Quote:
Originally Posted by Yuri
New York and Chicago skyscraper boom, for instance, have been heavily residential.
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Yes,
heavily residential, but not without significant new office towers being built either.
chicago has built 17 major office towers so far this century, totaling roughly 22M square feet of new class A space in big office towers (and that doesn't even include all of the space in the sub-400' range like the current west loop office building explosion).
here's how they shake out on height and square footage.
1. Salesforce Tower --- 2023 - 850' - 1.6M SF
2. 110 N Wacker ------ 2020 - 817' - 1.5m SF
3. 300 N LaSalle ------ 2008 - 785' - 1.3M SF
4. BCBS Tower -------- 2010 - 744' - 1.6M SF
5. River Point --------- 2017 - 732' - 1.0M SF
6. BMO Tower --------- 2021 - 727' - 1.5M SF
7. 150 N Riverside ---- 2017 - 724' - 1.2M SF
8. 111 S Wacker ------ 2005 - 681' - 1.5M SF
9. 71 S Wacker ------- 2005 - 679' - 1.8M SF
10. UBS Tower ------- 2001 - 652' - 1.4M SF
11. 155 N Wacker ---- 2009 - 638' - 1.2M SF
12. 353 N Clark ------ 2009 - 623' - 1.2M SF
13. Citadel Center --- 2003 - 580' - 1.5M SF
14. One S Dearborn - 2005 - 571 - 0.8M SF
15. CNA Center ------ 2018 - 517' - 0.8M SF
16. 191 N Wacker --- 2002 - 516' - 0.7M SF
17. 540 W Madison -- 2003 - 453' - 1.1M SF
source: SF figures are approximate and are pulled from a variety of online sources. height figures are CTBUH.
And I imagine that NYC has a similar list that's like 5x longer.
EDIT:
i merged the new thread into this old one on the same topic.