kotsy
Senior Member
I really hope the light extends as far as it does in the picture. Moving lights would be great, changing colours would be even better
I would love it if the lighting was animated, moving slowly from top to bottom, like falling rain. Movement is almost always a good thing.
and gravity pulling the glass down (as in thinner at the top and thicker at the bottom of a pane), etc..
So which building will get its lighting operational first, Aura or Trump?
Oh, that old myth.
No doubt though, there will be plenty of failures in these windows over time. It's the same in any window-wall condo in Toronto, over the span of 10-20 years. Hopefully the stricter reserve fund regulations for condo boards these days will ensure they can eventually be replaced.
That said, it's very depressing that in an age of a looming climate change crisis, we accept the use of window-wall systems that begin to wither and fail within 1-2 decades. (The same is not true for curtainwall.) It really hurts the energy performance of the building over time, and even the greenest buildings going up today are relatively vast consumers of energy.
Amen. I actually can't wait to see the lights fully functional. I still can't grasp how that much lighting will look from all corners of the city.I hope I'm wrong though, cause at these heights, those lights really transform this into a landmark.
I'm curious, where did you get 10-20 years from? The seals in five windows are still fine in my suite, installed in 1972.