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^^ What do you mean? The first few floors (lobby + residential) look fine. The large parking garage at the base of the tower will be covered up by plenty of greenery and park space, so I don't see why that would hurt the aesthetics of this building. -See page 1 for what I'm talking about.
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Nick, your first shot of july 5th is awesome. Working, dangling, smoking all at once. Shows how badass those workers are.
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July 9, 2018
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July 10, 2018
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July 11, 2018
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July 16, 2018
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July 17, 2018
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It looks like this is the cantilevered deck as shown in the renderings.
https://i.imgur.com/vU1WOmn.jpg 7-24 |
It's great to see this thing finally emerge from the ground..
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July 5
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I love that moody third shot
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This one feels like it's taking forever.
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I fish the river a lot and every time I go by, very little appears to have been done. My girlfriend always asks me what the hell is taking them so long. I imagine a lot of non-SSP people out there are wondering the same thing, even though there are a myriad of valid reasons. |
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The lower floors are no doubt tricky. Walsh is also known to be slower in their concrete cycles than the big concrete subcontractors (McHugh, Adjustable, Goebel... and more recently Pepper). For instance 1326 S Michigan (Walsh) has a 5-day cycle versus Essex (Adjustable) at 3-day for similar size floor plates. NEMA (McHugh) once they passed the final setback and got to a similar size floor plate as those two projects also is on a 3-day. I'm not sure how big the WPE floor plate is when they get to typical floors, but I would expect their cycle to be a little longer than if one of the big concrete guys was doing it.
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