jje1000
Senior Member
That's a shame. Though, it should make the remaining two towers stand out even more.
I hope they don't use window wall for the remaining towers, IMO.
That's a shame. Though, it should make the remaining two towers stand out even more.
what is a window wall?
Here's a pretty good recap of what @Nastapoka provided me with when I was curious about the differences between the two. I have a good general understanding, but it's always great to learn more about the two:what is a window wall?
-Curtain wall hangs in front of the floor slab and is anchored back to the slab at each level to support the dead load of each story of glazing. Window wall typically sits on the slab edge spanning from floor to floor with a spandrel panel "cap" over the exposed slab edge
-Assembly wise, curtain wall enclosures are glazed from the exterior as opposed to interior. Window wall panels are installed from the interior.
-Performance wise, curtain wall can act as a rainscreen, meaning water that penetrates joints is designed to drain along a secondary drainage plane within the joint. Window wall systems are face-sealed, any water infiltration is a failure in the system.
-Window wall also relies heavily on the joints at each floor level. Differential settlement/movement can lead to air and water leakage. Curtain wall, because it hangs off the slab, can absorb differential movement between it and the concrete/steel structure.
It gets a lot more complicated when you look at different types of curtain and or window wall: stick-framed vs unitized curtain wall or hybrid window wall, but I think those are the basics.
Window wall cant be all bad can it? Is there a building in Toronto that is an example of good quality window wall?
Reminds me of the TORONTO sign at NPS.
What building is this, and where? Whose photo?Window wall with lots of spandrel but, no grill work. Clean
Gee, couldn't find one in Toronto?...lolYa, Bankers Hall in the background. Building is Park Point.