An application for permission to install two very tall construction cranes in Brickell was submitted to the Federal Aviation Admiration yesterday.
The filing is for the site where the 71-story solar-powered 1428 Brickell residential tower is planned.
Both of the cranes are planned to rise at the same height – 1,001 feet above ground, or 1,010 feet above sea level.
The cranes are temporary and are expected to be in place for around 19 months, the filing states.
The permanent height of the 1428 Brickell condo tower is planned to be 861 feet above ground, making it one of the tallest in Miami.
The 189-unit luxury building will also be the world’s the first residential high-rise in the world partially powered by the sun, the developer says, with 500 photovoltaic-integrated windows
The cranes are temporary and are expected to be in place for around 19 months, the filing states.
The permanent height of the 1428 Brickell condo tower is planned to be 861 feet above ground, making it one of the tallest in Miami.
There are multiple construction permits currently in process at Miami’s Building Department, including demolition, site work, and full vertical permits.
The contractor listed on both the site work and vertical permits is John Moriarty.