Toronto The Well | 174.03m | 46s | RioCan | Hariri Pontarini

Oct 20, 2019


DSC04051.JPG




DSC04052.JPG





DSC04053.JPG




DSC04054.JPG




DSC04055.JPG




DSC04056.JPG




DSC04057.JPG




DSC04058.JPG




DSC04059.JPG





DSC04061.JPG




DSC04063.JPG




DSC04064.JPG




DSC04066.JPG




DSC04069.JPG
 
Saturday Nov 2, 2019

Fun with the camera.
"Miniature – or Tilt-shift – effect is a photography function that makes photo subjects look way smaller than in real life with an almost toy-like, dreamy effect."


fullsizeoutput_315d.jpeg




fullsizeoutput_315e.jpeg




fullsizeoutput_315f.jpeg




fullsizeoutput_3160.jpeg




fullsizeoutput_3161.jpeg




fullsizeoutput_3162.jpeg
 
Last edited:
What exactly is above that portion that warrants such a large transfer slab?
 
What exactly is above that portion that warrants such a large transfer slab?

What I was told (by a supervisor at the site) was that the deep rebar nest was not for a transfer slab, but was the extra strength drive ramp for trucks - entering the site at the southwest corner of the property, and going around the west and north perimeters to get down to the loading dock area below. I have not seen the engineering documents, so I cannot use them as an authority for my response. What does seem strange is that there is very little perceptible grade to the ramp, if that is indeed what it is.
 
What I was told (by a supervisor at the site) was that the deep rebar nest was not for a transfer slab, but was the extra strength drive ramp for trucks - entering the site at the southwest corner of the property, and going around the west and north perimeters to get down to the loading dock area below. I have not seen the engineering documents, so I cannot use them as an authority for my response. What does seem strange is that there is very little perceptible grade to the ramp, if that is indeed what it is.
Interesting! Yes it was the lack of grade that was making me assume it was a transfer slab. I suppose in this case it is a "transfer slab" but for trucks!
 
Per the drawings on the City website - level P2 is the one with the thick slab - I'd call it a transfer slab because of the large open spaces with no columns on the loading level P4.

L3ikWgL.jpg


soF17ut.png
 

Back
Top