Here's the breakdown according to my numbers (sourced from CTBUH).
(Someone correct me if I'm wrong but I believe there are no 150m+ buildings in Chicagoland outside Chicago proper.)
Assuming all the current proposals are built with a latest possible completion year of 2028 (this is a horrible assumption but let's just run with it for now), then the GTA will pass Chicago in number of 150m+ buildings by one single building in that year, 2028.
Again some of these proposals will not be built by then, and some of them may even be chopped to a height under 150m, and new proposals will pop up for both cities in this timeframe as well. But given that East Harbour and Christie's are likely to include towers above 150m, and those projects have a timeline for the next decade, it is very reasonable to assume that Toronto will pass Chicago in this metric sometime between 2025-2030. If our cutoff is at 200 or 300 metres it's a different story however, it may take longer than that for Toronto to pass Chicago in the supertall race.
But we are closing that gap:
Cities | Count of buildings >= 150 metres, current + construction + proposed |
City of Toronto | 138 (not including Christie's or East Harbour) |
Toronto + Mississauga + Vaughan | 149 |
Chicago | 148 |
Assuming all the current proposals are built with a latest possible completion year of 2028 (this is a horrible assumption but let's just run with it for now), then the GTA will pass Chicago in number of 150m+ buildings by one single building in that year, 2028.
Again some of these proposals will not be built by then, and some of them may even be chopped to a height under 150m, and new proposals will pop up for both cities in this timeframe as well. But given that East Harbour and Christie's are likely to include towers above 150m, and those projects have a timeline for the next decade, it is very reasonable to assume that Toronto will pass Chicago in this metric sometime between 2025-2030. If our cutoff is at 200 or 300 metres it's a different story however, it may take longer than that for Toronto to pass Chicago in the supertall race.
But we are closing that gap:
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