Early in the 1970s the number of multistory office blocks in downtown Toronto increased significantly, with a consequent interference with television and radio reception in large parts of the city. Toronto needed an antenna taller than any existing office block, indeed, of any that was anticipated, and the CN Tower was proposed to meet that need. The project was initiated in 1972 by the Canadian National Railway, which commissioned John Andrews Architects, working in collaboration with Webb Zerafa Menkes Housden Architects of Toronto. The structural engineering consultant was Roger R. Nicolet of Montreal; the mechanical and electrical engineers were Ellard-Wilson Associates Ltd. of Toronto; and the manager-contractor was Foundation Building Construction.
The original design proposed three concrete towers linked by structural bridges, but that was developed into a single tower with three hollow “legs.” As well as serving as electrical and mechanical service ducts, the hollow columns provided the necessary degree of flexibility for such a tall structure. Construction started in February 1973, and in four months a Y-shaped, 22-foot-thick (6.7-meter) reinforced concrete base was founded on the bedrock 50 feet (15 meters) beneath the city. The continuous slip-form process then began. When the tower reached 1,100 feet (336 meters), a seven-story “SkyPod,” fabricated on the ground, was raised into position
and anchored by twelve steel-and-timber brackets that were
slowly pushed up the tower by forty-five hydraulic jacks. The concrete-walled
SkyPod, reached by four high-speed, glass-fronted elevators, houses a 400-seat
revolving restaurant, a nightclub, and indoor and outdoor observation decks.
Later, a 2.5-inch-thick (6.4-centimeter) glass floor was installed. Beneath the
SkyPod, delicate microwave dishes and other broadcasting equipment are protected
by an annular radome. The concrete tower continues to the Space Deck at 1,465
feet (447 meters)—an observation gallery that on a clear day provides a view
with 100-mile (160-kilometer) visibility. A Sikorsky Skycrane helicopter lifted
the tower’s 335-foot (100-meter) communications mast in forty sections, each of
about 7 tons (6.4 tonnes), and they were bolted together in place. The mast,
erected in three weeks, was covered by fiberglass-reinforced sheathing. The
maximum sway experienced at the very top in 120-mph (190-kph) winds with 200-mph
(320-kph) gusts is 3.5 feet (1.07 meters).
The CN Tower was completed in June 1975 and officially opened on 1 October.
It cost Can$57 million and took about 1,550 workers forty months to construct.
It is nearly twice the height of the Eiffel Tower and more than three times as
tall as the Washington Monument. Soaring above Toronto, it is struck by
lightning about seventy-five times every year.In 1995 Canada National passed ownership to a public company, the Canada Lands Company. In June 1998, the CN Tower officially opened a 75,000-square-foot (7,100-square-meter) expansion including an entertainment center, shopping facilities, and restaurants.
Further reading
Campi, Mario. 2000. Skyscrapers: An Architectural
Type of Modern Urbansm, Boston: Birkhäuser.
McDermott, Barb, and Gail McKeown. 1999. The CN
Tower. Edmonton, Canada: Reidmore Books.
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