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Office in Antioquia, Colombia
The Coltejer Building is the tallest building in Medellín, Colombia and the tenth-tallest in Colombia as of 2016. It was completed in 1972. Coltejer is
Coltejer_Building
Colombian architect
31, 2012) was a Colombian architect. He designed the Coltejer Building, Medellín's tallest building with Hernando Vélez, Germán Samper and Jorge Manjarrés
Raúl_Fajardo_Moreno
Barranquilla". EL HERALDO (in Spanish). Retrieved 2022-11-01. emporis.com - Torre Coltejer Tiempo, Casa Editorial El (2021-11-11). "Conozca cuáles son los ocho edificios
List of tallest buildings in Colombia
List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Colombia
Mixed-use in Bogotá, Colombia
currently under construction in Bogotá, Colombia, featuring the tallest building in the country, surpassing the Torre Colpatria, and the sixth tallest in
BD_Bacatá
Colombian politician and mathematician (born 1956)
His father is Raúl Fajardo Moreno, an architect who designed the Coltejer Building. He graduated high school from the Colegio Benedictino and then moved
Sergio_Fajardo
City in Colombia
October 1907. Its headquarters, the Coltejer Building, is the tallest skyscraper in Medellín and the fourth tallest building in Colombia.[citation needed] The
Medellín
Building in Bogotá, Colombia
under construction in Bogotá. The South Tower is planned to be the tallest building in Colombia at approximately 879 feet (268 m) in height. The complex is
Torres_Atrio
continent's tallest buildings being residential. Office buildings have not historically been built taller than residential buildings in the region, though
List of tallest buildings in South America
List_of_tallest_buildings_in_South_America
Former Art Nouveau hotel and theatre in Medellín, Colombia
demolished and replaced by the Coltejer Building, the tallest in Medellín. Local businessman Gonzalo Mejía developed the building starting in 1922, wanting
Edificio_Gonzalo_Mejía
Office skyscraper in Bogotá, Colombia
skyscraper in the downtown area of Bogotá, Colombia. It is the fourth tallest building in the country. Constructed from 1973 to 1978 and opened in 1979, it has
Torre_Colpatria
Skyscraper in São Paulo, Brazil
Mirante do Vale Building (Portuguese: Condomínio Mirante do Vale, loosely translated as Overlook of the Valley Condominium), commonly called Mirante do
Mirante_do_Vale
Office skyscraper in Bogotá, Colombia
Point Building Complex is an office skyscraper complex in Bogotá, Colombia. Built between 2008 and 2017, the complex comprises five buildings with the
North_Point_Building_Complex
Building in Cali, Colombia
the tallest building in Cali and among the tallest in Colombia. Due to its dominance of the Cali skyline it has become a landmark building of the city
Cali_Tower
Commercial office in Medellín, Colombia
175-metre-high (574 ft) skyscraper, the Torre Coltejer, and the tenth-tallest in Colombia. Cali Tower Coltejer Building Torre Colpatria Centro de Comercio Internacional
Torre_del_Café
Office skyscraper in Cartagena, Colombia
at 202 m (663 ft) tall with 52 floors, and is the current 2nd tallest building in Colombia as well as the tallest in Cartagena. The tower is located in
Hotel_Estelar
This list of tallest buildings by city ranks cities by the height of their tallest completed building. Tall buildings, such as skyscrapers, are intended
List of tallest buildings by city
List_of_tallest_buildings_by_city
Skyscraper in Barranquilla, Colombia
stands at 175 m (574 ft) tall with 41 floors and is the current 9th tallest building in Colombia. The structure is located in the Villa Country district of
The_Icon_(Barranquilla)
Office in Bogotá, Colombia
office skyscraper located in Bogotá, Colombia. The building is 190 m/623 ft, 50 floors. The building is a neighbor of Torre Colpatria, the second-largest
Centro de Comercio Internacional
Centro_de_Comercio_Internacional
Skyscraper in Cartagena, Colombia
stands at 190 m (620 ft) tall with 44 floors and is the current 6th tallest building in Colombia and the 2nd tallest in Cartagena. The tower is located on the
Plaza_Bocagrande
Mixed-use skyscraper in Bogotá, Colombia
stands at 185 m (607 ft) tall with 45 floors and is the current 7th tallest building in Colombia. The Parque Central Bavaria residential project was built between
Museo_Parque_Central
architectural details but does not include antenna masts. The current tallest building in Cartagena is the Hotel Estelar Bocagrande with 202 meters. "Estelar
List of tallest buildings in Cartagena
List_of_tallest_buildings_in_Cartagena
Office in Bogotá, Colombia
Avianca Building is a 161-meter-tall office skyscraper located at the intersection of 16th street and Seventh Avenue, next to Santander Park in the city
Avianca_Building
Hotel skyscraper in Bogotá, Colombia
Bogotá, Colombia. Built between 1970 and 1983, the complex consists of two buildings standing at 171 m (561 ft) with 47 floors (North Tower, also known as
Ciudadela_San_Martin
Torre Coltejer, in Medellín, 175 m (574 ft) La Nacional Building, in Bogotá, 171 m (561 ft) Caja de Empleados de la Policía Nacional Building, in Bogotá
List of tallest structures by country
List_of_tallest_structures_by_country
Bogotá, 1965–1970 Hotel Tequendama, Santa Fe, Bogotá, 1953–1970 Torre Coltejer, Medellín Torre Colpatria, Bogotá Luís Ángel Arango Library, La Candelaria
Architecture_of_Colombia
Colombian poet (1895–1976)
General Santander – Ministry of National Education 1971 Premio Antioquia – Coltejer 1973 Order of San Carlos – Colombia 1975 Grand Officer Spouse María Teresa
León_de_Greiff
Radio network in Colombia
50% of Emisora Nuevo Mundo. Caracol would be legally founded in 1949. Coltejer, a textile company which had invested in La Voz de Antioquia and Emisoras
Caracol_Radio
Empire State Building (two replicas), the Chrysler Building (two replicas), the Coit Tower in San Francisco (two replicas), and one of the Coltejer Tower. This
Museum of Modern Art of Barranquilla
Museum_of_Modern_Art_of_Barranquilla
Municipality and city in Antioquia Department, Colombia
unveiled, built by philanthropist Diego Echavarría Misas]p. In 1962, he began building the first formal City Hall. In 1967, the renowned painter of Itagüí, Eladio
Itagüí
American painter (1930–1998)
Sechziger Jahre, Wallraf-Richartz Museum, Cologne, Germany XI Bienal De Arte Coltejer de Medellin, Colombia, South America Exhibition of Paintings Eligible for
Allan_D'Arcangelo
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the various places bearing this name, for example in Essex (Haltesteda in Domesday Book), Kent, and Leicestershire, all of which are probably named from Old English h(e)ald ‘refuge’, ‘shelter’ + stede ‘site’, or possibly Hawstead in Suffolk, which has the same origin. However, the name is now most frequent in Lancashire and Yorkshire, where it is from High Halstead in Burnley, named as the ‘site of a hall’, from Old English h(e)all ‘hall’ + stede ‘place’.English : occupational name for someone employed at ‘the hall buildings’, Middle English hallested, an ostler or cowhand, for instance.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : most probably a habitational name from Colwich in Staffordshire, named from Old English col ‘(char)coal’ + wīc ‘building’. Derivation from the word denoting an educational institution is less likely, but see Coolidge.
Surname or Lastname
English and North German
English and North German : metonymic occupational name for a plasterer, from Middle English, Middle Low German plaster (from Latin emplastrum ‘(wound) plaster’ (originally a paste), from Greek emplastron, a derivative of emplassein ‘to shape or form’; the term was carried over into building terminology to mean ‘bonding agent’).English : habitational name from any of various places called Plaistow (in East London, Derbyshire, Sussex, and elsewhere), from Old English plegestÅw ‘place where people gather for sport or play’. This can also be a variant of Plaisted (through interchangeable use of the Old English elements stÅw and stede, both meaning ‘place’, in earlier times).German and Ashkenazic Jewish (Pflaster) : from Middle High German pflaster (German Pflaster, from Latin plastrum) ‘street pavement’, ‘pavement’, cognate with 1.
Boy/Male
American, British, English
Horse Herdsman
Surname or Lastname
English
English : unexplained.South German : topographic name for someone who lived at the upper end of a village on a hill, from Middle High German ober, obar ‘above’. In other cases, it may have denoted someone who lived on an upper floor of a building with two or more floors.North German : topographic for someone who lived on the bank of a river or stream name, standardized from Middle Low German over ‘river bank’.Possibly a shortened form of any of various German compound names formed with Ober- (see entries below).Jewish (Ashkenazic) : from German Ober ‘senior’, ‘chief’. In some cases it can denote a rabbi; in others it is ornamental.A 17th-century American bearer of this name, Richard Ober (1641–1715/16), emigrated from Abbotsbury, Dorset, England, to the Salem colony and settled in Mackerel Cove, MA, later Beverly. His descendant Frederick Albion Ober, who was born in Beverly, MA, in 1849, was an ornithologist who discovered 22 new species of birds in the Lesser Antilles, the flycatcher Myiarchus oberi, and oriole Icterus oberi.
Surname or Lastname
English (southwestern)
English (southwestern) : from Middle English hous ‘house’ (Old English hūs). In the Middle Ages the majority of the population lived in cottages or huts rather than houses, and in most cases this name probably indicates someone who had some connection with the largest and most important building in a settlement, either a religious house or simply the local manor house. In some cases it may be a status name for a householder, someone who owned his own dwelling as opposed to being a tenant, but more often it is an occupational name for a servant who worked in such a house, in particular a steward who managed one.English : respelling of Howes.Translation of German Haus.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from Newark in Cambridgeshire or Newark on Trent in Nottinghamshire, both named from Old English nīwe ‘new’ + weorc ‘fortification’, ‘building’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a stone- or bricklayer, from Middle English setter ‘one who lays stones or bricks in building’ (agent derivative of setten ‘to set’).English : occupational name from Old French saietier ‘silk weaver’ (an agent derivative of sayete, a kind of silk).English : from an agent derivative of Middle English setten ‘to place (decoration, on a garment or metal surface)’, probably an occupational name for an embroiderer.German : unexplained.Norwegian : unexplained.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : from a medieval personal name, a variant of Maud (see Mould).English : from the Old English personal name MÅd(a), a short form of the various compound names containing the element mÅd ‘spirit’, ‘mind’, ‘courage’.English : topographic name for someone who lived in a particularly muddy area, from Middle English mud(de) ‘mud’, perhaps also a metonymic occupational name for a dauber (one who constructed buildings of wattle and daub).
Surname or Lastname
English
English : of uncertain origin. Possibly topographic, from Old English scÄ“ad ‘boundary’ + bÅþl ‘building’, ‘dwelling house’, ‘hall’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : topographic name for someone who lived in a newly constructed dwelling, from Middle English newe ‘new’ + bold ‘building’. There are several places (in Cheshire, Derbyshire, Lancashire, Leicestershire, Northamptonshire, Nottinghamshire, Warwickshire, and Worcestershire) named with the same elements in Old English (nēowe + bold), and the surname may also be derived from any or all of them.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a place in Nottinghamshire named Colwick, probably from Old English col ‘(char)coal’ + wīc ‘building’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of the various places so named, for example in Norfolk, North Yorkshire, and East Yorkshire. The two villages of this name in Norfolk are recorded in Domesday Book as Ristuna, and are from Old English hrÄ«s ‘brushwood’ + tÅ«n ‘enclosure’, ‘settlement’; Ruston Parva in East Yorkshire, recorded in Domesday Book as Roreston, is named from the genitive case of the Old Norse byname Hrór meaning ‘vigorous’ + Old English tÅ«n. Ruston in North Yorkshire is Rostune in Domesday Book, apparently from Old English hrÅst ‘roost’, ‘roof’ + tÅ«n, referring to a building with an unusual roof.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from either of two places in Cheshire. It is possible that the name originally denoted a building where village assemblies were held, named in Old English as ‘meeting-house’, from (ge)mÅt ‘meeting’ + ærn ‘house’, ‘hall’. Other possibilities are that the name derives from Old English (ge)mÅt-rÅ«m ‘meeting space’, or (ge)mÅt-treum ‘assembly trees’.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for someone who looked after asses and horses, from an agent derivative of Colt. Compare Coulthard.Variant spelling of German Kolter.
Boy/Male
Tamil
Himan was the name of one of the famous slaves that had a hand in building the tomb of queen Venika
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from any of various places named from Old English scypen, scipen ‘cattleshed’, such as Shippen in West Yorkshire and Shippon in Berkshire, or a topographic name derived directly from the vocabulary word. In some cases it may originally have been acquired as a metonymic occupational name for a cowman, who in medieval times would often have lived in the same building as his animals.Born in Methley, Yorkshire, England, in 1639, Edward Shippen emigrated to Boston, MA, in 1668. He joined the Society of Friends and moved his family and business to Philadelphia in about 1694 to avoid religious persecution, eventually becoming mayor of Philadelphia, where his sons and grandsons continued to be prominent.
Boy/Male
English American
Horse herdsman. young horse;frisky.
Surname or Lastname
English
English : occupational name for a wattler, Middle English watelere, i.e. someone who made the panels of interwoven twigs that were used to fill the spaces between the structural timbers of a timber frame building. See also Dauber.
Boy/Male
American, British, English
Colt Herder; Keeper of the Colt Herd; Horse Herdsman; Variant of Colt; Young Horse; Frisky
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
Boy/Male
Tamil
Strong warmth of Sun
Girl/Female
English
which is a.
Boy/Male
Gujarati, Hindu, Indian, Kannada, Malayalam, Marathi, Oriya, Sanskrit, Tamil, Telugu
The Earth
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian, Tamil, Telugu
Chief
Girl/Female
Tamil
Boy/Male
Hindu, Indian
Name of God
Surname or Lastname
English
English : habitational name from a lost place in the parish of Bolton-le-Moors, near Manchester, of uncertain etymology.
Girl/Female
Muslim/Islamic
Queen of river Nile
Boy/Male
Hindu
Peaceful
Boy/Male
American, Anglo, British, English
Son of the Red-haired
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
COLTEJER BUILDING
n.
An open or unoccupied space between bodies or things; an interruption of continuity; chasm; gap; as, a vacancy between buildings; a vacancy between sentences or thoughts.
n.
The filling below or beneath; the under part of a building.
n.
The official who takes care of the interior of a church building.
a.
Having a form resembling that of a colter, or straight on one side and curved on the other.
n.
The main part of a plow, to which the handles and colter are secured, and to the end of which are attached the oxen or horses that draw it.
n.
Same as Colter.
n.
A movable building, of a square form, consisting of ten or even twenty stories and sometimes one hundred and twenty cubits high, usually moved on wheels, and employed in approaching a fortified place, for carrying soldiers, engines, ladders, casting bridges, and other necessaries.
n.
Something standing upright, as a piece of timber in a building. See Illust. of Frame.
n.
That by which a building is underpinned; the material and construction used for support, introduced beneath a wall already constructed.
n.
A colter. See Colter.
n.
The lighter woodwork in the interior of a building; especially, that used around openings, generally in the form of a molded architrave, to protect the plastering at those points.
n.
A building used as a school of gymnastics.
n.
A work or structure of stone, brick, or other materials, raised to some height, and intended for defense or security, solid and permanent inclosing fence, as around a field, a park, a town, etc., also, one of the upright inclosing parts of a building or a room.
v. t.
To lay stones, masonry, etc., under, as the sills of a building, on which it is to rest.
n.
A principal door of a large ancient building, as of an amphitheater.
n.
A magnificent assemblage of buildings at Rome, near the church of St. Peter, including the pope's palace, a museum, a library, a famous chapel, etc.
n.
The thin, sharp part of a colter.
a.
Having a bill shaped like the colter of a plow, or like a knife, as the heron, stork, etc.
n.
A knife or cutter, attached to the beam of a plow to cut the sward, in advance of the plowshare and moldboard.
n.
A West African anthropoid ape allied to the gorilla and chimpanzee, and by some considered only a variety of the chimpanzee. It is noted for building large, umbrella-shaped nests in trees. Called also tscheigo, tschiego, nschego, nscheigo.