Kingdom Kampala’s second phase kicks off as Sudhir’s addition to Kampala’s skyline

KAMPALA.

Uganda’s celebrated property magnet Dr Sudhir Ruparelia has kicked off Phase Two of his iconic Kingdom Kampala project, unveiling a 21-storey mixed-use tower topped with a rooftop helipad – a feature that’s as novel as it is audacious in the country’s urban landscape.

This isn’t just another high-rising building; it’s a statement, blending luxury with logistics in a city notorious for its traffic woes.

Imagine this: executives in tailored suits descending from helicopters onto a sleek rooftop pad, bypassing the snarl of Nakasero Hill roads below. The helipad, a rarity in private developments across East Africa, positions the tower as a haven for high-fliers – international investors, deal-makers, and VIPs who demand efficiency in a place where time is often lost to congestion.

For Kampala, where the tallest buildings have long been modest by global standards, this addition to the skyline near Uganda Broadcasting Corporation (UBC) headquarters is nothing short of revolutionary. Phase One, completed in 2019, already transformed the area with a modern mall, office blocks, and multi-level parking, drawing crowds and commerce. Now, Phase Two elevates it literally and figuratively.

The tower itself is a vertical marvel: luxury hotel rooms (rumored to number around 200), upscale apartments and penthouses for the elite, corporate offices buzzing with business, and ground-level retail spaces to keep the energy flowing. Construction is well underway, with structural elements and facade installations progressing steadily, though the Ruparelia Group has kept details like total cost and exact completion date under wraps.

Renderings show a sleek, orange-hued edifice with glass facades reflecting the equatorial sun, integrating seamlessly with the existing complex. It’s designed as a “self-contained hub,” where one can live, work, shop, and even land by air without stepping into the street.

But why is this project so crucial for Kampala and Uganda at large? In a nation grappling with post-pandemic recovery and economic pressures, developments like this signal unwavering confidence in growth.

Ruparelia, Uganda’s wealthiest individual and a diaspora returnee who built his empire from exile in the UK, embodies the power of private investment. The tower is expected to create hundreds of jobs during construction and operation, from architects and laborers to hotel staff and retailers. It boosts property values in the CBD, attracting foreign direct investment – think oil executives from the Tilenga project or tech firms eyeing East Africa’s hub.

Ruparelia’s vision, unveiled just last month, comes at a pivotal time – his 70th birthday year, marked by awards for conservation and investment leadership. Kingdom Kampala Phase Two isn’t merely a building; it’s a novelty propelling Uganda toward a bolder, skyward future. As cranes hum and the tower ascends, Kampala watches – and wonders what heights it might reach next.

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