Hyundai gets nod to build South Korea's tallest skyscraper

26 November 2019 - 14:29
By Reuters
After years of delays, Hyundai will build a new 569m skyscraper office in Seoul.
Image: Chesnot/Getty Images After years of delays, Hyundai will build a new 569m skyscraper office in Seoul.

The Seoul city government said on Tuesday  it has approved the long-delayed construction of Hyundai Motor Group's new headquarters in the affluent district of Gangnam, which is set to be South Korea's tallest skyscraper when completed in 2026.

The 569m building will break ground in the first half of 2020, Seoul city said in a statement.

The approval came more than four years after Hyundai Motor Group, South Korea's second-largest conglomerate, offered to purchase the site with $10bn in 2014, more than triple its market price, outbidding Samsung Electronics and sparking a stock sell-off.

The construction, originally scheduled to commence in 2016, was delayed partly due to security concerns raised by South Korea's air force, which said the building would interfere with radar and military operations, a Seoul city official said.

Hyundai signed an agreement with the defence ministry to resolve operational restrictions until the construction of the building has reached around 260m high, the official said, adding that the construction can be suspended should Hyundai fail to do so.

The building, consisting of 105 floors, will house not only offices, but a car theme park, a hotel, a concert hall and a convention centre, according to its 2014 plan. It will be home to 18,000 employees from 30 affiliates of the conglomerate, it said at the time.

Hyundai said in March it was in talks with potential investors to share additional investment costs worth about 3.7-trillion won (roughly R46,463,915,130) needed to develop its new headquarters, following a call by US hedge fund Elliott Management Corp to drop the controversial project.

Hyundai is trying to rebound from its sixth consecutive annual profit decline, while accelerating its investments in future technologies.

Hyundai said it "will continue to work closely with the Seoul metropolitan government to proceed with the project in compliance with the administrative procedures.”