
BUILDING WEBSITE Vancouver Ritz Carleton at 1133 W Georgia Street, Vancouver, BC. Coal Harbour Neighborhood, 123 suites, 57 levels, building to be completed in 2011. This website contains: current building MLS listings & MLS sale info, building floor plans & strata plans, pictures of lobby & common area, developer, strata & concierge contact info, interactive 3D & Google location Maps link; www.6717000.com/maps with downtown intersection virtual tours, downtown listing assignment lists of buildings under construction & aerial/satellite pictures of this building. For more info, click the side bar of this page or use the search feature in the top right hand corner of any page. Building map location; Building #76-Map2, Coal Harbour, Bayshore Area & Part of West end.
|
Instructions: To pan the map use your mouse to click a point on the map and drag in any direction or use the navigation menu in the top left hand corner. To view a full size map click HERE.
|
The Residences at the Ritz-Carlton-Vancouver, Marketed by Rennie Marketing Systems, 604-689-
8881. Marketing started Oct 2007 Developer's Website: www.vancouversturn.com.
"The Residences
at Ritz-Carlton - New $500 million-plus 57-storey tower designed by Arthur Erickson
to be built at 1133 W Georgia, occupying 20 levels for the Hotel portion with
127 rooms & balance of 38 levels (floors 27-60) for the residential component
consisting of 123 luxury suites & 5 levels of underground parking for 311 vehicle
stalls. Marketing , Architect; Musson Cattell Mackey Partnership Architects with
collaboration by Arthur Erickson Design Consultant (retired) & Davidson Yuen Simson
Architects, Developer; West Georgia Holdings Ltd. See news article at side bar
for more info. The Residences at The Ritz-Carlton, Vancouver are not owned, developed
or sold by the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company, L.L.C. Holborn Developments (West Georgia)
Ltd. uses the Ritz-Carlton marks under license from the Ritz-Carlton Hotel Company
L.L.C.
Vancouver Ritz Carlton
is an Arthur Erickson-designed skyscraper that promises to be Vancouver's most
unusual and striking building. The slim, elegant, glass-covered building rises
from its triangular base to its summit in a way that gives the 167-meter tower
-- which would be the city's second highest after the Shangri-La across the street
-- a sense of grace and movement.The tower will appear to twist 45 degrees from
bottom to top. Each floor will be offset 0.75 of a degree from the one below.
The surfaces on the three faces of the building, which create an optical illusion
that the building is actually bending, are what Erickson calls "hyperbolic paraboloids"
-- a technique that employs nothing but straight lines, yet the surface is curved."
City
of Vancouver Policy Report Building and Development
|