AHK
Senior Member
October 16 - 9:30 AM, Ongoing installation, but still only appears to be a single crew on site.
Wow starting to take shapeOctober 16 - 9:30 AM, Ongoing installation, but still only appears to be a single crew on site.
View attachment 604744
View attachment 604745
...and question answered! And thanks again, @AHK! /bowsIs that one of the first of the "triangle waves" to get cladding?
The glass block absolutely could fail at intermediate points. They are not one giant IGU, but a bunch of smaller glass blocks preassembled into one larger unit. So the quality control for assembly into one unit at the offshore unit fabricator itself must be much higher.The glass blocks aren't integral to anything. It's a standard curtainwall frame with blocks mounted where you'd normally have glass or a panel.
The real leaks are going to happen at all of those transitions and interfaces. Inside corners, outside corners, stepbacks, balconies...
The glass block absolutely could fail at intermediate points. They are not one giant IGU, but a bunch of smaller glass blocks preassembled into one larger unit. So the quality control for assembly into one unit at the offshore unit fabricator itself must be much higher.
Both vision and spandrel configurations exist for the glass block.You may have more insight than me, but I was assuming from what I saw that those frames had a fully sealed backpan behind that block "unit", so that even if the intermediate points failed you'd still have a drain path behind the unit? Not something you'd want to rely on, but to get through warranty...
The most likely replacement parts are obviously infill components, which are universal more or less. For the rest, not sure. If they need to, whoever is doing the job can cut new dies for the old stuff. Whomever came on board is definitely providing custom dies anyway.You might also know, what on earth is their plan for replacement parts? Those extrusions don't exist anymore. I didn't even think they had enough in stock to finish this as it was. I'm guessing they went with this because they were never going to get an alternative in time, before Westbank's financing vaporized?
...kinda reminds of that mecha/robotic construction gear used in a Gundam manga I read once.Final update from late Friday, October 18. The installation crew was finishing up after a long day - additional sections installed. The spyder crane was being moved over to the next section in preparation for the coming weeks work. Interesting unit - it chimes and audibly announces when it initiates a change of state - starting to move, putting its legs down.