AtlasIslamica

Jame al-Jazair (Great Mosque of Algiers)

Being the largest mosque in Africa and third largest in the world, Jame al-Jazair houses the world’s tallest minaret (265 metres) and can accomodate upto 120000 devotees at one given time

Algiers, Algeria

Coordinates: 36.735839, 3.137941

Jame al-Jazair, also known as the Great Mosque of Algiers is a mosque in Algiers, Algeria.

It houses the world’s tallest minaret (265 metres) and is the third-largest mosque in the world after the Great Mosque of Mecca and Al-Masjid an-Nabawi of Medina in Saudi Arabia.

The construction of the mosque began in August 2012 after the Algerian government’s contract, for 1 billion euros, was won by the China State Construction Engineering Corporation.

The mosque faced construction delays owing to budgetary concerns due to the falling prices of oil. Around 2,300 workers from China, Algeria and other African countries were deployed to work on the project.

The mosque sits on a site covering 400,000 m2 (4,300,000 sq ft) and overlooking the Mediterranean Sea.

The prayer hall has a capacity of 37,000 worshippers, while the structure including the compound can house up to 120,000 worshippers and has parking space for 7,000 cars.

The complex also houses a Quran(قرآن) school, a park, a library, staff housing area, a fire station, a museum of Islamic art, and a research centre on the history of Algeria.

The mosque also has a 265 m (869 ft) tall minaret, which makes it the tallest building in Africa.

It also houses an observation deck atop the minaret, which has 37 floors.

The mosque is designed to withstand an earthquake of magnitude 9.0 and the structure has been specially processed to resist corrosion.