The mosque is located next to Perdana Putra, where the Malaysian Prime Minister’s office and Putrajaya lake are located. It is named after the first Prime Minister of Malaysia – Tungku Abdul Rahman Putra Al-Haj

The mosque is modelled after the Persian Islamic architecture of the Safavid period, with some design elements borrowed from other mosques around the world. Its basement wall is reminiscent of the one in Morocco’s King Hassan Mosque, while its 116-metre minaret resembles that of the Sheikh Omar Mosque in Baghdad, Iraq. Masjid Putra consists of three main areas – a 12-column main prayer hall, a landscaped courtyard named The Sahn and an area housing a religious learning centre and function rooms. The mosque can accommodate 15,000 worshippers at a time.

This place is called the “pink mosque” because of the dome structure built of pink granite, which is also a feature that attracts many tourists to visit here. Tourists can come here to visit the outside of the church during non-prayer hours.

In addition to the Putrajaya mosque, there are 2 other pink mosques in Southeast Asia located in the Philippines and Indonesia.

According to itc.gov.my and Wikipedia.