Automation Gallery
Superstar
Haha, sad when your favorite skyscraper is almost topping off and barely showing up in Southcore
Christmas Eve morning sunrise...
View attachment 222288
View attachment 222289
View attachment 222290
I just hope that this building's facade doesn't get obstructed by some other big monstrous building in front of it in the future. That's why I wished this building to be 300M or more. Because of its iconest facade look!light and reflection control of this facade is truly remarkable..
also worth pointing out is that the location and positioning of the tower(s) over the rail corridor makes it possible to showcase this playfulness, glass tint colour becomes almost irrelevant..
I just hope that this building's facade doesn't get obstructed by some other big monstrous building in front of it in the future. That's why I wished this building to be 300M or more. Because of its iconest facade look!
Maybe I misunderstand you but what do you mean "the economics just aren't there to turn a profit on it as a landlord"? If you have a site that is large enough to give you a decent efficiency on the lower half of the building, you can certainly fit the servicing to go that high or higher. The issue isn't the building itself, it's that most American cities don't have enough prospective tenants to fill it.The number of office buildings in North America (outside New York) built after 1992 and occupied above 900 feet is incredibly low (I count 3). The economics just aren't there to turn a profit on it as a landlord.
Salesforce in San Fran, and Comcast in Philly (2 buildings) are the only ones I know of. Atlanta BOA Plaza was 1992 which is how I picked that date.
Union Park is a very unusual proposal, not just in Toronto but for the entire continent.
Maybe I misunderstand you but what do you mean "the economics just aren't there to turn a profit on it as a landlord"? If you have a site that is large enough to give you a decent efficiency on the lower half of the building, you can certainly fit the servicing to go that high or higher. The issue isn't the building itself, it's that most American cities don't have enough prospective tenants to fill it.
There are non-trivial inefficiencies/costs to height. A landlord with a 70 floor 1 million sqft usable space competing with no other advantages against several other landlords with 10 floor 1 million sqft usable spaces is going to take a substantial loss when trying to land tenants. NA commercial tenants haven't willingly paid a premium for high floors since the early 90's.
What they're paying for in Toronto is transportation accessibility and since that's restricted to about 1km around Union Station, is enabling an indirect premium to be charged for height (there simply isn't another option with pedestrian access to Union).