Petronas Towers by architect Cesar Pelli, Malaysia Kuala Lumpur. Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur Height of Petronas Towers in Malaysia

88-storey Petronas Towers(Petronas Twin Towers) were once the tallest twin towers in the world. This brilliant megastructure, rising 452 meters in height, held the proud title of the tallest building built by man until 2004, when the construction of the 101-story (508 meter) Taipei 101 was completed.

The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur became the tallest buildings in the world in 1998, surpassing the 442-meter Willis Tower in Chicago, USA.

These are incredible twins located in the capital of Malaysia, contain a complex of office space, conference rooms, a 50-acre park and a prestigious shopping complex. First of all, the building housed the headquarters of the Petronas company, connected by a two-story bridge ( Sky Bridge) on the 41st and 42nd floors.



Tower One(The first tower) is fully occupied by the Malaysian state oil company Petronas, its subsidiaries and partner companies. IN Tower Two(The second tower) mainly houses transnational organizations, which include: Al-Jazeera, Microsoft, IBM, Bloomberg, McKinsey & Co, Barclays Capital...

One of the most notable features of Petronas in Kuala Lumpur is concert hall Dewan Filharmonik PETRONAS, which occupies leading places in Southeast Asia in classical music concerts. It is located in two towers, the architectural design of which has received excellent reviews as one of the best concert halls in the world, based on the time-tested designs of 19th-century European concert halls. The hall has hosted many international music stars and is home to the Malaysian Philharmonic Orchestra.



Even more attractions of Kuala Lumpur are located under the towers - the Art Gallery, the aquarium.



The other main attraction of these twins in Kuala Lumpur is Petrosains Science Center. The gallery's display cases contain exhibits related to the oil industry, from the origins of petroleum in the age of dinosaurs to the latest advances in oil-based products.



Next to Petronas Towers is the spacious and beautifully landscaped KLCC Park, which includes jogging tracks, walking paths, a fountain and a children's pool.

In both engineering and design, Petronas Towers successfully showcase Malaysia's past and future, the country's legacy of modernization. This is a monument that is not actually a Malaysian creation, but will forever be identified with Kuala Lumpur.

The Petronas Twin Towers Kuala Lumpur, along with the Menara TV Tower, are a symbol not only of Kuala Lumpur, but of the whole of Malaysia. The article contains useful information for those who are planning to visit the Petronas Twin Towers and go up to the observation decks: where the towers are located, how to get there, where to buy tickets, cost, opening hours, view from the Petronas Tower. I warn you right away that all the photos were taken on a phone, so don’t expect super beautiful photos.

Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur

Petronas Towers Kuala Lumpur: description and general information

  • Where are the Petronas Towers? — In the center of Kaula Lumpur, Malaysia
  • The Petronas Twin Towers were built in 1998
  • Construction took 6 years
  • Most of the construction financing was provided by the oil company Petronas.
  • The height of the Petronas Towers is 452 m, 88 floors
  • The piles go 100 m into the ground
  • Total area – 395,000 sq. m
  • Only local Malaysian materials were used during construction
  • The towers are built in the Malaysian style in the shape of an eight-pointed star and resemble two ears of corn.
  • Two towers connected to each other sky bridge– Sky Bridge at an altitude of 170 m (by the way, the bridge was not built for beauty or to be used as an observation deck, but for fire safety)
  • In the twin towers two observation decks: one on the Skybridge at the level of 41-42 floors, and the second in one of the towers on the 86th floor
  • Inside the Petronas Towers there are offices, conference rooms, galleries, a science museum, and below is a huge shopping center Suria KLCC with shops, restaurants, coffee shops and a good inexpensive food court
  • Next to the Petronas Towers there is a large park with a lake and fountains, every evening there is a light and music show
  • Unlike, for example, in or in a hotel in Petronas Towers No! But you can stay in a hotel with a view of the towers :)
  • Official website of Petronas Towers: www.petronastwintowers.com.my

The towers are so huge that they fit into the frame only in parts :) Bottom part
Upper part and sky bridge And I'm in front of the Petronas Towers

Petronas Towers: tickets

How to climb the Petronas Towers? — It’s easy, you just need to buy tickets to visit the towers. Unlike many other observation decks in high-rise buildings, the Petronas Towers observation decks allow only as part of a group at the certain time. Number of tickets limited!

Tickets for the Twin Towers can be purchased at the box office on the ground floor of the building, but it may turn out that there are no tickets for the time you need. In front of the box office, the monitor displays the availability of tickets for a certain time. Of course, the most popular time to visit the observation deck is 18:00-19:00 before sunset, in order to get the opportunity to admire the city in daylight and in the evening illumination.

You can buy tickets to the Petronas Towers in advance on the official website by selecting the desired date and time, or on this website (the price includes transfer from the hotel).


A monitor that displays the time available for visiting and ticket offices

Working hours

The Petronas Tower observation deck is open from 9:00 to 21:00, the ticket office opens from 8:30. Day off Monday!

Price

  • 85 MYR for adults
  • 35 MYR for children from 3 to 12 years old
  • 45 MYR for adults over 61 years old

The cost of visiting includes:

  • Skybridge on the 42nd floor
  • Indoor observation deck and tower museum on the 86th floor
Opening hours and cost of visiting

Petronas Tower Observation Deck Kuala Lumpur: review

Despite the fact that we have been to Kuala Lumpur more than once and each time we went shopping at the Suria KLCC shopping center, it was only recently that we came to visit the observation deck of the Petronas Tower, when I went on a s. On our last visit, we climbed the mountain, so I compared the view from the Petronas Tower with the view from the Menara observation deck.

At first, I planned to buy tickets in advance on the website, but I didn’t know what time I would be free after submitting documents for a visa, and then I would also like to have breakfast and drink coffee :) So I decided to take a chance and buy tickets on the spot at the box office.

Approaching the ticket office on the monitor, I immediately saw that there were no tickets for the next hour, so I specifically took tickets two and a half hours later so that I could have time to drink coffee at Starbucks and run to the hotel to leave the documents that I took with me to the consulate just in case. . The line at the box office was short, you can pay for tickets by card.

You must approach the “checkpoint” for access to the observation decks 15 minutes before the time indicated on the ticket. There we were divided into groups, each given a badge of a certain color.

They let you in one by one through a frame, like at an airport, and check your bags very carefully. You cannot go up with large bags, backpacks, as well as a tripod and a selfie stick (!); all these things can be left right there in the storage room.


While we wait for our time, we take pictures with the model of the towers
15 minutes before the time indicated on the ticket, you must go to the check in counter
Ticket to the towers and information about what is not allowed on the observation decks

While we were waiting for everyone to gather, a short film about the construction of the towers was shown on the screen. Those who wish to take pictures are immediately photographed against a green background, and after visiting the observation deck you can buy a photo against the backdrop of Petronas Twin Towers :)

Then, centrally in groups, we load into the elevator and go to the 41st floor to the Sky Bridge. On the bridge you are given about fifteen minutes to walk around, look, and take photos. We were walking in the mountains in Malaysia, where it seemed that the bridge was floating over an abyss, and it was also swaying! Right here, on the Twin Towers Bridge, you don’t get that impression; walking along it isn’t scary at all :)


Sky Bridge or Sky Bridge at an altitude of 41 floors
One of the Petronas observation decks on the Skybridge
View of the city from the bridge
View of the city from the bridge
View of a park with a lake and fountains
Park and construction site nearby
Kuala Lumpur from the 41st floor
View in the other direction

After visiting the bridge with the whole crowd, we again load into the elevator and, with a transfer, go to the 86th floor to a closed observation deck, which is located in one of the towers. It offers views of the city, the neighboring tower and the Menara TV Tower. There is also a mini museum here that tells about the construction of Petronas. Just below is a souvenir shop where you can buy a magnet or other souvenirs with symbols, as well as send a postcard. I sent a postcard home to Kyiv - I don’t know whether it will arrive or not :)


On the 86th floor in one of the towers there is another closed observation deck
View of the neighboring tower
View of the neighboring tower and the city from the 86th floor
Petronas Tower and Menara Tower Kuala Lumpur

At this point, the excursion to the Petronas Tower ends and everyone is taken down in the elevator to the first floor. There is also a souvenir shop there, which you can visit without visiting the observation decks.


In the souvenir shop you can buy magnets, figurines, T-shirts, cups, postcards with the symbols of the towers, and they also sell souvenirs with orchids

The duration of the excursion is about an hour.

If we compare the observation tower of Petronas and the observation tower of Menara, then I liked the one at Menara much more, because...

  • The Menaret TV Tower has a closed and open observation room with a cube with a glass floor, a photo of which at an altitude of 276 m will tickle the nerves of those who, like me, are afraid of heights :), and in Petronas there is only an enclosed area
  • At Menard you go at your own pace, without a group.
  • Menara offers a beautiful view of the Petronas Towers

If you don't have much time in Kuala Lumpur or have a limited budget for visiting attractions and you choose whether to visit Petronas or Menara, I recommend choosing observation deck on the Menara tower, and just take a walk near the twin towers, go to the shopping center, have lunch at the food court, and in the evening watch the fountain show.

Close to Petronas Towers

On one side of the towers there is a park with an artificial lake; in the evening there is a beautiful show - light and music fountains. There are restaurants on the ground floor of the shopping center where you can have dinner or drink beer/coffee overlooking the fountains.


Park next to the towers, very few people during the day
Towards evening, tourists gather in the park near the lake
In the evening, light and sound fountain show

Fountain show near the towers: video

All tourists try to take photos with the towers on the opposite side in the square with small fountains. During the day, taking a photo is problematic - the sun hits directly into the lens, and in the evening there is simply a huge crowd of tourists there :) The towers are tall and refuse to fit into the frame :) I twirled the selfie stick for a long time and took a lot of shots to get a more or less normal photo :) Enterprising merchants offer buy a lens on your phone for $20 (you can negotiate it down to $5-7) and take a photo with the twin towers.


Near the entrances to the towers there is a small park with fountains, from where everyone tries to take photos of the Petronas Towers
In the evening I try to take a photo with the towers in the background



Other Kuala Lumpur hotels

If you suddenly need a hotel at Kuala Lumpur airport or nearby, then I wrote about them.

Petronas Towers: how to get there

You can get to the Petronas Towers at:

  • Metro to KLCC station
  • Taxi. In Kuala Lumpur, taxis are very cheap, especially if you order Grab, but you need the Internet for this (I didn’t have a Thai SIM card)
  • Bukit Nanas Monorail Station is nearby.

How to get from Kuala Lumpur airports to the city and back, read.

In the Suria KLCC shopping center there are signs everywhere for Petronas Twin Towers, then you need to take the escalator down to the minus first floor to the ticket office.


We go into the central entrance between the two towers
Go right or left, there will be turnstiles to enter the offices and escalators to the ground floor to the Petronas ticket office
  • DATE 1998
  • STYLE Postmodernism
  • MATERIALS Reinforced concrete and stainless steel cladding
  • ARCHITECT Cesar Pelli, Thornton-Tomasetti (engineers)
  • The world's tallest twin towers

The turn of the century and the turn of the millennium were marked in architecture by a new round of the high-altitude race. grew up in cities that had never even thought about building towers. The height parameters of buildings, which just yesterday seemed literally sky-high, quickly lost their aura of exclusivity, turning into the most ordinary technical characteristics. The list of the tallest buildings of our time was updated several times a year.

Against this background, a particularly notable achievement is the creation of skyscrapers, which not only at a certain time topped the world ranking of the tallest buildings, but were among the most popular and memorable structures of the entire decade. Any architect has the right to be proud of such a spectacular structure! Of course, we are talking about the famous Malaysian complex - the Petronas Towers.

Skyscrapers are a modern technological marvel, and at the same time, they are “undoubtedly symbols of wealth and power. They first appeared at the end of the 19th century, in large American cities such as New York and Chicago. There the new wealth of industry and trade reached its peak.

The most famous skyscraper is (1931), it remained the tallest in the world for more than 40 years, but then the record passed to another American building, (1974). And for another 20 years no one could surpass the new height.

Tall Twin Towers

The project that finally broke the Sears Tower's record wasn't just another skyscraper in Atlanta or Dallas—it was a pair of amazing towers in Malaysia. With the emergence of the “economic tigers” in Asia, a new focus of money and power emerged. The inevitable result was that unimaginable buildings began to appear in China, Korea, Taiwan and Singapore. Once upon a time, grandiose skyscrapers were a purely Western (primarily American) phenomenon. Now they have grown up across Asia as symbols of national pride and economic prosperity.

The Petronas Towers in Kuala Lumpur are a clear expression of former Prime Minister Datuk Seri Mahathir bin Mohamad's ambition to make Malaysia an industrialized economy and a leader in the region by 2020. The towers stand in the midst of a massive redevelopment of Kuala Lumpur, around which remnants of the colonial past are constantly being demolished and an entirely new future for Malaysia is being created.

Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohammad proposed building the towers in an “Islamic” style. Therefore, two eight-pointed stars were taken as the basis for the plan of symmetrical buildings, and Pelli added semicircular protrusions for stability. As a result, the bright stepped completion of both skyscrapers turned out to be surprisingly multicultural.

The creator of the towers is the American architect Caesar Pelli, he worked with the engineering company Thornton-Tomasetti. One of the towers houses the headquarters of the government oil company Petroleum Nasional Berhad. In total, the towers contain 750,000 m2 of office space, 140,000 m2 of retail and entertainment halls, and 4,500 parking spaces. There is also a conference center, an oil museum and a concert hall. One of the requirements for the project was to provide a place where Muslim office workers could perform the obligatory prayers twice a day.

The towers are built primarily from reinforced concrete, which is unusual for such tall buildings. True, the concrete was specially designed for this project. They rest on many piles driven into the ground, into the soft stone below, for as much as 93 meters. Such an unusually deep foundation can support the weight of huge towers, 452 meters high.

The competition design for office buildings with a height of 451.9 meters for an oil and gas company was accepted in 1992. Construction of the 88-story towers began in 1994, and the official opening took place in 1999. The construction was carried out by two competing companies, and in the process they solved many unique technical and engineering problems.

For example, during geological surveys it turned out that the site allocated for the towers is located on heterogeneous areas of soil, which would lead to subsidence of parts of the building. As a result, the buildings were completely moved 60 meters and piles were driven to a depth of more than 100 meters into soft soil. Today it is one of the largest concrete foundations in the world.

A person of Western culture, brought up on the aesthetics of the famous American skyscrapers of the first third of the 20th century, will see in the nature of the completions of the Petronas Tower references to the hierarchical spiers of Art Deco architecture, which became again relevant in high-rise architecture thanks to the spread of postmodernism ideas. Adherents of Muslim traditions read the multi-tiered stepped finish with alternating rounded and rectangular protrusions as a modern reflection of Islamic decorativeism.

An attentive observer may also see references to ancient Hindu and Buddhist architecture in this structure. And a comparison with neighboring Indonesian monuments (in particular, with the ancient cult complex of Prambanan on the island of Java) naturally suggests itself. In addition to architectural associations, another one arises - with the form of ceremonial headdresses of the rulers of South Asia. So the variety of veiled cultural codes, when everyone can find something familiar and familiar in this building, explains its high popularity among representatives of various nations.

The Petronas Twin Towers are a rare example of a complex that has caused a huge number of imitations and replicas all over the world (we must also take into account that they were not built at the dawn of the development of high-rise buildings, but quite recently). Even during the construction process in 1996, the complex was recognized as the tallest twin office complex, and years later it remains the most famous pair of all high-rise twins in the world.

After the success of Petronas, twin high-rise towers were at the peak of fashion. Many famous architects began to offer customers similar

compositional solutions. At the same time, Cesar Pelli himself never returned to this idea in his work, preferring to develop other imaginative solutions, including for high-rise buildings.

Petronas Towers is extremely high-tech, it is literally crammed with technical innovations and the latest materials. The total area of ​​all premises of the complex is colossal: 213,750 m2 could fit 48 football fields! And the buildings themselves with the adjacent site occupy 40 hectares of urban territory.

The basis of the design of the twin high-rise complex is not light steel, as one might assume due to the delicate outlines of the facades. A significant limitation that influenced the choice of the main material for the load-bearing structures was the requirement to build a skyscraper from Malaysian building materials.

Local industry could not produce high-quality light steel in the required time frame. Therefore, Petronas developed a special elastic concrete with the addition of quartz, comparable in strength to steel. During the construction process, due to poor-quality concrete, the finished floor had to be dismantled and rebuilt. As a result, the skyscraper turned out to be twice as heavy as similar steel ones.

The structural frame and internal spaces are adjusted down to the millimeter. There is no central core in the towers, and in the elevator shafts, for the sake of efficient use of space, two two-story elevators travel, each stopping on its own floors - even or odd. In addition, since earthquake resistance is an important factor in construction throughout the region, there were also increased requirements for Petronas towers in this area.

The structure of skyscrapers is such that they will stand even if they lose the support of three of the sixteen load-bearing columns. The connecting openwork bridge on giant ball bearings also serves as additional insurance: it does not allow the towers to sway too much and deviate from each other, giving the structure greater rigidity and stability. In addition, this air passage is another escape route between the upper parts of the complex in case of fire.

The mentioned openwork bridge connecting the towers is in fact extremely heavy: its weight is as much as 452.6 tons. This part of the complex was specially manufactured in South Korea and disassembled (493 separate fragments) transported to Malaysia in the summer of 1995. The assembly of the structure was carried out at the foot of the towers, and the installation with the main volumes was already at a height.

The building design was tailored from the outset to the needs of state oil corporation Petronas, and the headquarters ended up costing the client and major investor 2 billion ringgit ($800 million). But in addition to a convenient and status office, the company became the owner of one of the most recognizable buildings of the decade, and Kuala Lumpur and Malaysia as a whole acquired a new main urban landmark, a truly iconic monument of modern architecture, and even the image of an advanced and progressive power in the region in the field of modern architecture and engineering and construction - a bonus that cannot be calculated in monetary terms.

The building has a museum, exhibition halls and an art gallery, and you have to spend the whole day visiting the observation decks, since the queue forms early in the morning, and by 6 am registration for the opportunity to get into this queue stops.

Windy Heights

Besides the strength of the buildings, there is another big problem for such skyscrapers. In order for people to easily get to the upper floors, many elevators are needed; elevators take up a lot of space on the floors. So two 44-story “extensions” near the towers are needed so that the buildings have enough space for offices.

Between the towers there is a two-story “sky bridge” that is 48 meters long and weighs 738 tons. At a height of about half the towers, it allows you to move from one elevator lobby to another. It is also an emergency exit for amazingly tall buildings. Such buildings can sway from strong winds, so the “sky bridge” is attached to the buildings with movable fasteners; it is 138 m long and can move up to 30 centimeters on each side. The skybridge towers appear to be huge gateways to a renewed city that is rapidly growing around them.

The Petronas Towers are no longer considered the tallest building in the world. In 2004, the record was passed to the Taiwanese skyscraper Taipei 101. In addition, giant buildings are now being built in South Korea and Shanghai. Whether these buildings are worth the enormous money, resources and energy that are invested in them is a political question, and there is still no answer to it.

Mahathir proved that Asians can achieve development without democracy and prosperity without political rights. Historically, skyscrapers have been symbols of Western capitalism and the rapid energy of development. Whether they can serve as symbols of something in completely different cultures remains to be seen. But they are already making an impression, reminding us of the desire for change that has made Asia strong and brought it into the 21st century.

We can see evidence of the popularity of Pelli's creation in popular culture. In the film "Entrapment" starring Sean Connary and Catherine Zeta-Jones, much of the intriguing story about the largest electronic bank theft on the eve of the new year 2000 unfolds in the unusual spaces of a pair of Malaysian skyscrapers. The most exciting sequence was filmed on the suspended structures and festive illumination of the bridge connecting the upper parts of the towers. The deft escape of the film's heroes ends with a parachute jump in an elevator shaft, which would have been impossible in a less technically advanced and smaller structure.

And if in digital terms the Malaysian twins gradually have more and more competitors, then in terms of figurative and artistic level this work can safely be considered one of the true pinnacles of Cesar Pelli’s work.

The Petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur () are perhaps as much a symbol of Malaysia as the Moscow Kremlin and Red Square of Russia. Initially, we planned to devote only a couple of hours to the famous twins, but somehow unnoticed we spent the whole day there. So what were we doing there?!

Firstly, we admired the famous towers. We have written more than once that we like to find the very best, and Petronas is just from this series.

Judge for yourself: height 451.9 meters. The ninth tallest building in Asia, and until 2003 the tallest building in general. Until last year it was 8th, but another Chinese skyscraper has displaced the Petronas. By the way, China has the largest number - 43 buildings with a height of more than 300 meters. Tenth tallest building in the world. The tallest twin towers in the world today. Such an impressive list of “coolness”.

Next to the towers there is a small cozy park with an artificial lake, playgrounds, swimming pools, jogging paths and marked points from which the most interesting view of Petronas opens.

The twins in the area of ​​the 41st-42nd floors are connected by a bridge SkyBridge, which, if desired, can be climbed. Entrance fee is 85 ringgit(approximately 1360 rubles). Opening hours from 9:00 before 21:00 daily except Monday. On Fridays the bridge is closed from 13:00 before 14:30 because of prayer (Malaysia is a Muslim country).

Tickets at the box office start selling from 8:30 , but they can be more conveniently purchased in advance at www.petronastwintowers.com.my. But even with online tickets to get to SkyBridge It will be very problematic - the queue is gigantic, although perfectly organized.

We thought that we were not at all eager to waste time on this and decided to devote it to the huge shopping center in Petronas. This is one of the coolest shopping centers in Kuala Lumpur. And after almost a year spent in Indian and Nepalese towns and villages, he makes a simply stunning impression. Food courts, restaurants, shops, a scientific and entertainment complex - we were sucked in ☺.

Despite all the pretentiousness, most of the stores turned out to be more than accessible. And prices in some of them are lower than in Russia or Thailand. Shoooping! ☺

It's amazing how different the impression the towers make in daylight and evening light is. During the day they seem simply tall, and at night they seem monumental and majestic.

Seeing the Petronas Towers in the evening light is a must do in Kuala Lumpur.

And besides this, in the evening you can watch a rather colorful, but short light and sound show of fountains. It starts in the area 20:00 , but there is no more accurate information, as soon as it gets dark enough, that’s when it begins ☺.

Many locals come to the fountains with food and have impromptu picnics to the accompaniment of the romantic melodies of the fountain.

And finally, some additional information about how to go and what else you can do in the Petronosov area.

How to get to the Petronas Twin Towers: take the metro and go to the station KLCC automatic line Kelana Jaya. You can also get to the station Ruja Chulan monorail line, then about 700 meters along the covered galleries and you are there. Read more about transport in Kuala Lumpur.

Other things to do in the KLCC area:

1. Visit one of the coolest aquariums Aquaria KLCC, if not all over the world, then in Asia for sure.

  • Ticket price for adults: 64 ringgit(about 1025 rubles);
  • Operating mode: from 10:00 before 20:00 , the last visitors are launched into 19:00 ;
  • Website: aquariaklcc.com

2. In the evening, when Petronas gets bored, take a walk to the street Jalan P. Ramlee and have a good time hanging out in local bars and clubs, because Kula Lumpur is a city that never sleeps ☺.

Hello friends. The famous Petronas Towers or Petronas Twin Towers are the beauty and pride of the capital of Malaysia, Kuala Lumpur. They were built to surprise the world, and the builders succeeded. The Twin Towers are the first high-rise buildings in the country. Stylish, modern, striking the imagination - this is not just a business card or a miracle of architecture, it is an ambitious and bold bid of the people to become an Asian economic leader in a short time.

Malaysia. The capital city is Kuala Lumpur. City center. Petronas Twin Towers.

Since the Petronas Towers represent the apotheosis and symbol of the economic miracle, we cannot do without history.

We have written about other attractions of Kuala Lumpur.

A little history

Until August 31, 1957, the country was a British colony. The capital of the state, which translates as “Muddy Water,” was a small settlement where local residents were engaged in tin mining.

Oil reserves were discovered in the country, then everything changed, the Federation of Malaya declared its independence, the ideologist and founder of modern Abdul Rahman proclaimed a political credo: We must be practical. We want to live in peace and do worthy deeds.

6 years later, in 1963, Singapore, North Borneo and Sarawak joined the Federation. At the same time, in honor of the unification, the particle “zi” was added to the name “Malay”, and the country began to be called Malaysia.

In 1965, Singapore left the union and began to develop independently.

We must pay tribute to the country's leadership - they did not build economic development only on the sale of oil, tin and rubber. Western investors were attracted to the country in large numbers and on favorable terms, heavy and light industry, electronic technologies, and the service sector developed. The country has aimed at producing its own goods and minimally importing others.

Views from the towers


Views from the towers

As a result, in 30 years it has become one of the most economically developed countries in the world and almost the most influential country in Asia. However, Malaysia was not going to stop there.

Construction of the Twin Towers

In the 90s of the 20th century, it was decided to erect the first high-rise buildings in the country, and in the shortest possible time, they should become the tallest in the world. Construction started in 1992 and was completed 6 years later in 1998.

By comparison, the twin towers of the World Trade Center in New York took longer to build: the project was accepted in 1962. Excavation work began in 1966. The official opening of the towers took place in 1973.

So, the main customer for the construction of the Towers in Kuala Lumpur was the state-owned Malaysian oil and gas corporation Petronas.

During construction, difficulties emerged - the soil in this place turned out to be unstable and the already constructed part of the structure had to be moved 60 meters.

$800 million was spent on the construction of the towers.

Petronas Towers

As a result, the world's tallest twin towers were born. Everyone learned about the country. Malaysia has declared itself as the most successful and richest country in the Asian region.

The tallest buildings in the world (picture clickable)

Tower parameters:

  • Height 452 meters
  • Number of floors 88
  • If you look at the towers from above (this can be easily done in the tower museum), you can see two eight-pointed stars. This feature was added to the project at the request of the Prime Minister of Malaysia.
  • During construction, exclusively Malaysian materials were used.
  • The towers have the most powerful concrete foundation in the world, and the depth of the piles is 100 meters. Since the towers were built without the use of lightweight steel, only from Malaysian concrete, they turned out to be 2 times heavier than they could have been.
  • At the height of 41 floors there is the Sky Bridge. It serves as an observation deck and functions as an emergency exit in case of evacuation.

  • The Sky Bridge is reinforced with hinged (not rigid) supports because the high-rise buildings of the towers sway.
  • Another observation deck is located on the 86th floor.
  • If you add up the area of ​​the towers' interiors, you get 48 football fields.
  • Cleaning 16,000 windows of one tower takes 1 month.
  • 10,000 people live and work in the towers.

What's in the Petronas Towers

  • giant shopping center Suria KLCC (you can do shopping here)
  • Aquaria KLCC
  • science museum Petrosains Science Discovery Center
  • art Gallery
  • tower museum
  • restaurants, cafes, snack bars
  • conference rooms
  • offices
  • at the entrance to KLCC we see Formula 1 ballids. As you know, the Petronas campaign has been a sponsor of the German car manufacturer Mercedes AMG Petronas F1 Team since 2010.
  • In front of the building is Kuala Lumpur Central Park
  • There are light fountains nearby (very beautiful show from 20:00 to 22:00)

How to get to the observation deck

On the 1st floor they sell tickets for an excursion to the twin towers, but there is one “but”, which I will talk about below.

The excursion includes Sky Bridge, an observation deck on the 86th floor, also known as the Museum of Towers.

You will have an accompanying person throughout the excursion. Everything goes according to schedule “without a hitch.” You'll encounter some fantastic technology implemented, from a floating image of a talking guide to the ability to see the Petronas Towers from above by simply twirling your ticket in front of the screen.

Street view


View of the lake in front of the towers

It’s definitely worth visiting the towers. Firstly, to get acquainted with technology, and secondly, to see Kuala Lumpur from a height above a bird's eye view.

And now about the tickets:

Tickets can be bought on the ground floor of the towers, but not for the current day, but for the next one, and it’s not a fact that there will be seats for it.


Queue at the tower for those who have already bought tickets

There are a lot of people willing. We found a situation where all places on the excursion were sold out 2 days in advance. Therefore, book a ticket to the observation deck through the official website. In advance.

Attention! Book your excursion seats in advance through the website.

Website address: www.petronastwintowers.com

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Working hours

  • The towers are open to visitors from 9:00 to 21:00.
  • On Fridays there is a break from 13:00 to 14:30.
  • Please note: Mondays are a day off - no excursions.

What is the price

  • Adult ticket costs 85 ringgit
  • Child – 35 ringgit
  • Seniors (over 65 years old) - 45 ringgit

How to get there

  • By metro, take the Kelana Jaya line to KLCC station.
  • Also located near the towers is the Bukit Nanas Monorail station.
  • There is a Pavilion shopping complex near Bukit Bintang MRT station. You need to go inside, turn left, go through the center and after that an overhead tunnel will begin that will lead you to the towers. Walk through the tunnel for 10-15 minutes. Very interesting, because... it's practically a bridge with glass walls - you can see the city from above.

Petronas Towers on the map

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