Sri Lanka opens China-funded ‘White Elephant’ Tower to tourists – Times of India
Shaped like a gigantic long-stemmed lotus, the structure is the tallest in the South Asian nation. It opened to the public on Thursday, selling tickets to an observation deck with 360-degree views of the city and the Indian Ocean. When fully occupied, the venue will have shops, host weddings and boast a fine dining rotating restaurant on the bud of the flower.
This will be the tourism and entertainment hub of Colombo,” said Prasad Samarasinghe, chief executive officer of state-run Colombo Lotus Tower Management Co., which is overseeing the building’s operations. “We have developed a business model to earn enough money for operations and maintenance of the tower so that it is not a burden to the government.”
Operators are forecasting 1.1 billion rupees ($3 million) of revenue by 2024, against a total construction cost of $113 million following repeated delays. Building began in 2012 with a loan from China’s Exim Bank, which exposed it to criticism of being a vanity project, one of the many so-called white elephants commissioned during the tenure of President Mahinda Rajapaksa, whose family has since been ousted from several government posts.
Key attractions:
- Clients have already been found for more than 70% of the 133,000 square feet of commercial space in the podium block
- The lotus bud atop the tower will have nine floors; expressions of interest invited until September 23
- Receiving bookings for weddings at a charge of 1.5 million rupees; hope to give out operating licenses by November
- Information shared by Minhar Azeez, financial consultant, Colombo Lotus Tower Management
First envisaged as a telecom tower, critics have long questioned the feasibility of the project. The Telecom Regulatory Commission will service the Chinese loan with its own funds, Samarasinghe said.
Sri Lankan authorities have also been seeking investors for the desolate Chinese-built Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport in the southern home base of the family that ran the island nation for nearly two decades. Sri Lanka has sold a China-funded port in the southern district of Hambantota after failing to repay the debt for its construction.
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