Perhaps people could parachute down or slide down a big pole.
It's win win. I imagine this was all detailed in the planning application.It would become a blockbuster disaster movie
Apologies if pointed out before but isn't the Brighton & Hove one about three times higher? Weymouth's is just a little stick in the ground by compare.
Apologies if pointed out before but isn't the Brighton & Hove one about three times higher? Weymouth's is just a little stick in the ground by compare.
NSC?174 foot versus 531 foot.*
* according to a well known but potentially unreliable website.
NSC?
Daft question really, it uses gravity to come down.
Ah yes, the devil is in the detail.He said potentially.
Interesting point: I'm glad I don't live in either the C or D flats in Sussex Heights - anyone with a telephoto lens will get a prime view inside those flats from the new Brighton hydrocracker.
And - one big storm in about 10 years time and we'll see how that tower does. I reckon non-Brightonians have a habit of underestimating the power of the sea and storms.
I want to like it and I do appreciate the engineering, but as much as I keep trying to pull the wool over my own eyes it looks crap. It will do the same for iconic architecture and design as what the Emperor's New Clothes did for the fashion industry, in fact the two are quite comparable.
When we look at iconic constructions around the world we can take away some satisfaction from their beauty and even sexyness, which can be appreciated time and again, but the i360 doesn’t give anything back in this respect. The Spinnaker Tower enhances Portsmouth's skyline visually but what we have will always be described as a giant pole. In reality it’s more Ikea than iconic.
Hopefully lit up at night it will make up for what it looks like during the day, but I am not convinced that it will attract more visitors to the city than what we do already because we are a must visit city anyway.
If there had been a plan to build a new super pier with a tower at the end of it out to sea it would have made some sense, but right up close dumped on the seafront makes it look like a half baked idea for the area.
It won't look much different when it is, and in reality it is more suited to Alton Towers.
It's. Not. Finished.