From Nov 21:
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Is it just me or does the ceiling heights look very low in this tower? My building (The King William) has 9 foot ceilings does anyone know what the ceiling heights are in this one? When driving by I swear it looked like it was 7 feet'ish, I'm 6 foot and joked that I may bump my head in this building.
 
Is it just me or does the ceiling heights look very low in this tower? My building (The King William) has 9 foot ceilings does anyone know what the ceiling heights are in this one? When driving by I swear it looked like it was 7 feet'ish, I'm 6 foot and joked that I may bump my head in this building.

When I was involved on the site in the summer most floors we were pouring were well over 8 feet we were in the podium at that time so it had some really strange floor heights but the shortest I recall was the mezzanine level which was slightly shorter than the rest of the levels.

Digging up the elevations from the CoA months ago shows 2.95m for the standard floor which is about 9.5 feet which certainly feels similar to what it was like when I was on the site.
 
When I was involved on the site in the summer most floors we were pouring were well over 8 feet we were in the podium at that time so it had some really strange floor heights but the shortest I recall was the mezzanine level which was slightly shorter than the rest of the levels.

Digging up the elevations from the CoA months ago shows 2.95m for the standard floor which is about 9.5 feet which certainly feels similar to what it was like when I was on the site.
Awww it was the mezzanine level because it was the only floor I've seen in person with the spandrel and thought it looked very short and assumed all the floors were that height. Thanks for the info.
 
yup - 2.95m floors are the standard here, with the mezzanine being slightly shorter at 2.8m.

The 2.95m includes the floor slab itself though - it actually results in 8.5ft ceilings at that height within a unit from what I remember. 2.8m floor to floor results in 8ft ceilings.

2.95m floor to floor is the industry standard for new residential buildings - some floors need more to accommodate transfer slabs, but result in the same 8.5ft ceiling.

This is different from older buildings which historically had 7-7.5ft ceilings and thus shorter heights. Across 30 storeys, that adds up! It's a big reason a modern 30-storey building is typically substantially taller than a 30-storey building built 50 years ago.

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I was shocked when I first viewed my new unit having 9 foot ceilings seemed so grand and modern to me coming from the Olympia where I could touch the ceiling without needing a step stool haha.
 

Some insights on Insta
 

Some insights on Insta
Cool video, one floor a week pour concrete this is moving fast.
 

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