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Al-Seif Palace
قصر السيف
The old seif palace with clock tower in the background
General information
Location Kuwait city - Kuwait
CountryKuwait
Coordinates 29°22′51″N 47°58′16″E / 29.38083°N 47.97111°E / 29.38083; 47.97111
Groundbreaking1880
Construction started1880
Renovated1909, 1964, & 1987
OwnerGovernment of Kuwait
References
The official website of Aldiwan Alamiri.
The door of the palace with the famous writing on top: "if it had lasted for others, it wouldn't have passed to you". It was placed in 1918.

Seif Palace (Arabic, قصر السيف) is a palace in Kuwait City, Kuwait. Located opposite the Grand Mosque, one of Seif Palace's best-known features is the watch tower, covered in blue tiles and with a roof plated in pure gold. [1] Local materials such as clay, rocks, limestone, wood and metals were used in its construction.

Overview

The tower of the Seif Palace received a direct hit from an incoming missile during the first Gulf War (1990–91), which destroyed the dial room. Smith of Derby Group replaced the iconic clock, and were the only non-US company to be awarded a contract in this reconstructive period. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kuwait
  2. ^ Craven, Maxwell (2011). The Smiths of Derby: A Journey Through Time. Derbyshire. ISBN  978-0-9570846-0-5.

External links

Media related to Seif palace at Wikimedia Commons

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Al-Seif Palace
قصر السيف
The old seif palace with clock tower in the background
General information
Location Kuwait city - Kuwait
CountryKuwait
Coordinates 29°22′51″N 47°58′16″E / 29.38083°N 47.97111°E / 29.38083; 47.97111
Groundbreaking1880
Construction started1880
Renovated1909, 1964, & 1987
OwnerGovernment of Kuwait
References
The official website of Aldiwan Alamiri.
The door of the palace with the famous writing on top: "if it had lasted for others, it wouldn't have passed to you". It was placed in 1918.

Seif Palace (Arabic, قصر السيف) is a palace in Kuwait City, Kuwait. Located opposite the Grand Mosque, one of Seif Palace's best-known features is the watch tower, covered in blue tiles and with a roof plated in pure gold. [1] Local materials such as clay, rocks, limestone, wood and metals were used in its construction.

Overview

The tower of the Seif Palace received a direct hit from an incoming missile during the first Gulf War (1990–91), which destroyed the dial room. Smith of Derby Group replaced the iconic clock, and were the only non-US company to be awarded a contract in this reconstructive period. [2]

See also

References

  1. ^ Kuwait
  2. ^ Craven, Maxwell (2011). The Smiths of Derby: A Journey Through Time. Derbyshire. ISBN  978-0-9570846-0-5.

External links

Media related to Seif palace at Wikimedia Commons


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