WORLD> America
|
Related
View from Chicago's 'Ledge' gets more dizzying
(Agencies)
Updated: 2009-07-02 08:21 CHICAGO: The view from the tallest skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere just got better.
Some may experience a floating sensation when stepping into one of four glass boxes that jut out from the indoor observation deck at the Sears Tower. "At first I was kind of afraid but I got used to it," said Adam Kane, 10, a visitor from Alton, Illinois, as clouds drifted past. "Look at all those tiny things that are usually huge." "The Ledge," unveiled on Wednesday, invites visitors to step onto a 1-1/2 inch-thick glass floor suspended 1,353 feet in the air.
The popular deck attracts 25,000 visitors on clear days. They each pay $15 to take an elevator ride up to the 103rd floor of the 110-story office building that opened in 1973. Architects considered creating an open-air deck, like the one atop New York's Empire State Building, but the rush of air that would have been created could compromise the skyscraper's mechanical systems, Wimer said. |