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It's fine to view the GGH as a Toronto-centric cultural and economic region. Kind of like SoCal, or a lot of American CSAs, but I wouldn't consider that to be an accurate reflection of the metropolitan area. |
Who is building the most in North America, per data from SkyscraperPage.com
Database search for each city by construction only. Toronto - 222 buildings New York - 44 buildings (lol, woefully undercounted) Miami - 11 buildings... Chicago - 5 buildings... Okay... I thought this would be a good idea but no. lol Toronto certainly does keep its information current and up-to-date for the most part. |
Hmm according to emporis over 300 building u/c in New York
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That's ridiculous. We probably have more than 44 12 story+ buildings under construction right now in Queens, heck even maybe Flushing alone.
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I certainly didn't see hundreds of tall towers (let's say 300 ft+) under construction throughout the rest of the city, either. Of course there are some very noticeable supertalls or near supertalls U/C, those are hard to miss! It's easy to just say things like "there are probably X number of buildings under construction", but that doesn't alway turn out to be close to reality once you actually go out and look around. I think Toronto currently has more hi-rises (and skyscrapers) U/C than NYC, it's on New Yorkers to go out and count building sites to prove me wrong. |
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Granted, Toronto is a different beast, in that so much of the construction activity is in random suburban nodes. There's a collection of giant towers next to an Ikea right off a freeway. That would never happen in the U.S. But I still don't think Toronto would have greater activity at any highrise or multifamily cutoff. |
Guys we are overthinking this. It's from the SSP database. Has to get updated.
Go with Emporis or CTBUH figures. Tend to be more recent until SSP database catches up... Those NYC figures are so low that it made me immunocompromised. A better way to look at the 44 figure is to think of it like dog years. That will be more to the reality, especially if we are talking within the 10-12 floor category, which will vary a lot and often undercounted. The Emporis figure of 315 is closer to reality, which proves that the dog year methodology is closer to reality. When in doubt, think of dog years for current NYC construction figures. I mean for the love of sweet baby racks Jesus, there are more than 44 towers alone over 22 floors u/c. And keep in mind because something has 19 or 20 floors, doesn't mean its short. Ceiling heights alone can make a 20 floor tower a lot taller or larger than it looks on paper. Also that Miami figure is woefully wrong. |
Someone was triggered enough to do a Google Maps flyover of Flushing? Anyway ... NYYimby does a pretty good job of researching and compiling data from the DOB and his 2022 construction report includes this: "In all, Brooklyn tallies 43 ten-story-plus filings. So that's 43 buildings of 10 stories + going up in Brooklyn alone." These are just approved permits for construction that began in 2021, not those that were either already under construction or approved in 2022.
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https://i.kym-cdn.com/photos/images/...50/147/d92.jpg |
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Miami is building a ton. Recently posted this in the Miami compilation.
Note just a smaller area. Pound for pound... Miami is on fire! 2022 will see a ton of projects starting up as well. ================== Quote:
https://i.imgur.com/N2hcDE6.jpeg Credit: NXT |
As much as NYC is building, I don't think it's near enough for the size of the city
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I don't know about there being 44 high-rises U/C in Flushing, but the New York numbers are always grossly underrepresented on SSP since it's been years since active forumers were actively cataloguing construction activity in the city.
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One thing that's odd about the GTA is that the fancy areas often have the least construction, and the less desirable areas often have the most "luxury condos". Probably trans-national differences in zoning and regulatory framework.
For example, Yonge north of the 401 is kinda dumpy. But there's an orgy of gigantic towers everywhere, topped only by downtown Toronto. And most look pretty expensive and upscale. Yonge south of the 401 is very affluent, but looks basically the same as 25 years ago, when I was visiting nearby relatives as a kid. There are numerous SFH teardowns, but the essential character is the same. North York looks like some alien spacecraft touched down. If Toronto were in the U.S., Yonge north of the 401 would still be dumpy strip malls and worn bungalows, and any construction would be concentrated to the south. Toronto's growth is much more efficient, but it's hard to understand. |
If anybody is an Emporis research member... maybe share some data?
Emporis on a side note is pretty damn good. They have some very under the radar projects listed for NYC. Like I'm talking very under the radar, even if some are say 12-15 floors. The Emporis figures are your best bet. Even more so than the CTBUH for a better u/c status gauge. |
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The affluent areas have the strongest Nimbies so nothing gets built in those areas and vice versa. Zoning was created a hundred years ago for this exact reason so rich people could tell everyone else what they can and can't build. |
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There are some cultural differences for sure, but I don't see wealthy Canadians or Americans varying drastically in their desire to keep high-density development away from their neighbourhoods. I think the primary difference is that the wealthy Torontonians never fled to the suburbs en mass. As such their protectionism creates a much more stark visual contrast with swaths of low-rise, undevelopable areas so close to the core. In many U.S. cities, you could build pretty continuously outwards from the core without running into such large areas of wealthy homeowners opposing you. In terms of North York, I wouldn't say the condos are typically that high end. The area was also designated for high density development before the surrounding neighbourhoods became as pricey as they are today. In addition, the area tends to attract more East Asian immigrants who obviously are culturally familiar with high-rise living. |
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