Menara Saidah is a 28-storey office tower in East Jakarta that stands as one of Indonesia's most infamous haunted buildings. The tower, which was operational for some years, was gradually abandoned after reports of intense supernatural activity drove tenants away. According to the most widely circulated version of the legend, the building's original owner named it after his wife, Saidah, who was murdered. Her ghost reportedly haunts the upper floors, and tenants described hearing a woman's screaming, seeing lights on empty floors, and experiencing elevators stopping at floors where no one was waiting. Some accounts describe the apparition of a woman in white falling past the windows — replaying a death that may have occurred in the building. The tower now stands largely vacant in the East Jakarta skyline, an imposing monument to supernatural fear's impact on commercial real estate. Indonesia's real estate market, like Hong Kong's, takes haunted properties seriously, and Menara Saidah's inability to retain tenants has made it a cautionary tale in Jakarta's development community. The building's sheer height — towering over the surrounding neighbourhood — means its empty, darkened windows are visible for miles, a constant reminder of what drove everyone out.
