One tonne per tonne, all-in. That's superstructure, envelope, inhabitants, machinary, etc.
Where do you get this? So, if I want a warehouse to store a 250000 tons, I need to bring 250000 tons of material to Venus? Don't seem much practical.
No. A warehouse containing 250000 tons (whatever your reason for having one of those, which as yet seems not to habe been decided) weighs 250000 tons plus the weight of the warehouse, which includes the structure and lift-envelope necessary to maintain lift 250000+extras tons (barring a small quibble that I'll skip over). The extra would not be anything like as much as a quarter of a million tonnes, as it is probably something like a
Cloud 9 with a tolerance for up to a quarter of a million tonnes (or tons) if that's what's wanted.
"All-in" was the key phrase. 'Wet weight', not 'dry weight'.
Dismissing the further midunderstandings you made on this point...
(In my head Venus would be like colonizing a gas giant), since the last question answer is a big fat no, then you need to bring everything.
As you would to send a habitat to orbit.
(Mars/Moon-bases, at least at first, would also need the 'tin-cans' lowered from orbit, whether ready assembled on Earth, in LEo or metely fabricated as panels elsewhere, to be bolted together and filled with air once in situ, but what chever way it needs a safe descent option not so much needed (just insertion retros) in orbitals. You
can also count on adding regolith/etc on top, saving you sending 'bulk' materials, but untul you set up a local miner/processor/fabricator manufactury you're still delivering the more necessarily designed and machined components. Venusian Cloud Station is using thick atmosphere as the equivalent to at least part of the regolith aspect, whilst orbital stations in all locations have to be equipped with all protections thst their host world isn't incidentally providing in some part either by distance (Mars) or magnetically (Earth). Proximity of Venus to the Sun and the more 'accidental' magnetic protection it gets probably requires a tougher orbital station for Venus, albeit not as tough as any surface habitat would have to be, as noted.)
How are you going to manage them to stay in a single place?
Why would you do that?
To find the darn thing? I know structurally talking it will be subjected to less stress as free floating but it doesn't seem very practical for things beyond simply exploration and scientific study. The fact of being free floating doesn't magically do away with the speed of the wind neither.
The ground beneath your feet is travelling at anything up to 1000mph, you know. Yet you don't complain. Why not?
Right, as serene as a ballon flight can be with peaks of 360 km per hour... And in this scenario... once the planet if densely you'll have the occasional colonies crashing into each other. Nice.
Does your house often collide with your neighbours' houses? With houses from the next city over? (Maybe it does, if you're somewhere like San Andreas. But not more than once or twice, surely?)