Topping off on this day in 1975 with last segment of the antenna installed by helicopter skycrane, the Toronto communications and observation spire held the title of the tallest free-standing structure in the world until overtaken by the Burj Khalifa of Dubai in 2007. At just over five hundred fifty metres high, it remains the tallest in the Western Hemisphere, (see also, a member of the World Federation of Great Towers) opening to the public in June of the following year. The CN stands for Canadian National and was conceived by the state railway’s desire to build a large radio and television broadcasting platform to serve the area. Plans were expanded to include the observation gallery—originally the Space Deck but later renamed the SkyPod with a revolving restaurant.
synchronoptica
one year ago: the Fabiola Project (with synchronoptica)
seven years ago: the premier of 2001, assorted links worth revisiting plus the money plant
eight years ago: sculpting with cheese plus a doomsday archive
nine years ago: an appreciation of artisanal signage, a disturbing hack plus hybrid husbandry
ten years ago: epic and pioneering roadtrips, David Rumsey’s map collection plus more links to enjoy