Kish Mall appears massive by any applied scale. [Project website can be found HERE] These photos depicting ongoing construction efforts were taken within the past sixty days.
Two cranes working the enormous construction site
Iranian construction workers at work on the project's foundation.
The completed mall will provide parking for 1250 cars.
The completed mall will provide parking for 1250 cars.
Rebar grid system detail
Artist's rendering of completed Kish Mall
Artist's rendering of Kish Mall's completed interior
Photos: www.kishmall.com
Uskowi on Iran construction links:
Current construction projects in Tehran
Current construction projects in Shiraz
Current construction projects in Mashad
Current construction projects in Tabriz
Public Housing projects in the Islamic Republic of Iran
Uskowi on Iran construction links:
Current construction projects in Tehran
Current construction projects in Shiraz
Current construction projects in Mashad
Current construction projects in Tabriz
Public Housing projects in the Islamic Republic of Iran
Too bad the regime has destroyed the purchasing power of the ordinary people for nothing; but who cares: you can take all those parasitic Moft-Khor of the regime (like Basiji's and Bache-Mullah's) to spend 'their' money in those Malls ...
ReplyDeleteANOTHER testimony the regime HAS A HUMAN FACE!![to those name callers]
ReplyDeleteYes BMA the regime has a human face !!!!
ReplyDeleteThe Shopping center in Kish is more important to the IRGC then these people.
http://www.peykeiran.com/Content.aspx?ID=59456
The regime may have a "human face" but like countless other oppressive regimes like NAZI Germany,Stalin's Soviet Union,it is a soulless anti human entity which see itself above the people that it claims to represent.
ReplyDeleteIn Iran's case the theocratic state wants the people to be serfs of the regime and demands people should knell to their Allah through the edicts of the veliyats whims.
But in reality the regime should be the servant and answerable to the people without bringing in peoples personal or spiritual beliefs into the arena of public questioning.