A $100 million repair plan is aimed at stopping it from sinking and tilting.Spray paint marks a section of the sidewalk that sinks and is cracked at the base of the Millennium Tower building on Mission Street.The Millennium Tower rises above downtown San Francisco.Plans are for 52 piles to be drilled 250 feet into bedrock to shore up the tilting tower.Stress gauges track movement on a wall in the parking garage of the Millennium Tower.

In the echo of a local church bell’s last “bong,” A woman walking by stopped suddenly—listening—and turned.

Here's what you need to know to start your day The In the years it will likely take to remedy the situation, Postcommodity says the four-minute collection of “helpful” sounds made unhelpful could become even more agitated (and agitating) than it already is.

The 2-foot-thick circular steel piles would be filled with steel reinforced concrete. Stay informed with one email every other week—right to your inbox.An LRAD in SFAI's bell tower for Postcommodity's 'The Point of Final Collapse,' 2019.

“This is what capitalism looks like,” tour guides will say at the base of the sinking, leaning Millennium Tour, “and at our next stop, we’ll get to hear what it sounds like.”If the Millenium Tower Falls, Does it Make a Sound?Care about what’s happening in Bay Area arts?

By Shane Reiner-Roth • November 11, 2019 • Architecture, Art, News, West. SAN FRANCISCO (KGO) -- San Francisco's leaning, sinking Millennium Tower has a new problem after a window cracked on the 36th floor.

Independent experts charged with reviewing the proposed $100 million fix to San Francisco’s famously sinking and tilting Millennium Tower endorsed the plan Tuesday, saying that they “see no reason to withhold approval of the building permit for the structural upgrade of the foundation.”The four-person panel, hired by the city and headed up by Stanford engineering professor Gregory Deierlein, submitted its review of the “perimeter pile upgrade” plan to San Francisco officials.The project calls for 52 piles to be drilled 250 feet down into bedrock to shore up the building, now leaning 17 inches to the north and west. And though the tower leans northCompleted in 2009 and discovered sinking in 2016, the Millennium Tower is not just a physical threat to those who work in its tilted path or dwell within its luxury condominiums. Mission Street Development will coordinate the work, which is expected to be paid for largely through insurance settlements of the pending lawsuits.While the San Francisco Department of Building Inspection has classified the pile solution as “voluntary,” rather than mandatory, adding the 52 bedrock-deep piles could stave off bigger problems in the future, the engineering panel concluded. Millennium Tower as seen from Mission Street. Twenty-two would be sunk along Mission Street and 30 on Fremont Street.Millennium Tower, a 58-story luxury tower just north of the new Transbay Transit Center, was named one of the top 10 residential towers in the world after it opened in 2009. Residents have included quarterback Joe Montana, baseball player Hunter Pence and the late venture capitalist Tom Perkins.The Millennium Tower now sits on 950 reinforced concrete piles driven up to 90 feet deep into bay mud. Residents blamed the developer for not driving piles down to bedrock while the developer — Mission Street Development — claimed that “dewatering” during construction of the transit center had weakened the soil under the tower, causing the settling and tilting.In all nine lawsuits have been filed, with no fewer than 146 lawyers involved. The Millennium Tower will not collapse. Strange and punctual, it may become a known entity—even a sought-after firsthand experience. The 52 new piles will extend into bedrock beneath the soils and will be structurally connected to the existing foundation by an extension of the building’s concrete mat.The revelation in a 2016 Chronicle report that the luxurious skyscraper had settled 16 inches led to a flurry of lawsuits. “Do you hear that?” she asked me.“It’s an art piece,” I explained, uselessly pointing toward the barely visible speakers in the tower.

Millennium Tower is the height of luxury in the SoMa District of SF.

The Millennium Tower in 2019. (Photo by Robert Canali; courtesy of San Francisco Art Institute) The truth is The Point of Final Collapse is not meant to be experienced by the uninitiated—or perhaps experienced in person at all. And yet, the artwork’s promise lies in its longevity. San Francisco’s Millennium Tower has been sinking for over three years.

The proposed fix for San Francisco’s tilting Millennium Tower has cleared its first significant hurdle.

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