Regina Leader-Post

Heights of controvers­y: Does tallest structure in Sask. qualify as a building?

- PHIL TANK ptank@postmedia.com twitter.com/thinktanks­k

SASKATOON The Mosaic potash mining company thinks the above-ground portion of its mine in Esterhazy qualifies as the tallest building in Saskatchew­an.

But the internatio­nal authority on the ranking of tall buildings begs to differ.

The distinctio­n lies between the definition of a building and a structure. Mosaic’s K3 headframe, which was built in Esterhazy as part of the potash mine, towers at least 113 metres above the prairie just outside the town about 180 kilometres east of Regina.

That easily makes the structure the tallest in Saskatchew­an with no competitio­n between Winnipeg and Calgary.

“Indeed Mosaic’s headframe is the tallest building in Saskatchew­an (and we do call it a building),” Mosaic spokeswoma­n Sarah Fedorchuk said in an email this week.

Not so fast, says Daniel Safarik, the editor-in-chief of the Chicago-based Council on Tall Buildings and Urban Habitat (CTBUH).

According to the globally recognized authority on skyscraper­s, to be considered a building, instead of a structure, half of the facility’s height must be space that is “designed to be safely and legally occupied by residents, workers, or other building users on a consistent basis.”

For example, Safarik pointed out in an email, Toronto’s CN Tower is not considered a building despite its height.

The potash headframe is a hoisting structure built above the potash mining shaft. Fedorchuk said people do work inside the K3 headframe, but could not provide details on how many and what portion of the concrete structure is regularly occupied.

The current title for Saskatchew­an’s tallest building is held by another structure with Mosaic in its name, the Mosaic Potash Tower in Regina. The CTBUH considers the Regina tower a building and at 84.5 metres it ranks as the province’s tallest.

Nutrien Tower, which will house the Saskatoon operations of the other potash giant, is being built at River Landing as part of a massive hotel-condominiu­m-office complex. It’s expected to snatch the tallest building title from the Mosaic building in Regina when completed in 2021.

“We were interested to hear about tall doings in Saskatchew­an, which is not a place we routinely hear from!” Safarik added. Even when Nutrien Tower is completed to claim the province’s tallest building title, it would not crack the STBUH list of the 500 tallest buildings in Canada.

First Canadian Place in Toronto ranks as Canada’s tallest building at 298 metres, but it’s only the 174th tallest building in the world.

 ?? TROY FLEECE ?? The headframe of the K3 potash mine in Esterhazy looms 113 metres over the prairie.
TROY FLEECE The headframe of the K3 potash mine in Esterhazy looms 113 metres over the prairie.

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