Quote:
Originally Posted by JDRCRASH
In all seriousness, at this point, having a building be 2nd tallest in the world matters more than the 1st, because the building that currently holds the latter, quite frankly, has simply bastardized that title and has turned it into a p***s measuring contest.
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I find it rather surprising that I'm truly somewhat

by this....
Quote:
At 1,100 feet, the new Wilshire Grand will technically become the tallest building west of the Mississippi River, trumping the reigning champion that is also located in Downtown, the U.S. Bank building.
But, Martin clarifies, "To the level of occupied floors, the other building is taller."
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When certain forumers & others who through the months & yrs have been going on & on about the height of the new tower...& wanting it to be as tall as possible....I waved them off as just going through a silly game of 'who's on first'. But now that the final details have come out on grand wilshire, I realize that, when all is said & done, I really am a secret admirer of the idea of a new bldg in dtla being super tall.
All the delays in getting new devlpt started in the hood, & filling new space with shops, residents, guests &....definitely new companies.....made me so cautious that I forget that, yes, it really is more exciting when a new proj is a skyscraper....a true skyscraper.....or something that I imagine attracts many visitors to a website called....skyscraperpage.com.
btw, one reason why I haven't fussed over whether a new tower in dtla is super tall or not is cuz I notice things like, on this very website, an ad for condos in the evo tower....which was completed how many yrs ago? And I don't think that ad is for resell units, but for condos that never sold in the first place.
as for apts in the brockman bldg, for some reason the pace of leasing seems to have slowed down over the past few wks. About 2 or 3 months ago, a good portion of 25 to 30 of the brockman's apts were leased. But over the past few wks, the remaining 12 or 13 seem to be hanging on, still not spoken for by any new tenant. Hope that isn't a sign that demand can peak in unexpected or unpredictable ways.