What the Willis (formerly Sear’s Tower ) is to Chicago, what the Empire State Building is to the “Big Apple”; that is what the Palermo is to Cuenca. All of its mighty eighteen pisos (floors) majestically tower over the city of Cuenca--it displays an impressive edifice. Yes, the Palermo at eighteen pisos (floors) is and will be the tallest building in Cuenca for some time to come, since city ordinances have been changed with its construction, and no new construction can be more than fourteen stories in height.
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Of course, height is relative. As a high school and college-age youth, it was a big deal to ride to the observation deck at the top level of the Prudential Building. At forty-nine stories, it was the tallest building in Chicago in the 1960’s. We, living in Chicago, could not imagine the dizzying heights of a 102 story Empire State Building back then.
With the 1970’s came the new observation deck in the John Hancock, which was one of the tallest buildings in the world at the time. In my opinion, the Hancock still offers the best aerial view of Chicago, because of its location on Michigan Avenue and overlooking Lake Shore Drive. Meanwhile, the Sears Tower was built, and at 114 stories became the tallest building in the world, which was a title it held for approximately thirty years. Now Saudi Arabia intends to construct the largest edifice in the world, which will be about 3/4ths of a mile. Imagine a building of approximately 4,000 feet in height compared to the Willis Tower, which is 1,450 feet in height.
So you may laugh at the height of the Palermo, but as I said height and its affect upon human perception is relative. Take for example, the young man who when he painted my apartment, stepped out on my seventh floor balcony and became woozy from being up so high. The same young man was here Saturday, drilling holes into the plaster to hang all my paintings and pictures, and chose to pass on the opportunity to step out again onto the balcony. His experience is an observation that brings home the point of how so much of who and what we are, and how we perceive reality is based upon our experiences or lack thereof.
Speaking of relativity, the Palermo is at an elevation of 8,500 feet. Add to that the approximately 175-200 feet of the Palermo, and it’s already taller than any new building going up on the flat sea-level sands of Saudi Arabia. Sorry, can’t help myself but brag. It comes with being a Chicagoan. We are always boosting about our city, which is why New York journalists back in the 1800’s derogatorily nicknamed Chicago “the Windy City”. The name had nothing to do with the wind blowing off Lake Michigan, but rather the name was due to Chicago civic boosterism.
I did an earlier post on the Palermo when I first came to reside in its environs this past May. Rather than repeat everything I wrote before, you may click on the link below for some background:
Today’s post is basically providing the reader with photos of the exterior of the Palermo:
This is a side view of the Palermo facing the east or toward El Centro, the downtown
business and residential area. About two-and-a-half miles from the Palermo to the
heart of El Centro is Parke Calderon. Notice the homes at the feet of the
Palermo. While numerous high-rises dot Calle Lasso (The main street on which the first
photo above of the Palermo faces), the streets off of Lasso are inhabited by single and two
story homes.
This is a side view of the Palermo facing the east or toward El Centro, the downtown
business and residential area. About two-and-a-half miles from the Palermo to the
heart of El Centro is Parke Calderon. Notice the homes at the feet of the
Palermo. While numerous high-rises dot Calle Lasso (The main street on which the first
photo above of the Palermo faces), the streets off of Lasso are inhabited by single and two
story homes.
This is the home in a close-up at the bottom of the feet of the Palermo. Like many such
homes in Cuenca, this home is part of a family compound of homes made up of related
families. In typical South American style, you will find homes gated and walled-off
from the street.
This is a further closeup, which is focused on my condo-rental. The balconies are small and semicircular. My condo is the seventh-floor condo where you see the chair. I frequently eat my breakfast on the balcony. In the photo, the window to the right of the balcony is where my kitchen is located; with the laundry room, maid's quarters, and bathroom with shower to the back of the kitchen. The living room overlooks the balcony, with the dining room behind it. The first window to the left of the balcony is the guest bedroom. A smaller bedroom is opposite the guest bedroom, which I use as my man-cave and serves as the T.V. room. The end window left of the balcony is the master bedroom. There is a walk-in closest to the back of the bedroom, which leads to the master bathroom.
A further close-up of my balcony.
This is what the construction of the high-rises looks like in its early stages. Almost everything is made from concrete. There are steel rods which run through the pillars pictured above. The walls are of concrete blocks, over which they are then plastered. No wall board or insulation is used. Nor is any wood or steel frame used in construction.
The advantage to the concrete construction, as one Ecuadorian told me, is that Cuenca hasn't had a major house fire in seven years.
The disadvantages are two-fold:
One is that in cold, damp weather the concrete is not the best conduit for retaining heat within the building, particularly since the climate is mild and buildings in Cuenca have no central heating. During the colder, damp months of late July through August and September; one must either dress warmly in layer clothes, and/or make use of electrical heaters on occasional days and on many evenings.
The second disadvantage is that high-rise construction in Ecuador does not build on pylons, which allows tall buildings some sway in heavy winds or if a major earthquake strikes. In fact, most of the single and two-story homes would be rubble in a major earthquake. I observed the rubble in Beijing, China in 1977 about a year after a major earthquake struck. However, Cuenca of the four earthquake zones in which Ecuador is divided ranks in the third zone. The coastal region is ranked one; and Quito which is located in the Northern Andes among a number of active volcanoes is ranked as the second most vulnerable area in Ecuador for potential earthquakes. The Orient, which is the tropical rain-forest biosphere in Ecuador ranks fourth. Cuenca has not had a major earthquake in over 500 years. I have not to date been aware of any information that geologists are predicting a long overdue earthquake for the Cuenca area, like the reports that frequently come out about California with the San Andreas fault-line.
The Palermo is not only Cuenca's tallest building, but is also the standard for construction and interior floor designs. It has only been opened a year, and almost all the condos have been purchased. Yesterday was just an example of its current preeminent status as another van of tourists were brought out to the Palermo for a real-estate tour of the kind of upper-scale, high-rise living that is available in Cuenca.
Next post will be of courtyard and interior public places in the Palermo.
Postscript: A major thanks of appreciate to Lenny Charnoff. He has followed my blog since its inception when he was still living in Oregon with his wife, Sharon. Lenny has a tremendous background in software use, and his six hours of instruction in three separate sessions has made these photos possible. This will astound not only some of my friends in Cuenca, but a number of my friends and relatives back in the states. Needless to say, now I have no choice but to use my camera more frequently, so that everything Lenny has taught me will be reinforced repeatedly, and eternalletched into my memory. If anyone wishes or has a need to learn how to do the various things necessary to transfer photos, upload, download, and all the pecuniary steps in between that drove me crazy, Lenny is your go-to man and his rates are reasonable.