Difference between revisions of "SZYM Tower (building)"

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At the time, Northbridge was also the home to a [[Gentek Telecom]] microwave antenna tower on a hill on the other side of the region, as well as a filler factory, a scenic overlook, and the Hutson River, with a bridge crossing to [[Prototype]]. Passaic County Route 610 also ran through the region, as did the Northbridge Rail Line, which ran a freight train through every three hours from Prototype in the west through [[Glenbrook]] (Augest Isles) in the east. Those in Northbridge could also hear the Tredpro factory steam whistle, which blew twice at 9 AM, 12 PM, and 5 PM on weekdays. All of these features were scripted by [[Nelson Jenkins]].
 
At the time, Northbridge was also the home to a [[Gentek Telecom]] microwave antenna tower on a hill on the other side of the region, as well as a filler factory, a scenic overlook, and the Hutson River, with a bridge crossing to [[Prototype]]. Passaic County Route 610 also ran through the region, as did the Northbridge Rail Line, which ran a freight train through every three hours from Prototype in the west through [[Glenbrook]] (Augest Isles) in the east. Those in Northbridge could also hear the Tredpro factory steam whistle, which blew twice at 9 AM, 12 PM, and 5 PM on weekdays. All of these features were scripted by [[Nelson Jenkins]].
  
On December 12, 2018, SZYM Tower IX, along with the rest of Northbridge, was demolished to make space for new construction. The NTBI bot was repurposed as a mall security officer in [[Prototype]].
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On December 15, 2018, SZYM Tower IX, along with the rest of Northbridge, was demolished to make space for new construction. The NTBI bot was repurposed as a mall security officer in [[Prototype]].

Revision as of 14:29, 15 December 2018

SZYM Tower has been the name given to several large high-rise buildings built by Will Szymborska. Although they are numbered chronologically, they are all formally known as "SZYM Tower" without the numerical designation. The name is a play on the game SimTower, which was one of Will's favorite video games during childhood.


SZYM Towers I, II, and III

Little is known of these towers. They were constructed on the Teen Grid.

SZYM Tower IV

This tower was located in the Bliss region. It was demolished when Bliss shut down, in part due to ongoing drama between Will Szymborska and Nelson Jenkins before he joined NTBI.

SZYM Tower V

SZYM Tower V in Lionheart next to the Union Micro building.

This tower was located in Lionheart. It hosted the NTBI 2010 Christmas Party, where Nelson Jenkins was formally introduced as an NTBI affiliate. The tower was infamous for its easily broken elevators.

SZYM Tower VI

SZYM Tower VI in Lionheart with the Gentek Interregional Tower in the background.

SZYM Tower VI was a total remodel of SZYM Tower V in the same location in Lionheart.

The tower remained in the same location and was inhabited on a regular basis.

Soon after, the Gentek Interregional Tower was built across the street. After a few weeks, GIT was moved to a different location across a different street and a skybridge was erected between them.

The tower held mostly offices, with some various stores interspersed throughout the floors.

SZYM Tower VII

SZYM Tower VII in the distance during a smoggy morning.

This tower was a short-lived endeavor in the Prototype region.

The tower was never completed, as it was deemed too prim-heavy for the region. Shortly after, the first Prototype Mall was built.

The design was reminiscent of previous SZYM Tower designs.

SZYM Tower VIII

Postcard of SZYM Tower VIII.

This tower was built in Celaeno after the demolition of the NTBI Celaeno Complex in September 2012. The building structure was completed and floorplans were developed, but only around 1/4th of the building was ever furnished before its demolition in anticipation of the move to the private NTBI region.

The tower was designed to accommodate the amenities provided by the Celaeno Complex in a more spacious vertical arrangement. As the Celaeno Complex featured only 5 floors (including basements) the tower provided a generous increase by way of 21 accessible floors (25 total) and 3 basements. Floors B1, B2, and 1-8 (1 and 2 being the lobby) were deemed public with plans to lease out upper floors to other companies, while floors 9-24 and B3 (excluding the lower auditorium) were private and only accessible to NTBI affiliates and staff.

Two public elevators served the public floors, while an express elevator accessed floors L, 9, B1, and B3. A separate bank of elevators beyond an NTBISS checkpoint served floors 9-24. A car elevator was also accessible from the exterior of the building on floor L, as well as floors B1 (private parking) and B3 (vault).

Below is information obtained from the final revision of the building's directory, on October 1, 2012:

  • The lobby floor featured entrances on all sides with a front desk and access to the central public and express elevator banks. The lobby spanned two floors. Some sections of it were furnished. The back portion of the lobby was to feature a museum on the history of NTBI and its affiliates, but it was never built.
  • Floors 4-8, which were public, were to be leased out to companies, but never were. None were furnished.
  • Floor B1, although accessible from the public elevator bank, only housed private parking, laundry, and maintenance services.
  • Floor B2 offered access to a ballroom and the auditorium. It was the lowest level accessible to the public - access to the lower level of the auditorium was done through a large stairwell along the side.
  • Floor B3 housed a secure vault as well as a data center which would have hosted backup servers.
  • Floor 9 was the sky lobby, accessible from the ground only from the private express elevators. It was to house a cafe and security checkpoint, beyond which would have been access to the private local elevator serving the upper floors. It was only partially furnished.
  • Floor 14 housed employee offices, which was only partially furnished.
  • Floor 15 was to house another dining area exclusively for private parties, as well as a large kitchen. It was never completed.
  • Floor 16 was the only floor fully completed, which was the home of the executive lounge. It had a very elaborate smoking lounge area, as well as some extra rooms and an in-house salon.
  • Floor 17 was the private apartments of Will Szymborska, Nelson Jenkins, and Lyte Rae, the primary owners of the Celaeno land. Although partially completed, they were never inhabited long-term. All apartments featured a living room, bathroom, and bedroom, although the bedroom in Lyte Rae's apartment was used as an office.
  • Floor 18 housed two boardrooms which extended into the 19th floor.
  • Floor 20 was an observation floor, featuring an exterior deck.
  • Floor 21 was the office of Nelson Jenkins, although it was never furnished.
  • Floor 24 was the office of Will Szymborska, which was partially furnished.
  • Floors 3, 11, 12, 13, 22, and 23 were never allotted for a specific use, and remained empty.

In November 2012, the building was demolished and the Celaeno land was abandoned. Construction began on the NTBI Development Campus in the NTBI region soon after.

SZYM Tower IX

SZYM Tower IX at dusk.

SZYM Tower IX was built in Northbridge after the demolition of one of the Northbridge complexes in July 2018. The design was based off of the NTT Docomo Yoyogi Building. The tower stood 218 meters (715 feet) above ground level at the tip of its spire, and an additional 23 meters (75 feet) below ground level. On the southern exterior wall of floors 18 through SL/21, a large lit clock face showed the time in the Eastern US timezone, home to Will Szymborska and Nelson Jenkins. At night, the top three segments of the tower were lit, much like the lighting at the top of the Empire State Building, although all in white. The exterior lighting was the only lighting to operate on estate time; all other time-based lighting and operations in the tower ran on Eastern US time.

The tower itself was split into four general zones - the main tower (floors L through SL/21), the Tower Mall (most of floor B1, as well as a small portion of floors B2 through B4, including the Party Hall), the basement (the rest of floors B1 through B4), and the executive suites (floors 22 through 24, as well as the roof utility area). Certain rooms in the tower were connected using hidden passageways. Additionally, the tower site was the home of the Peter Nelson Convention Center (PNCC), a very large hall attached to the lobby of the tower designed for public events. Because of scheduling constraints and the site demolition a few months later, PNCC was never used to host a public event. However, the tower saw frequent use among NTBI staff and friends.

SZYM Tower IX was the first to be built partially in mesh. The tower featured the Maestro 512 Background Music System throughout the building in four separate zones - the PNCC (which played a selection of city pop, particularly Casiopea), the lobby/skylobby (which played light jazz), the Party Hall (never used), and Club Shinjuku (which played piano music). Gentek lighting was installed throughout the building, and lighting in common areas automatically switched into eco mode at 11:45 PM nightly. Additionally, several areas - Ramen Man, KanSalon, the mailroom, the skylobby TahdaMart, and Club Shinjuku - opened and closed at different times daily using lights and security grate doors. On weekends, some opening times were shortened. Finally, beta NBS Synchron synchronized clocks were installed throughout the building, as were Gentek Security Camera Kit cameras, Gentek IntelliDoor doors, and NBS NorPhone public and private phones. Nelson Jenkins also beta-tested the Gentek Delta Elevator using four elevator cars - two assigned to the main bank, one for the Tower Mall basement levels, and one for the NTBI executive suites above the skylobby. He also designed a proprietary room numbering placard system and installed an early beta of BTN to broadcast to a handful of televisions throughout the building.

One of the more popular features of SZYM Tower IX was the NTBI Resident bot, which sat at the reception desk in the lobby and walked to the bathrooms and TahdaMart on floor B1 every few hours. The bot ran well for several months, but at the start of December, he trapped himself in a bathroom stall and could not escape for several days. For this reason, he was canonically demoted to mall security at the Prototype Gardens Mall. During the last days of SZYM Tower IX, the reception desk was left empty, occasionally commandeered by visitors for photo opportunities.

The tower layout was as follows:

  • Floor B4 housed storage rooms, a vault, a generator room, a development center, and the private apartment of Will Szymborska. It was also to house a Gentek Telecom exchange, although this was never completed.
  • Floor B3 housed the Party Hall, Ramen Man (a ramen shop), storage rooms, and restrooms.
  • Floor B2 housed a laundry room, mailroom, and an empty Tower Mall space. Most of this floor was used for the upper half of the Party Hall, and a small balcony overlooking it was accessible from the main elevator bank.
  • Floor B1 housed the bulk of the Tower Mall, including a 24-hour TahdaMart, a KanSalon, and two empty spaces, one used for displaying suits. The building security room was located in the mall area, as were restrooms. This floor also had access from the mall to an underground parking garage, drop-off zone, and loading dock, accessible from ramps to the main parking lot outside at ground level. An NTBISS garage was located behind the loading dock.
  • Floor L was the lobby, which included the reception desk, a connecting hallway to the PNCC, and direct elevator connections to all floors except the NTBI executive suites floors. Outside, the building featured a covered drop-off area and a large parking lot.
  • Floors 2-8 were filler floors.
  • Floor 9 was left empty, but was used for impromptu meetings and some product testing because of the open space.
  • Floors 10-11 were filler floors.
  • Floor 12 was used for 8 public leased offices, as well as a small break room and restrooms.
  • Floor 13 was a filler utility floor.
  • Floor 14 housed the NTBI staff offices, which included a large floor with cubicles, a conference room, a break room, and restrooms.
  • Floors 15-18 were filler floors.
  • Floor 19 was left empty, although it was planned to be leased out.
  • Floor 20 housed the Gentek Telecom Network Operations Center, including an operator center, system monitoring displays, a conference room, the Records Department, and the billing data center.
  • Floor SL (21) was the skylobby, which included an observation deck, TahdaMart, Club Shinjuku (a full-service restaurant), and two sets of restrooms. The skylobby also had elevator access to the NTBI executive suites floors listed below, which were inaccessible to the public.
  • Floor 22 was a filler floor.
  • Floor 23 housed an executive conference room, two unused offices, a storage room, and a restroom.
  • Floor 24 had a waiting room with receptionist, the offices of Will Szymborska and Nelson Jenkins, Nelson's private workshop, Will's private restroom (complete with gold toilet), and another restroom. Both offices were equipped with their own private Sei Audio sound systems, which were essentially the same technology used in the Maestro 512, as well as intercoms to the executive receptionist, security, lobby receptionist, and Will's private apartment.
  • Floor R was the lower roof utility floor, which housed power and control equipment for the Gentek Telecom microwave antenna arrays on the exterior roof of the building. The actual roof was only accessible by stairs and a ladder, and housed air conditioners, the antenna arrays, aircraft obstruction warning lights, and the spire.

During construction, several planned rooms and features were removed, including a BTN TV studio, a much larger secure area for access to the vault, and a secret easter egg room.

At the time, Northbridge was also the home to a Gentek Telecom microwave antenna tower on a hill on the other side of the region, as well as a filler factory, a scenic overlook, and the Hutson River, with a bridge crossing to Prototype. Passaic County Route 610 also ran through the region, as did the Northbridge Rail Line, which ran a freight train through every three hours from Prototype in the west through Glenbrook (Augest Isles) in the east. Those in Northbridge could also hear the Tredpro factory steam whistle, which blew twice at 9 AM, 12 PM, and 5 PM on weekdays. All of these features were scripted by Nelson Jenkins.

On December 15, 2018, SZYM Tower IX, along with the rest of Northbridge, was demolished to make space for new construction. The NTBI bot was repurposed as a mall security officer in Prototype.