SP!RE
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In all seriousness I'd think that personal drones like the ones currently available at Best Buy and the like will be able to capture angles like that by the time this thing is complete (5 years +?). Not trying to be cheeky here but when you consider the exponential progress of technology it's pretty likely.
99% of people will experience the building from further down Yonge Street looking up toward the building, or experience it from the sidewalk. If people can see it through Google Earth or a "drone" or whatever the future technology, that is not nearly as important as the actual human experience and interaction with the building.
The rendering above doesn't give much useful information about the tower's design apart from its rooftop terrace. Yet people here will judge its design off the rendering. I was simply reminding everyone to judge the building from the viewpoint it will actually be seen from (or from the interior spaces in which people will actually live), not from some strange angle in the sky used by marketers.
That said, the building won't be seen as it is in an elevation or other similar drawings, since that is a 2D projection.
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