Developer: Tridel, Mizrahi Developments
Architect: Foster + Partners, Core Architects
  
Address: 1 Bloor St W, Toronto
Category: Residential (Hotel, Condo), Commercial (Retail)
Status: ConstructionCrane(s): 1
Height: 1,013 ft / 308.60 mStoreys: 85 storeys
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Toronto The One | 308.6m | 85s | Tridel | Foster + Partners

As I mentioned last week, something special today. (I'll add my regular 1 Bloor shots later today or tomorrow.) On March 28, 1975, 50 years ago today, I walked down to the CN Tower, its antenna still being installed, and took shots, and also went up to the Toronto Dominion Centre observation floor in the TD Bank Tower, got shots of the CN Tower and of the First Canadian Place, topped off and adding the skin.

These shots were with my hand-dandy Pocket Instamatic, using 110 film... can't find the negatives, so these are scans from the prints. Because I used a scanner, I couldn't get the file sizes small enough to post, so these are shots from my phone off my laptop screen!

So here you go, as 1 Bloor W closes in on a milestone, surpassing in height the FCP which has held the record for a half century, a few shots of that tower under construction, and also of the CN Tower, the ultimate height record-holder, also under construction. Several weeks after these shots were taken, the final pieces of the antenna were added to top off the CN Tower. (I was not in town for that.)

The first shot from down John Street, taken from where Metro Hall is now. The crane still on top of the FCP at the left. Then from the observation deck of the TD Centre. A scale model of the CN Tower is seen in the reflection of the window. The observation deck closed after the CN Tower opened. I seem to remember that the Commerce Court had an observation deck, also closed after the CN Tower opened...

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As I mentioned last week, something special today. (I'll add my regular 1 Bloor shots later today or tomorrow.) On March 28, 1975, 50 years ago today, I walked down to the CN Tower, its antenna still being installed, and took shots, and also went up to the Toronto Dominion Centre observation floor in the TD Bank Tower, got shots of the CN Tower and of the First Canadian Place, topped off and adding the skin.

These shots were with my hand-dandy Pocket Instamatic, using 110 film... can't find the negatives, so these are scans from the prints. Because I used a scanner, I couldn't get the file sizes small enough to post, so these are shots from my phone off my laptop screen!

So here you go, as 1 Bloor W closes in on a milestone, surpassing in height the FCP which has held the record for a half century, a few shots of that tower under construction, and also of the CN Tower, the ultimate height record-holder, also under construction. Several weeks after these shots were taken, the final pieces of the antenna were added to top off the CN Tower. (I was not in town for that.)

The first shot from down John Street, taken from where Metro Hall is now. The crane still on top of the FCP at the left. Then from the observation deck of the TD Centre. A scale model of the CN Tower is seen in the reflection of the window. The observation deck closed after the CN Tower opened. I seem to remember that the Commerce Court had an observation deck, also closed after the CN Tower opened...

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@jer1961, Truly appreciate your contributions.
 
Curious questions about tall towers and laying floor plates: Does it take longer to complete proportional to the height said floor being constructed is off the ground? It always seems to me the last floors outside the mechanicals take longer to complete.
 
Curious questions about tall towers and laying floor plates: Does it take longer to complete proportional to the height said floor being constructed is off the ground? It always seems to me the last floors outside the mechanicals take longer to complete.
Yes! Good question—there are a few reasons why construction tends to slow down toward the top, even outside of the mechanical floors.

One big factor is vertical transportation. Getting workers, tools, and materials all the way up to the top floors takes a lot more time the higher you go. Hoists or lifts are in high demand by that point, and sometimes there are fewer of them operating near the top. Just moving people and stuff becomes a bottleneck.

Weather also plays a huge role. Wind speeds are stronger at higher elevations, and that can slow or stop work altogether—especially anything involving cranes or concrete pours. Even on a sunny day, high winds can delay things at the top while the floors below stay active.

Then there’s the added complexity and safety protocols. Working at extreme heights means more time spent setting up scaffolding, tying off for safety, and just moving around carefully. It’s not as fast or smooth as working lower down, where everything is more accessible.

Another thing that contributes is that the last few floors are often more customized. While the mid-floors are usually repetitive and can be built pretty efficiently, the upper floors might have unique structural features—like setbacks, angled walls, or even penthouse layouts. That added complexity slows things down.

Finally, by the time crews get to the top, there’s often a shift in focus toward interior work on the completed lower floors. Resources like workers and equipment might be divided between finishing the interior and topping out the structure, which can stretch things out a bit.

So yeah, you're absolutely right—those last few floors can drag out more than you’d expect. Not necessarily because they're higher, but because a bunch of smaller challenges start to stack up (no pun intended).
 
Photos taken today, Friday (Mar. 28). Lots of movement on the top since I posted last Friday. As seen in mbrrrr's post above, it looks like they are working now on level 82, whose ceiling is at 285 m. And, most of the scaffolds parked below the 4th mechanical level have now been raised above it as work commences on the building's final stretch. The corner scaffolds encasing the hangers below are where they were last week, around level 73, save for the SE corner which is up a level. The black Rail Climbing Systems installing the buildings skin are where they were last week, level 56, soon to clear the 3rd mechanical level to install level 59's skin. A small section of cladding on a super column on the south face is all that is newly visible since last week.

With the side blue scaffolds on the south face now above the 4th mechanical level, the external elevator is up one more floor, to 73. And the crane has been raised one segment. As I shot in the later afternoon, the next set of crane column braces were being installed, at the base of level 76. Check out the photos of this at the end of the post.

Starting with the view from the south, Yonge and Dundas, moving up to Charles east of Yonge. Then, the view from by Holt Renfrew on Bloor west of Yonge, including a tighter view of the west face at the top. Then, from Cumberland east of Bay, with another closer look at the top. The view from the NE corner of Yonge and Bloor. Then the view from Queen's Park Cres. W and Hoskin, and then from Queen's Park Crescent and College (taken before the brace was raised, workers are visible on the 76th floor). And ending with a sequence of shots as a new crane brace was installed.




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