Quinn Tower

Built by Anthony Quinn and located Downtown Quinn Tower sits nearly two hundred feet wide at the base it and reaches over six hundred feet in height, making it the second highest building in the city. Rather than a simple block of concrete the tower is constructed of bright glass with a more organic feel to it. From the base one side tapers in until the building is perhaps a third its width, then the building flairs back out near the top in both directions, cantilevering part of its structure slightly over a park far below. Construction is based around reinforced concrete floors supported by internal pillars. This frees the outside from any load bearing responsibilities resulting in the vast majority of the surface being covered in reinforced glass.

Although it is nearly as tall as the nearby Corporate Tower it tops out at ten floors less due to a slightly greater height of each floor as well as the soaring thirty foot height of the ground floor. Three banks of elevators each with eight elevators run through the building. The elevators are controlled by keycards and only allow general access to the first eight floors as well as the thirty eighth floor. The thirty eighth floor being a restaurant with an impressive view of Colonial bay is open to the public and the eighth floor opens out to the lobby of Quinn Industries which occupies fifteen floors of the building. The six floors below that house the offices of various companies that have rented space within the building. The twenty third through the thirty second floors house the Wayland Foundation, Quinn's non-profit corporation and the thirty third through thirty seventh are set aside as guest space for various important people. The thirty ninth and fortieth floors house the residence of Anthony Quinn as well as a helipad on the larger cantilevered section and an infinity pool on the smaller cantilevered section of the thirty ninth floor.

Locked away in the basement of Quinn Tower behind multiple security doors is a working Q-Drive. The room housing the drive is approximately fifty feet by fifty feet and nearly twenty feet tall, however the drive proper is only about the size of a beach ball. Surrounding the drive is a ring of workstations which monitor and control the drive and banks of machinery line the walls storing data and regulating the flow of electricity which the drive puts out. The drive generates about 15 megawatts of power, making the building self powering and provides enough electricity to the grid to power approximately 5000 homes.