TIK TOK: The timepiece sits atop the Royal Mecca Clock Tower which  dominates Islam’s holiest city. Its four faces are 43 metres in  diameter.
A giant clock on a skyscraper in Islam's holiest city Mecca began ticking on Wednesday at the start of the fasting month of Ramadan, amid hopes by Saudi Arabia it will become the Muslim world's official timekeeper.
The Mecca Clock, which Riyadh says is the world's largest, has four faces  measuring 43 metres in diameter. 
It sits 400 metres up what will be the world's second-tallest skyscraper  and largest hotel, overlooking the city's Holy Grand Mosque, which Muslims  around the world turn to five times a day for prayer. 
"The Holy Mecca Clock started with the order of King Abdullah bin Abdulaziz  Al-Saud ... one minute after 12am this morning, the first day of the holy month  of Ramadan," Saudi state news agency SPA said. 
Over 90 million pieces of coloured glass mosaic embellish the sides of the  clock, which has four faces each bearing a large inscription of the name  "Allah." It is visible from all corners of the city, the state news agency said.  
The clock tower is the landmark feature of the seven-tower King Abdulaziz  Endowment hotel complex, being built by the private Saudi Binladen Group, which  will have the largest floor area of any building in the world when it is  complete. Local media have said the clock tower project cost US$3 billion  (NZ$4.2 billion). 
The clock is positioned on a 601-metre tower, which will become the second  tallest inhabited building in the world when it is completed in three months'  time. 
"Because it based in front of the holy mosque the whole Islamic world will  refer to Mecca time instead of Greenwich. The Mecca clock will become a symbol  to all Muslims," said Hashim Adnan, a resident of nearby Jeddah who frequently  visits Mecca. 
The project is part of efforts to modernize the old city and make it more  capable of catering to pilgrims. Around 2 million Muslims visit the city each  year for the annual Haj pilgrimage, a once-in-a-lifetime requirement for  able-bodied Muslims, and 3.5 million pilgrims visit Mecca at other times of the  year. 
While many in Saudi Arabia are celebrating the clock tower's launch, some  Mecca visitors are critical of how it will affect the ambiance of the Prophet  Muhammad's birthplace. The complex is built on the land once occupied by an  Ottoman fortress. 
"I think they are trying to do a lot of luxurious development around the  Grand Mosque which is taking away from the spiritual atmosphere of the place,  making it more modern," said Lina Edris, a frequent visitor to Mecca. 
"The clock tower is higher than the minarets of the Grand Mosque, which  will take attention away from the mosque even though it is obvious the mosque is  more important," she added. 
 
 
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