Still ridiculous. Your statement is the equivalent of seeing a half-finished rolls royce on the assembly line and stating as fact that a potentially gorgeous vehicle was already ruined by the addition of 15" hubcaps which you had neither yet seen or had knowledge of.
Can you answer the questions I asked above in post #2823? If not, then you have no business making any sweeping proclamations on the finished product. All you have to go on are a few pieces of cladding from a couple sides of the building, a lot of guessing, and understandably low expectations.
I cannot answer your question, but I certainly do hope that it will be clad in something other than the mediocre cladding currently being used here.
Also, if I were to ever witness a half-built rolls royce still on the assembly line get dressed in 15" hubcaps, I would be one of the first people to conclude that such a decision is shameful.
LOL you made up a ratio to judge the building yet you don't have any numbers to replace your variables and you still come to a conclusion? what is going on here? ALSO...it looks like you've already used this equation on the "average development" and on other "high end developments in the area" lol do you mind posting an excel spreadsheet with your findings professor?!?!
Let me tell you something "cladding cost:building cost" has ABSOLUTELY NOTHING to do with anything
Sorry to disappoint, but I coined that ratio based on logic, not actual numbers.
I'll give you an example though:
A) A $500 million dollar development with $10 million dollar cladding = 10:500 = 1:50 ratio for cladding cost:building cost
B) A $400 million dollar development with $40 million dollar cladding = 40:400 = 1:10 ratio
* note that this can only be used for buildings that cost roughly the same (i.e. a $50 thousand house with $50 thousand cladding will be 1:1, but it would still not be comparable to buildings that cost 10000 times more, though it would still have nice cladding for similarly priced houses).
From this ratio, I can say that building "B" would appear nicer than building "A" though the core structure might actually be less fancy.