

I didn't expect though to be intimidated by the glass floor that you can stand on, on the 113th floor. I thought it would be made of those thick glass blocks you sometimes see in houses. These just looked like glass window panes.
Looking down 1122 feet, which is about circuit height if you're flying around the Victoria Airport. This isn't my foot but it's about as far as I got on the glass section. I started with the toe of one foot, then I stood on it with both feet, but only right by the edge and only for a second.
It doesn't faze some people. They walk, stand, lie and even jump on it.
This shows the Toronto Island Airport. We're trying to figure out how people get to the airport from the mainland.
The Sky Pod at 147 storeys and 1,465 ft. up wasn't open due to wind. We didn't go to the revolving restaurant. According to their website, the elevators go at a rate of 20 feet a second, and staff numbers from 400 to 550.
I missed going up the CN Tower during my brief trip through Toronto in the 1970's. Now I've done it and I think once was enough.




The Sky Pod at 147 storeys and 1,465 ft. up wasn't open due to wind. We didn't go to the revolving restaurant. According to their website, the elevators go at a rate of 20 feet a second, and staff numbers from 400 to 550.
I missed going up the CN Tower during my brief trip through Toronto in the 1970's. Now I've done it and I think once was enough.
No comments:
Post a Comment