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View Full Version : Sears Tower unveils 103rd floor glass balconies


ShatteredWings
July 2nd, 2009, 09:29 AM
CHICAGO – Visitors to the Sears Tower's new glass balconies all seem to agree: The first step is the hardest.

The balconies are suspended 1,353 feet in the air and jut out four feet from the building's 103rd floor Skydeck. Their transparent walls, floor and ceiling leave visitors with the impression they're floating over the city.

"It's like walking on ice," said Margaret Kemp, of Bishop, Calif., who said her heart was still pounding even after stepping away from the balcony. "That first step you take — 'am I going down?'"

Kemp was among the visitors who got a sneak preview of the balconies Wednesday. "The Ledge," as the balconies have been nicknamed, open to the public Thursday. Visitors are treated to unobstructed views of Chicago from the building's west side and a heart-stopping vista of the street and Chicago River below — for those brave enough to look straight down.

John Huston, one of the property owners of the Sears Tower, even admitted to getting "a little queasy" the first time he ventured out. But 30 or 40 trips later, he's got the hang of it.

"The Sears Tower has always been about superlatives — tallest, largest, most iconic," he said. "Today is also about superlatives. Today, we present you with 'the Ledge,' the world's most awesome view, the world's most precipitous view, the view with the most wow in the world."

The balconies can hold five tons, and the glass is an inch-and-a-half thick, officials said. Sears Tower officials have said the inspiration for the balconies came from the hundreds of forehead prints visitors left behind on Skydeck windows every week. Now, staff will have a new glass surface to clean: floors.

"It's very scary, but at the same time it's very cool," said Chanti Lawrence of Atlanta, adding that she's made her first step toward overcoming her fear of heights.

Adam Kane, 10, of Alton, Ill., rushed to the ledge with his friends and siblings, and they each eagerly pressed their faces to the glass bottom.

"Look at all those tiny things that are usually huge," Adam said.

The balconies are just one of the big changes coming to the Sears Tower. The building's name will change to Willis Tower later this summer. Last week, officials announced a 5-year, $350 million green renovation complete with wind turbines, roof gardens and solar panels.

With the ledge, visitors like Kemp said the nation's tallest building has succeeded in creating something they've never seen before.

"I had to live 70 years for a thrill like this," she said.
http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap_travel/us_sears_tower_ledge

Wow. oh clickie the link there's a few pics

ThUnDeR
July 2nd, 2009, 10:08 AM
i saw these on yahoo THEy look scaryy!!!

Atonement
July 2nd, 2009, 11:07 AM
They have these kind of things on another building I've been in... I think it was just a hotel and only like, 15 stories up. I would shit myself that high with no visible ground. And I've been to the top of the Sears Tower, I can feel it tilt back and forth in the wind... no fun. But uber cool view.

ShatteredWings
July 2nd, 2009, 12:59 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Chicago/photo//090701/480/9ffd3328812f4de8a2b4e00e351417d9//s:/ap_travel/us_sears_tower_ledge#photoViewer=/090701/480/9ffd3328812f4de8a2b4e00e351417d9
gotta love how little kids aren't smart enough to realize how high up they are

Whisper
July 2nd, 2009, 02:37 PM
http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Chicago/photo//090701/480/9ffd3328812f4de8a2b4e00e351417d9//s:/ap_travel/us_sears_tower_ledge#photoViewer=/090701/480/9ffd3328812f4de8a2b4e00e351417d9
gotta love how little kids aren't smart enough to realize how high up they are


She knows dam well how high she is
don't ever prejudge a child's cognitive abilities
thats exactly what teens get so pissed at adults over


She just isn't afraid, she knows she's perfectly safe
Children tend to be allot more bold then grown ups believe
it's usually a result of conditioning from individuals, care takers, and society ingeneral when fears begin to emerge

ShatteredWings
July 2nd, 2009, 03:13 PM
side view, walls and floor (http://news.yahoo.com/nphotos/Chicago/photo//090701/480/9ffd3328812f4de8a2b4e00e351417d9/#photoViewer=/090701/480/3e54bd7064be49aaa94837e6c5186318)
about 3-4 inch walls, and two 3-4in sheets with a dead space in between being supported by three metal thingies on the first layer
this is safe... in some future time maybe.
Kids lack this thing called a 'healthy fear of heights' Have yet to meet one who understand 'falling hurts' before they'er like 8


Going architecutaly, it's rather intersting having a room that's glass and metal. But we now have the problem of if it's going to fall off the building -- which addi already meantioned MOVES in the wind (a little too tall no? what happens when you bend a paperclip too many times? it breaks. Same consept with the steel sturcutre of that building. it's GOING to colapse sooner or later)

Methinks that's a reason to be a little afraid

Whisper
July 2nd, 2009, 03:28 PM
It's perfectly safe you're projecting your personal opinions and beliefs onto the situation
all skyscrapers move in the wind qwyn, trust me, that's a good thing.
If the steel didn't give a little the skyscraper would fail in a storm and collapse crushing allot of other buildings and people in the process
There are set codes which have to be followed and tests done
believe me it's fine if i lived in Chicago i'd go running up to it and jump up and down like i did on the CN towers glass floor
it's fine



take a blanket put it in the center of a glass table
put a todler on the blanket
and you have an Alcatraz
that baby
will NOT crawl onto the glass
they have a perfect understanding of heights its a basic instinct like a baby will hold its breath underwater (i wouldn't suggest trying that when your babysitting...could be taken in the wrong context, ye been warned)

YourFriend
July 4th, 2009, 12:46 PM
lol i don't have the guts to stand on that