46 2021[6]  Ethiopia Addis Ababa
Cairo Tower 187 m (614 ft) 62 1961  Egypt Cairo

 

The National Environmental Authority (Nema) last week declared a 30-day period for the public to give their views on the proposed development.

Wealthy investors are increasingly building show-stopping skyscrapers in Nairobi despite widespread fears of a looming office-space glut in the Kenyan capital city.