Absolute World

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Absolute World Towers
Alternative names The Marilyn Monroe Towers
General information
Type Residential condominiums
Location 50-60 Absolute Avenue
Mississauga, Ontario
Coordinates 43°35′42″N 79°38′02″W / 43.595°N 79.634°W / 43.595; -79.634Coordinates: 43°35′42″N 79°38′02″W / 43.595°N 79.634°W / 43.595; -79.634
Height
Roof Tower 1: 179.5 m (589 ft)
Tower 2: 161.2 m (529 ft)
Technical details
Floor count Tower 1: 56 floors
Tower 2: 50 floors
Floor area Recreation Centre: 2,800 m2 (30,000 sq ft)
Elevators Tower 1: 6
Tower 2: 6
Design and construction
Architect Burka Architects
MAD Studio
Developer Fernbrook Homes
Cityzen Development Group
Structural engineer Sigmund Soudack & Associates
Website
www.absolutecondos.com
References
[1][2][3][4][5]

Absolute World is a residential condominium twin tower skyscraper complex in the five tower Absolute City Centre development in Mississauga, Ontario. The project is being built by Fernbrook Homes and Cityzen Development Group. With the first three towers completed (Absolute City Centre 1 & 2 and Absolute Vision), the last two towers (Absolute World 4 & 5) have been topped off. Standing at 50 and 56 storeys, these two skyscrapers are the tallest of any built in a North American suburban city.[citation needed]

Contents

Background

On November 28, 2006, during the 24th annual Mississauga Urban Design Awards ceremony, Mississauga Mayor Hazel McCallion announced that an international design competition was going to be held for the building of the fourth tower for Absolute World that would be the landmark tower for the development located at the north-east corner of Burnhamthorpe Road and Hurontario Street. It also marked the first time in 40 years that an international design competition was held by a private development group for a building in the GTA area after the Toronto City Hall competition. Over six hundred registrants and ninety-two submissions from architects in seventy countries took part in this competition. On January 30, 2007, an announcement was made at Atrium at BCE Place in downtown Toronto at 12:00 PM informing the public who the 6 finalists were along with seven honorary mentions.

Submissions were judged by a panel which included architects, civic leaders and the development team members. Those on the jury included:

  • Larry Beasley, co-director of Planning, City of Vancouver
  • Colin Fournier, Professor of Architecture and Urbanism, Bartlett School of Architecture, London
  • Sol Wassermuhl, president Page + Steele Architects, Toronto
  • Claude LaCombe, EI Richmond Architects, Toronto
  • Michael Spaziani, MSAi, Toronto
  • Danny Salvatore, president, Fernbrook Homes
  • Sam Crignano and Paulo Stellato of Cityzen Development Group, and
  • Ed Sajecki, Commissioner of Planning and Building, City of Mississauga.

On January 30, 2007, the six finalists announced were:

Each of the finalists were given an honorarium to defray the costs of preparing the final submission design for a tower that would be taller than 50 stories and the tallest building in Mississauga when completed.

The public was invited to vote for the favourite designs which were on display at the Square One Shopping Centre as well as online, along with the judging panel. The voting was to stop on March 22, 2007 with the winning design announced from CN Tower on March 28, 2007 at 10:30 AM. On March 28, at 10:30 AM, Yansong Ma, founder of the MAD office, Beijing/China architectural design firm was announced as the winner. Sales were to start in May 2007 with construction beginning later that year, and anticipated completion in 2009. Within days of the announcement, the building had been nicknamed the "Marilyn Monroe Tower" due to its curvaceous, hourglass figure likened to actress Marilyn Monroe. Burka Varacalli Architects, a Toronto firm, was hired as MA local partner in April 2007.

Design

The tower twists 209 degrees from the base to the top, making it very similar to Turning Torso in Malmö, Sweden.[6] The structural design was done by Sigmund Soudack & Associates Inc, a Toronto-based almost 40-year-old structural engineering firm. The tower has six levels of underground parking.[7]

Absolute World Construction Photos
Absolute World construction status in May 2010  
Absolute World construction status in June 2009  

References

External links


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