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Showing results for tags 'adc'.
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Version 1.0
10,051 Downloads
CTA's Ashland/Lake station was built along with the rest of the Lake Street Elevated in 1892. It was designed by an unknown architect in the Queen Anne style, with elements of Victorian Gothic. Back in 1892, this station was identical to several other stations on the same line. Today, there are only two of these beautiful designs remaining. The stationhouses at Ashland remain intact, but the platforms have been extended and shortened many times over the station's century-long history. The platforms in this model are roughly as they appeared in the 1940s. The lot is only 1x3, with overhanging platforms, but it is meant to be linked with the NAM's Elevated-Railroad-Over-Road puzzle pieces, where those puzzle pieces cross a perpendicular road. (see the pictures, it will make sense then). Note: UDI does not work through this station, either on the roads or on the tracks, unless you drag roads through the lot after plopping it. Lot Stats: Lot Size: 1x3 Platform Length: 7 tiles Capacity: 10000 Cost: $1800 Air Pollution: 1 over 1 tile Water Pollution: 3 over 2 tiles Garbage: 1 ton/month -
Version 3
22,478 Downloads
Presenting the third iteration of 150 North Michigan! Previously known as the Smurfit-Stone Building, the Stone Container Building, and before that, the Associates Center, this is the first version to feature nightlighting. Built in 1983 at the corner of Randolph Street and Michigan Avenue in Chicago, 150 North Michigan has been a source of perennial controversy since construction. It was built in an area with several notable Chicago landmarks in the Beaux-Arts Style, and many architecture critics hated how it dismissed the classical architecture around it. They also hated the way the building's designers, A. Epstein & Sons, eschewed the traditional flat roof for a sweeping diamond-shaped cross-section that spans 19 floors. Since there was no roof to put ventilation units and elevator motors, these mechanical functions are placed inside the highest floors at the very peak of the building. Today a famous landmark, it is often cited as one of Chicago's most distinctive buildings, and stylized representations of the city's skyline usually feature the building. I have provided 3 versions for your enjoyment - a vanilla Landmark lot with no jobs, a growable CO§§ building, and a ploppable CO§§ building. All 3 use the same building model. Lot Stats: Size: 3x3 Jobs: 6,135 CO§§ Flammability: 35 Landmark Effect: +14 over 50 tiles Pollution: Air: 16 over 6 tiles Water: 16 over 7 tiles Garbage: 9 tons/month Power Consumed: 128 kWh/month Water Consumed: 1,255 gallons/month Building Value: §23,815 Worth (Taxable Value): §1285- 78 Comments
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