Tuesday, February 14, 2017

UP UP GO AMAZING BUILDINGS

Scan the New York City skyline and there's a new high -- 432 Park Avenue -- a pencil-thin, tall, concrete structure rising above Central Park.
My neck hurts when I walk by it and look up, up, up.

It's a residence, the tallest one in New York City, and the city's second-tallest building -- 1446 feet tall and 95 floors, while the 1,774 foot One World Trade Center has 104 floors. 

Here's how the city looks from the 95th floor, the million dollar penthouse's master bathroom.

In 1930, the first-ever super-tall, 1,046 foot Chrysler Building, was completed with its 77 floors. For 60 years thereafter, the U.S. was the only country to have buildings that were more than 984 feet tall. The Empire State Building, built during the depression, reigned as the tallest building in the world with its 1,250 feet and 102 floors for 41 years until the World Trade Center (1,368 feet, 110 floors) was completed in 1972. Two years later it was surpassed by Chicago's 1,450 foot-110 floor-Sears Tower that was the world's tallest building for 24 years.

The development of the elevator, the evolving use of steel beams, columns, and glass enabled architects to build taller  structures. In 1998, the Petronas Tower (1,483 feet, 88 floors) opened in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. In 2004, the 1,670 foot Taipei was completed in Taiwan. In 2011 the Burj Dubai became the world's tallest building at 2,716 feet, 160 floors, and it contains the world's fastest elevators.

What is it this up up up trend?

Tall, tallest, taller is very tall.
Too many floors make it a mall.
Looking down at the street is a feat--
You fearfully feel you might fall.

Architecture, nowadays, has gone far beyond tall. Wildly-weird buildings are being built for many, many millions of dollars. Eeny-meeny-mini-moe, which one would you like to go and visit.

What about The Cobra tower?


When I showed this photo to my husband, he asked "Were is it?" I was surprised to learn that some people say it's in Kuwait, others mention another city -- apparently it hasn't yet been built. The photo sent me scurrying around the web and finding other marvelous buildings and this video.

Wow -- it's pictures of 35 most amazing (and some of the weirdest) buildings in the world. Browse --  brace yourself for gasps, chuckles, utter amazement and click the link.

2 comments:

Dustspeck said...

I never want to live above 7 stories. I'm at six right now and that's high enough for me. Fire ladders reach seven floors. That is pretty much it for most places, pretty sure? Up, up, up and away they build; but, what is so great about all those clouds? Eddie Harris, (The Jazz Great, from Chicago), had a funny observation about that. He said that, "in a highrise apartment you look outside and all you see is clouds. You go downstairs and it's dry as %&@#." I believe that, when you see how high some of the new ones are reaching. I don't basejump; do you? I don't like my ears popping either due to altitude adjustments. That could happen in some of those monsters I'll bet? Maybe people should think more like termites and build down as well as up? It's been working for the Ant People for a long time, I Hopi?

Linda Vee Sado of Slippery When Wet said...

I worked in those high rises for years when I lived in Chicago. I hated being packed into the elevators like sardines trying to get to our offices. When I worked for a security outfit the owners secretary came to work one day and jumped out the 11th floor window. Weird memories, Frank Nitti was also shot to death in that same building on LaSalle and Wacker http://www.myalcaponemuseum.com/id41.htm