Speaking during the commissioning ceremony, Ian Rumanyika, the manager for public and corporate affairs in the Commissioner General’s office, said that the tower was designed as a one-stop centre to boost tax collection.
THE PEARL OF AFRICA HOTEL, KAMPALA, UGANDA.
“It is expected that URA will offer faster and better services to clients resulting from process integration while reducing administrative costs to the taxpayer and URA,” said Ian Rumanyika.
The URA tower
Construction of the URA tower began four years ago by the Ms Seyani Brothers & Co. (U) Ltd as the contractor, at a cost of US $37,000 which was fully funded by the government. It has 23 floors and measures 1,240 meters (4,070ft) above sea level. The building comprises of four podiums in addition to 18 floors totaling up to 26,021square meters (280,088 sq. ft.) of office space. Maximum occupancy is approximated at 1,700 people.
The tower has a 12,923 square car parking structure that can accommodate 1,070 vehicles. The building also has an auditorium and multipurpose high end conference hall that can host 300 people and mini-meeting rooms at every floor.
High performance building
The building is designed to be green with an Intelligent Building Management System (BMS) and other ICT innovations, making it a high performance building aimed at managing different services such as access control, lighting, water, security, firefighting, modern ICT network infrastructure and air conditioning.
The complex also features a central core atrium to enhance natural ventilation and minimize mechanical cooling of the building as well as house modern forensic and science laboratories that support tax investigations, customs and domestic taxes operations.
“The tower will provide modern office facilities that support URA’s current and future work methods of different departments. It will also improve security of vital URA computer and other records through provision of state-of-the-art and round the clock security,” said Rumanyika.
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