Riseth
Senior Member
May 23, 2024
You're right. I didn't notice that before either. Good catch!I hadn't realized this before, but at the top of each suspended mega-section (at the mechanical floor slab),
there are projecting corners created by the beveled cornice that appears nowhere else on the facade.
None of the hanger cladding panels project past the curtain wall at the tip of the corners.
Good catch. I think this is due to the fact that for the other sections, the horizontal pieces are attached to the angular ones and the resulting mirrored ‘4’ figures are attached flat to each other while here the horizontal pieces are attached to each other resulting in what appears to be a protruding corner.I hadn't realized this before, but at the top of each suspended mega-section (at the mechanical floor slab),
there are projecting corners created by the beveled cornice that appears nowhere else on the facade.
None of the hanger cladding panels project past the curtain wall at the tip of the corners.
Good catch indeed -- and easy to miss. It's a nice detail -- a classical, even "Vitruvian" reference. If you think of the tower as five shorter, identical towers stacked on top of each other, with the mechanical levels forming the "ground floor" of each of the upper sections, then the protruding corners are part of the finishing "cornice" at the top of each section that define and finish off the top of each section before the next mechanical level.Good catch. I think this is due to the fact that for the other sections, the horizontal pieces are attached to the angular ones and the resulting mirrored ‘4’ figures are attached flat to each other while here the horizontal pieces are attached to each other resulting in what appears to be a protruding corner.
yes this is the floor which has bench seatingYou're right. I didn't notice that before either. Good catch!
They’re made of Renderanium.it's funny how this was gold, and then champagne and now a very subdued champagne. this building blends in a little too perfectly with the CIBC building next door. I think originally the colours were a bit different.
So two main things have happened in that span of time one we switched over to sky grid as the general contractor so they would have had to organize as well as hitting the third mechanical floor which generally take longer time anyways especially if you have a new general contractor trying to figure everything out this project does move a lot slower because there are a lot of systems involved in its constructionWell, here in the thread-where-time-stands-still, it really does appear that this thing's barely moved in 2 or 3 months. At this rate it won't top out until next summer (at which point Pinnacle One Yonge will have overtaken it, and CIBC 2 will be ready for its new occupants). And, keep in mind, we're not talking the Sydney Opera Hall, or La Sagrada Famila here--just a slightly fancier than average condo. It's like the project exists in it's own, inexplicable time continuum where things happen 10X slower than normal. I have to admit that it's both vexing and strangely fascinating how this project just keeps going on, seemingly active, yet virtually unchanging. It's become the Waiting for Godot of Toronto builds.
Serious question here: How much longer can the money spigots stay on for this eternal flame of developer incompetence? And when the well does run dry, what happens then? Stop at whatever that floor they're on and the fleeced owners can finish the interiors themselves? I dunno, I find this whole fiasco to be an enigma wrapped in mystery.
(OK. I've said to much, I'll show my way out... *ducks for cover*)