Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Shaw Tower or variation, may refer to: Shaw Tower (Vancouver) , an office and residential complex in BC, Canada; regional HQ of Shaw Communications Shaw Monument , aka "Shaw Tower", in Preswick, South Ayrshire, Scotland
LEED Platinum for Office Building and LEED Gold certification for Residential Tower as part of the new downtown Telus headquarters project. [41] 21: TD Tower: 127.1 m (417 ft) 30: 1972: This building is also known as the Toronto Dominion Tower. [42] [43] 22= Capitol Residences: 126.2 m (414 ft) 43: 2011 [44] 22= Patina: 126.2 m (414 ft) 42: ...
It is currently the seventh-tallest building in Vancouver. The lower 16 floors of the tower are offices while the upper 24 floors contain 130 work-live condominiums. Shaw Communications, the building's former namesake, once occupied 11 full floors. The building has two official addresses: 1067 is the building's business address, while 1077 is ...
Living Shangri-La is a mixed-use skyscraper in downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and is the tallest building in the city and province.The 62-storey Shangri-La tower contains a 5-star hotel and its offices on the first 15 floors, with condominium apartment units occupying the rest of the tower. [1]
This building is the tallest all-residential tower in Vancouver. The building also has the tallest rooftop pool in the city. [30] 22: Metroplace: Burnaby: 141.1 m (463 ft) 46: 2014: Total redevelopment of the city south of Metrotown Mall. [31] 23: Royal Centre: Vancouver: 141 m (463 ft) 37: 1973: This building is also known as the RBC Tower or ...
Harbour Centre is a skyscraper in the central business district of Downtown Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada which opened in 1977. The "Lookout" tower atop the office building makes it one of the tallest structures in Vancouver and a prominent landmark on the city's skyline.
Panorama view of Canada Place's sails with the North Shore in the background Canada Place with Downtown Vancouver. Canada Place was built on the land which was originally the Canadian Pacific Railway's Pier B–C. Built in 1927, its primary purpose was to serve CPR and other shipping lines trading across the Pacific Ocean.
Exterior view of BC Place from the south, with its original roof, October 2005. Construction of the stadium started in February of 1981, with Dillingham Construction contracted to build the stadium, designed by architecture firm Studio Phillips Barratt, Ltd. [5] BC Place was built as part of the preparations for the 1986 World's Fair, Expo 86.