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NOPE. “Tilt,” the new attraction coming to the John Hancock building that promises to angle users over the city, has a preview video, and it looks as terrifying as it sounds.
Then came the Ledge at Willis (Sears) Tower--a glass box extending away from the building that allows visitors to step onto a clear floor and look down at the street below. Now, 360 Chicago ...
Chicago's John Hancock Building is putting a new slant on observation decks with the introduction of Tilt, a glass-and-steel enclosure that, as the name implies, angles to give visitors downward ...
Chicago residents and tourists alike will have a new way to get a fresh perspective on the city this spring when an attraction called TILT debuts at 360 CHICAGO (formerly John Hancock Observatory ...
360 Chicago has unveiled its plans to redevelop the top floors of the former John Hancock building. The 95th and 96th floors have been vacant since the 2023 closure of The Signature Room restaurant.
The "Ledge" at Willis Tower has a new rival for skyscraper thrills in Chicago. The Hancock Center has its own gravity-defying feature, "Tilt," which lets visitors lean out over the edge of its ...
France-based Magnicity’s 360 Chicago is expanding its observation deck to include the 95th and 96th floors of 875 North Michigan Avenue (formerly the John Hancock Center).
The view from the 94th floor of the John Hancock Center is already breathtaking, allowing visitors to see as far as 55 miles on a clear, sunny day. Now the operators of 360 Chicago (formerly the ...
Chicago, get ready to Tilt! The observatory at the John Hancock building will change the way visitors look at the city.
360 CHICAGO, the company that operates the observation deck toward the top of the former John Hancock Center, has purchased the building's 95th and 96th floors, including the former Signature Room ...
360 Chicago has unveiled redevelopment plans for the 94th, 95th and 96th floors of the former John Hancock building at 875 N. Michigan Ave.