Benito
Senior Member
Today.
Rough math says it should top out in roughly 1.5 years, that make sense?That's 6 working days a floor. For a concrete high rise structure, a decent pace.
Rough math says it should top out in roughly 1.5 years, that make sense?
12 days per floor (slab+walls) and at least double that for the mechanical and transitional floors before and after them makes it more like December 2025 by my calcs. Any 1 day improvement per floor is worth about 2 months assuming 60 floors to go…Rough math says it should top out in roughly 1.5 years, that make sense?
It seems to take 10 calendar days per floor, which includes the walls. I calculate between 1.6 to 2 years to top it up.12 days per floor (slab+walls) and at least double that for the mechanical and transitional floors before and after them makes it more like December 2025 by my calcs. Any 1 day improvement per floor is worth about 2 months assuming 60 floors to go…
I’ll take the over…It seems to take 10 calendar days per floor, which includes the walls. I calculate between 1.6 to 2 years to top it up.
I’ll take the over…![]()
![]()
I think it’s fantastic that we get such frequent and up close documentation of the rise of this building, I will continue to enjoy it no matter how long it takes.Though they have been achieving 8-10 calendar days /full floor cycles, inevitably the pace will slow down during the winter, add holidays, the fact that the mechanical sections take a month to construct and you get 49*1.5+3*4+2 and you get about 88 weeks (assuming only 85 floors) or 20 months and you arrive at Feb 2025. If they get their 94 floors, add 3 months.
Seeing One Bloor and the empty sky above it really gives a scale of how ridiculously tall this will be, even without the additional floorsFrom Bloor and Spadina on June 6:
View attachment 483456View attachment 483457View attachment 483458