Senna Tower Começa a Subir! O Gigante de 550m Já Está em Obra
Discover all the behind-the-scenes details of the Senna Tower, the future tallest residential building in the world, currently under construction in Balneário Camboriú. Standing over 500 meters tall, the building promises to change the city's skyline and challenge the limits of Brazilian engineering. In this video, we explore the history behind the project, the technical challenges of erecting a skyscraper on the waterfront, and the potential urban consequences of this mega-construction. Understand why this building could mark Brazil's place in global architecture or raise an alert about extreme verticalization. 📍Video Chapters 0:00 - Did you leave your Like yet!? 0:55 - Where Giants Are Born 3:40 - Between the Sky and the Concrete 8:30 - Ambition or Urban Warning? #SennaTower #BalnearioCamboriu #AyrtonSenna #IncredibleWorks

Jeddah Tower 2026 Update: The 1KM Tower Is Back From The Dead

Execution of the SENNA TOWER Foundations - Diaphragm Wall

This City is Taking New York's Skyscraper Crown

Most Ridiculous Worker Mistakes Caught on Camera

Is the SENNA TOWER being delivered? What changed in 2026!

The Largest Skyscrapers Under Construction in Brazil in 2024

17 Forbidden Places in the U.S. You’ll Never Be Able to See

Top 4 Railways That Will Revolutionize Logistics in Brazil

Progress on the construction of the SENNA TOWER - the tallest residential building in the world.

5 Skyscrapers that Never Existed

SENNA TOWER: the project that could exceed 3 BILLION in BC — Revelations Part 1

China Replaced Its Entire Power Grid in 10 Years — America's Is Still From the 1960s

Unbelievable Smart Worker & Hilarious Fails | Construction Compilation #5 #adamrose #smartworkers

The Line in 2026: Why Construction Stopped

Como será o prédio mais alto de SP? Entramos nas obras do 1º arranha-céu a passar de 200 m na cidade

How Was the Eiffel Tower Actually Built?

They Paid $100M to Live Here. Now They Can't Get Out.

Egypt is Building a New Nile

How Singapore Built an $8B "Ship" on Top of Crooked Skyscrapers

