What happens when a country builds a massive 105-story hotel but can't actually finish it? In this episode, Daniel Torres uncovers the wild story behind North Korea's Ryugyong Hotel - a 330-meter concrete giant that's been sitting half-finished in Pyongyang for over 30 years.
On Proof Positive, we explore why North Korea started this ambitious project in 1987, how it became known as the "Hotel of Doom," and what it reveals about how authoritarian regimes use massive construction projects to project power they don't actually have. You'll learn about the Egyptian company that threw $400 million at restarting construction in 2008, discover why the building sat as an empty concrete shell for 16 years, and understand how prestige projects like this one backfire spectacularly. It's a fascinating look at what happens when propaganda meets reality.
š Chapters:
[00:00] Introduction with Daniel Torres
[01:30] North Korea's impossible hotel project
[04:00] Why construction stopped for 16 years
[07:00] The $400 million restart that went nowhere
[10:00] What this reveals about authoritarian architecture
[12:00] Key takeaways
š Topics: North Korea, Ryugyong Hotel, authoritarian architecture, Pyongyang, prestige projects, construction failures
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Keywords: cold war secrets, espionage stories, unsolved mysteries, historical mysteries, investigative journalism
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