I thought that was a distant Cotter Tower on first glance.
They're moving very quick on these, I'm sure the good weather has helped.
Looks like steel going up for the retail side.
^
Thanks for the photo.
Remember, this is where they were supposed to rebuild the historic structures that were demolished.... Looks that that steel will be for the far south section which was always going to be new construction.
^
Thanks for the photos.
They are really moving now.
Wow, that place has really come up fast!
This is really shaping up to be quite a formidable structure. Note in the second photo you can see windows going in to the right.
it looks great and especially the pan shot that shows more of DD. Wow, that is definitely Oklahoma's densest urban residential neighborhood - and to think more development still to come and nearby. OMG.
I do have one question though - considering we're in the middle of Tornado Alley, is there any concern about so many multi-family buildings being constructed from wood (stick built)? I personally thought OKC of all places would have code requiring stronger materials for the wind.
It's a little ironic considering the tornados that have hit the suburbs (and destroyed most stick built structures - and even some that were concrete); ironic that these are not required to be stronger.
I like the development - but could someone in the know provide insight?
Oklahoma City, the RENAISSANCE CITY!
I don't think any existing building codes in this state are due to tornado possibilities.
This particular development has an underground parking garage that would no doubt be used as a storm shelter.
Also, on my tour of the Frank yesterday, they pointed out a safe room / storm shelter as part of that project.
If anyone would be screwed in the event of a big tornado downtown, it would be me. On the third floor of a 100 year-old building with absolutely nowhere to go. That is pretty much the case for most these historic apartment renovations.
Im pretty sure there are new regulations adopted in 2014 for Moore. It's not related to the type of structure (I.e wood or concrete), but rather the types of anchors and how everything needs to come together. I'm not really well versed in that area, but I know things did change. That being said, there's absolutely no way to build something that can withstand an EF5 tornado. Even partially above ground shelters were moved in my neighborhood. The only solution is underground bunkers, haha.
I wish I had a picture, but what are they doing with the billboard on the east side (on Walnut)? I noticed yesterday that they are building around it and it is now "inside" the building. I would assume they would have already taken it down if it wasn't going to stay. It looks kind of funny right now.
I believe it is going to stay just like the one they built around for the metropolitan.
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