archited
Senior Member
They do have a green light to build, @Swore. As an architect myself, I can assure you that Alldritt as the architect's client (in this case Brad Kennedy is the architect) did not green-light construction documents until 1. they had approval from the City to proceed, 2. they had actually secured the missing land pieces to their development (a closed City street among those), 3. talked to a number of hoteliers to determine structural functionality for the hospitality portion of the building, and 4. had completed soil testing to verify feasibility for a structure this large and had confirmed that verification with City plan-check engineers. I suspect -- but I don't know for sure -- that all of these points have now been completed. From the point of their completion it would take an office the size of Brad Kennedy's at least a year to complete construction documents (and especially considering civil and structural engineering, mechanical, plumbing and electrical engineering).
All of the foregoing considered, I was surprised, actually, to hear Deana -- Alldritt's representative for Condo sales -- say that construction was scheduled to start in late 2019; I would have thought it more likely to be 2020. I believe one of the reasons they are trying to get in the ground as quickly as they are is so that they do not have to build the temporary public park -- an unnecessary expense that will just add to their bottom line in a negative way. Considering the hillside slope and the need for soil retention, winter is the best time to start construction -- no rain, ground frozen, better labour market, to name a few points. If I were a betting man (and I am not), I would look for actual excavation to begin in January 2020.
As to Wikipedia's accuracy in this instance... well, that is another story altogether.
All of the foregoing considered, I was surprised, actually, to hear Deana -- Alldritt's representative for Condo sales -- say that construction was scheduled to start in late 2019; I would have thought it more likely to be 2020. I believe one of the reasons they are trying to get in the ground as quickly as they are is so that they do not have to build the temporary public park -- an unnecessary expense that will just add to their bottom line in a negative way. Considering the hillside slope and the need for soil retention, winter is the best time to start construction -- no rain, ground frozen, better labour market, to name a few points. If I were a betting man (and I am not), I would look for actual excavation to begin in January 2020.
As to Wikipedia's accuracy in this instance... well, that is another story altogether.