Sri Lankan Christmas tree
The Sri Lankan Christmas tree is the world's tallest artificial Christmas tree. It was built on the Galle Face Green in Colombo, Sri Lanka, the tree is tall and opened on Christmas Eve 2016.
The cone-shaped tree is a steel-and-wire frame made from scrap metal and wood, and covered by plastic netting. It is decorated with approximately one million natural pine cones painted gold, green, red and silver colors. It has 600,000 LED bulbs which illuminate the tree at night. On the top of the tree there is a Christmas star with bulbs, weighing about. The tree cost 12 million Sri Lankan rupees. The tree was constructed by 150 employees of the Sri Lankan Ministry of Ports and Shipping with support from other parties.
Construction work began in August 2016 but was abandoned in the first week of December after the Sri Lankan Catholic Church criticised it as "waste of money", and added "Construction work should be abandoned. Christmas is an occasion for sharing funds with the needy, not to waste money on lavishness... The market economy is using religion as a tool for selling Christmas."
Later, work on the tree recommenced after a meeting with Catholic Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo. Originally the tree was planned to be tall but the height had to be reduced to due to the delays in construction. A Santa Claus with a sled was placed near the tree.
The tree broke the previous world record for the tallest artificial Christmas tree, which was tall and constructed in Guangzhou, China in 2015 by GZ ThinkBig Culture Communication Co. Ltd.