Oh... THAT project. Ok, well I'll confess that this was one site where I just kind of threw up my hands and counted every tall construction vehicle in the photos as a crane.
Because I wasn't really sure what the heck they were. I figured someone would come along and correct me, if necessary. Ok, sure, I'll happily concede that I over-reached on that particular one
and will push the count back down to 1 for the elementary school. Although I suspect that for a project of this size, more cranes will be forthcoming in the future.
As to the philosophical arguments... would I count a construction crane erecting a sign or fixing a street light, etc. little things like that? ABSOLUTELY NOT! Besides the ridiculous
element, for sheer practical reasons I could never keep up with every dinky activity like that even if I wanted to. But, of course, that kind of shenanigans would turn the whole list into a joke.
I really am trying to be serious about this (whether it appears so or not).
The whole idea, naturally, is to attempt to capture the scope of activity in a city that is approaching (if not already in) a construction boom. Counting cranes is but one way of
achieving that goal, and an arbitrary one at that. But it does reflect fairly well, I think, what is going on during a boom time.
My original idea was to count only cranes for either new construction or extensive renovations of an existing building. Something that most anyone would readily agree represent serious activity.
I somewhat cheated on that notion by including the Santa Fe Parking Garage, because it's only cosmetic and not a renovation. But because that building is large and so prominent in the downtown area, and the work being done on it does actually reflect a city remaking itself, it seemed to fit the spirit of the list anyway.
Thanks for the clarification though. I'm hardly the most qualified person to be making this list, as I don't live or work downtown and do not have a construction background. I just thought that it would be an interesting thing to do, so I jumped in.
Latest update:
3 ... Hilton Garden Inn (Bricktown)
1 ... River inlet by Land Run Park (Bricktown)
1 ... Holiday Inn Express (Bricktown)
2 ... Kevin Durant Restaurant (Bricktown)
2 ... Aloft Hotel (Deep Deuce)
2 ... Maywood Apartments (Deep Deuce)
3 ... The Edge Apartments (Midtown)
1 ... Osler Building/Ambassador Hotel (Midtown)
1 ... New SandRidge Building (CBD)
2 ... Main Street Parking Garage (CBD)
1 ... Santa Fe Parking Garage (CBD)
1 ... John W. Rex Elementary School (Film Row)
1 ... Lincoln Plaza/Healthcare Authority Building (Lincoln Corridor)
1 ... Department of Labor Building (Lincoln Corridor)
[hr][/hr]
22 Total
Chickasaw Nation is renovating this building.
Hey Praedura, I appreciate the effort and was only giving my two cents on what constituted "construction cranes" in the truest sense. I'm definitely not an expert on large commercial construction either. I've been around plenty of jobs, but almost exclusively in support roles (materials sales, deliveries, etc.), or as an observer/cheerleader (in marketing and PR roles, or as a friend or colleague of someone who actually did call the shots), and much of what I know is just from osmosis. Most of the commercial jobs I have been involved in as a decision-maker of any type have been very small. Would love to see a real expert in commercial construction weigh in.
Crane is gone from the Department of Labor site.
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