【悲報】NY高級マンション、ゴミ捨て場がヤバすぎワロタ…衝撃の理由

挿話

ニューヨーク、パーク街432番地の超高級高層マンションのごみ捨てシュートは、1400フィート(約427メートル)の高さまで途切れることなく続いている。上層階から捨てられたごみは、時速170マイル(時速約274キロメートル)に達する速度で落下する。10億ドル以上するこのマンションの住民たちは、ごみ袋が底に叩きつけられる音が爆弾のように響くと苦情を訴えている。



コメント

  1. I was hoping to hear the noise they make 🙁

  2. It’s only really bothering the peasant on the bottom six floors. LOLOL

  3. matt95110 より:

    I live in a 30 storey building and someone keeps putting full cans of paint down the chute from one of the top floors and damn does it make an insane mess when it hits the garbage room.

  4. It’s a gravity compactor. Very energy efficient.

  5. i seriously doubt the 274kmh, except you throw aerodynamically shaped lob of lead.

  6. MinnieShoof より:

    … I’d be more concerned about the trash actually exploding at that rate.

  7. MonsieurReynard より:

    Any tall building I’ve ever seen with a trash chute has it designed with bends that slow down the rate of descent.

  8. ninjamullet より:

    That’s 426 meters. Or about 2,450 bananas if you want to use Freedom Units.

  9. Awfultyming より:

    Did you really post a link to youtube shorts?! And it didnt play the sound?

  10. Leticron より:

    Definitely great to clean and probably prone to disgusting smells. Great work 😁

  11. Malacon より:

    Wasn’t this part of the plot of a season of *Only Murders In the Building*?

  12. upvotegoblin より:

    Why in the fuck is a recording of this sound so fucking hard to come by

  13. bmcgowan89 より:

    *Cue my inner Patrick Bateman*

  14. Awww poor centi-millionaires.

  15. fourthords より:

    > **432 Park Avenue** is a residential skyscraper at 57th Street and Park Avenue in Midtown Manhattan in New York City, New York, U.S. The 1,396-foot-tall (425.5 m) tower was developed by CIM Group and Harry B. Macklowe and designed by Rafael Viñoly. A part of Billionaires’ Row, 432 Park Avenue has some of the most expensive residences in the city, with the median unit selling for tens of millions of dollars. At the time of its completion in 2015, 432 Park Avenue was the third-tallest building in the United States and the tallest residential building in the world. As of 2025, it is the sixth-tallest building in the United States, the fifth-tallest building in New York City, and the third-tallest residential building in the world.
    >
    > 432 Park Avenue has 84 numbered stories and a mezzanine above ground. The tower’s exterior is a lattice of poured-in-place concrete made with white Portland cement. The tower is segmented into 12-story blocks separated by open double-story mechanical spaces that allow wind gusts to pass through the building. It features 125 condominiums and amenities such as a private restaurant for residents. The skyscraper has received mixed reviews from both professionals and the public, with commentary about both its slenderness and its symbolism as a residence for the ultra-wealthy.
    >
    > 432 Park Avenue is located on the site of the former Drake Hotel, which was sold to Macklowe in 2006. The project faced delays for five years because of lack of financing as well as difficulties in acquiring the properties on the site. Construction plans were approved for 432 Park Avenue in 2011 and excavations began the next year. Sales within 432 Park Avenue were launched in 2013; the building topped out during October 2014 and was officially completed in 2015. After the building’s completion, residents complained of mechanical and structural problems, leading to multiple lawsuits in the 2020s.

    * Lead excepted from [432 Park Avenue](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/432_Park_Avenue) at the English Wikipedia

  16. 4ShoreAnon より:

    Man poor garbage collector is probably always cleaning exploded garbage off the floor

  17. LookAtYourEyes より:

    I thought continuous trash chutes weren’t allowed because of fire concerns?

  18. brokenB42morrow より:

    Wow, that was a dumb way to design a building.

  19. Status_Fox_1474 より:

    One would think a twisty slide could do the job just as well?

  20. diagrammatiks より:

    this entire building is such a disaster

  21. Couldn’t they just like, put some extra air in there to cushion the fall? I mean, imagine being the fella living ground level one hall away.

  22. A lot of people hate the architecture of this building, but I think it’s beautiful.

  23. i_lost_it_all_1 より:

    Time for a multimillion dollar renovation to put a spiral chute in with a water break at the bottom like at water parks.

  24. TilDeath1775 より:

    Imagine the kitty literally bags

  25. reav11 より:

    Most likely none of the trash would exceed 100mph. You have to assume they’re throwing away bowling balls to hit 170mph. Still have no sympathy for wealthy people living in a sky scraper.

  26. dodgyrogy より:

    Let the apprentice design the rubbish chute. Surely he can’t fuck that up…

  27. BeefistPrime より:

    Surely the engineers should’ve thought of this and added some sort of curvature in the shoot to slow things down?

  28. darcmosch より:

    Elsbeth had an episode about thus building or maybe it was a fictional one? Definitely inspired by this

  29. sqrt(2 × 9.8 × 426m) gives you up to 329km/h for dense aerodynamic trash. A 6.5 kg bowling ball at 329km/h would have 27kJ of kinetic energy.

    AI estimated crater depth in a concrete floor 11cm (1 small banana) with a 23cm diameter (medium pizza for one).

  30. ___HeyGFY___ より:

    Well… that sucks…

    #BWAHAHAHAHAHAAAAA
    first world problems