Yeah, 696 feet came from a good source.
That puts it shorter than River Point and 150 N Riverside, but taller than any residential building under construction now. |
Well maybe this is why they are about to start.
http://www.chicagobusiness.com/reale...or-700-million Nice profit of 700 million I don't think there is a design change this video wasn't up a few months ago......http://www.tishmanspeyer.com/propert...north-franklin It's visible in the skyline in the video, dope as hell. |
^ Holy crap. That video was seriously awesome
|
Beginning felt like a scene from the game "Watchdogs". One of the better rendering videos I've seen. :D
|
Quote:
|
Oh damn! Thanks for posting :cheers: The video was produced in 2014, per the ending credits. It's clear; this proposal is in full-on marketing mode. Not a chance they're redesigning it, at least for the time being.
By the way, the profit Tishman made on 353 was $315 Million, which still ain't chump change. |
Def one of the best videos for a proposed building..very thorough..and music was great..lol
|
|
super excited for this one!
|
Quote:
I think the difference between the 2010 and under contract 2014 sales price was a bit higher, as I haven't seen a final purchase price (or tentative, as it's still of course under contract, with I would assume a likely closing date sometime just prior to year-end).........all we know at the moment is the price is somewhat north of $700 mil...... Regardless, this is yet another very strong signal to the market (specifically to Buck, Tishman, Hines, others) that it is time to build, build, build (in addition to the two office towers already under construction)........will have more to say about this in the high-rise compilation thread..... |
Quote:
|
Quote:
I don't doubt for a second that the 696' figure is that actual working height of the current design here. In the video on Tishman's website, you can clearly see that some of the shots from inside the rendered very high floor interior looking out over the cityscape are clearly showing a view from over 700' up (look at the angle looking down on 155 N Wacker, look at how it looks down over the way to 77 W Wacker....and mind you, this is from an actual occupied office floor, not from the top of the parapet or anything..... ....However, that doesn' mean a whole lot, they could have the vantage point off - its just a rendering....there's no law that says the height implied needs to be realistic, or it could be very realistic, and the height of the working design when the video was made earlier this year could have been taller. At the end of the day, the actual planned heights of these towers are in flux in the months before construction begins/financing package wrapped (150 Riverside, RiverPoint, 151 N Franklin), and as we know even in the months after construction begins (150 Riverside at minimum)............ |
Fun video -- with a few revelations about the future:
Metra takes over the El stop at Washington & Wells (0:26) Blondes (but no one else in town) develop a propensity to flip their hair (1:17, 2:02, and 3:34) and Garrett Kelleher still visits from time to time (3:20) ;) |
Tishman Speyer kicks ass. Krueck+Sexton kicks dick.
http://www.ksarch.com/projects/130NF...es/image_4.jpg ksarch.com :tup::tup::tup::tup::tup: :cheers::cheers::cheers::cheers: :yes: |
Positive news here
|
Nice I like this one!
|
Awesome this one is a beauty
|
Quote:
|
Quote:
I strongly prefer an open office plan. It's probably partly due to me working in the trading industry where that is pretty much the standard, but better air and light, easier identification of where people I need are, and easier for people who need me to find me all make it so much more efficient than high-wall cubes. People talk about "distractions" and such, but the privacy of a high-walled cube also makes it easier for people to slack off, which, in my experience, more than offsets any improvement fewer distractions allow from an organization standpoint. And some "distractions" are actually beneficial to a business if they are keeping workers informed and working on the necessary parts of a project when they need to be. Isolation can make change harder simply because people are less aware of what others are doing. This is going to sound bad, and I don't aim it any anyone in this thread, but it's also been my experience that the people who gripe the most about open plan offices are often the least-productive workers. The only real exception are people doing work that requires privacy, such as certain kinds of law, HR departments, executives, etc. And even then, in the case of executives when you're visible as an executive you can usually muster more out of your workers than you can if they never see you. So, basically, better light, better air, and having actual line-of-sight of what your team is doing is a huge advantage that, in my experience, more than offsets the switching-costs of additional distractions and disruptions brought on by open-plan office layouts. |
the only people who like open floor plans are loudmouths in sales and marketing, and bosses who like to spy on employees instead of managing.
|
All times are GMT. The time now is 11:51 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.8.7
Copyright ©2000 - 2024, vBulletin Solutions, Inc.