Roche Tower Explained

Roche Tower
Native Name:Roche-Turm
Native Name Lang:German
Alternate Names:Building 1 (Bau 1)
Status:Open
Location:Basel, Switzerland
Address:Grenzacherstrasse 124
Groundbreaking Date:9 May 2012
Opened Date:18 September 2015
Destruction Date:-->
Owner:Hoffman-La Roche
Cost:CHF 550 million
Floor Area:74200sqm
Floor Count:41
Highest Region:Switzerland
Highest Prev:Prime Tower (Zürich)
Highest Start:18 September 2015
Building Type:Office building
Architectural Style:Modernism
Height:178m (584feet)
Architecture Firm:Herzog & de Meuron
Unit Count:-->
Location Town:-->
Namesake:Hoffmann-La Roche

Roche Tower (German: Roche-Turm) is a skyscraper in the Swiss city of Basel. At, it is the second tallest building in the country.[1]

The building, also known as "Building 1" (German: Bau 1), was financed by pharmaceutical company Hoffmann-La Roche and designed by Herzog & de Meuron. It cost 550 million Swiss francs to build. The entire construction ensemble, including the 205m (673feet) "Building 2" research facility completed in 2022, was expected to cost three billion francs in total.[1]

When finished on 18 September 2015, Roche Tower overtook Prime Tower in Zürich as Switzerland's tallest building, the latter having held the record for four years. Strict planning laws mean there are few skyscrapers in the country.[1] For the construction of the building, measures against earthquakes were envisioned and it stands on 143 pillars of reinforced concrete.[2] It is supposed to endure an earthquake of 6.9 on the Richter scale and therefore surpass the security regulations by the government.

References

  1. News: Switzerland’s tallest building officially opened. 4 January 2017. Swiss Info. 18 September 2015.
  2. Web site: 2020-12-09. Neuer Roche-Turm - So sicher ist das höchste Gebäude der Schweiz. 2021-05-31. Schweizer Radio und Fernsehen (SRF). de.

External links