Ferris Demolition
Chimney of a 1800 #39;s hotel comes down.
By: Jason Booth
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Ferris Demolition - Video
Ferris Demolition
Chimney of a 1800 #39;s hotel comes down.
By: Jason Booth
Read more from the original source:
Ferris Demolition - Video
Demolition Derby car, 1959 Ford
Getting ready to load my derby car on the trailer and haul it to the Demolition Derby. Unfortunately, the 59 ford got turned away at inspection that day and the car is still fresh. I can #39;t...
By: ankenyrx8105
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Demolition Derby car, 1959 Ford - Video
Richmond good old days demolition derby feature
Race was a 7.5/10 very good.
By: rational derby goer
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Richmond good old days demolition derby feature - Video
Grid 2 - Demolition Derby - My Car - Pwndbyachick69 Theme
Pwndbyachick69 inspired theme car I made.
By: Paws NClaws
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Grid 2 - Demolition Derby - My Car - Pwndbyachick69 Theme - Video
Fifa 15 | Liverpool vs City! Ultimate Demolition! Best Goals!
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Fifa 15 | Liverpool vs City! Ultimate Demolition! Best Goals! - Video
Landon Williams Danville Demolition III Interview
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By: Danville MMA
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Landon Williams Danville Demolition III Interview - Video
ST. PETERSBURG With a majority of the design teams competing for the $46 million St. Petersburg Pier project indicating they want to reuse the closed inverted pyramid, the iconic structure could survive.
But because the city is facing a deadline to complete the project in three years, officials are making plans should demolition be in the cards for the 1973 building. They've submitted an application to the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers for a permit to demolish the inverted pyramid.
The potentially lengthy permitting process requires an assessment of the historic significance of the iconic structure, which a study has found eligible for listing on the National Register of Historic Places as part of a St. Petersburg Municipal Pier Historic District.
The determination offers no protection against demolition, but in keeping with federal regulations, the permit process also requires the city to work with the state historic preservation office, the corps and St. Petersburg residents on ways to mitigate potential adverse effects of the new Pier project.
Emily Elwyn, president of St. Petersburg Preservation, described the inverted pyramid as "an iconic part of our history."
If the city decides to demolish and replace it with something else, "we feel it is important that we are left with something positive," said Elwyn, a member of a city committee that has been discussing the Pier and ways to record its history.
"Because the architect of the inverted pyramid was William Harvard, one of the most important mid-century architects in St. Petersburg, we would like to see a comprehensive historic resource survey of his work and other important mid-century structures in the city," she said.
Ideas for preserving and recording the Pier's history also are being offered by Rui Farias, executive director of the St. Petersburg Museum of History.
"We have had Pier exhibits in the past and we currently have a photographic exhibit of all the piers," he said of the museum nestled at the start of the Pier approach.
"We would love to have something from the Pier there," he said. "If we could save some of the core architectural pieces, we would love to have them outdoors."
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St. Petersburg seeking demolition permit for the Pier
Annie Z. Yu, The Republic | azcentral.com 11:07 a.m. MST September 10, 2014
The abandoned Elevation Chandler site.(Photo: Charlie Leight/The Republic)
Chandler City Council approved a development agreement with Houston-based Hines on Monday, giving Hines long awaited approval to demolish Elevation Chandler and setting a March 16, 2015 deadline for completion of the process.
Demolition of the skeleton of the unfinished mixed-use complex northwest of the Loop 101/Loop 202 interchange, just south of Chandler Fashion Center, is expected to start in January 2015, giving a "late Christmas present for our residents," Chandler Vice Mayor Rick Heumann said at Monday's City Council meeting.
RELATED: Elevation Chandler one step closer to coming down
Demolition will require about three months with an estimated cost of $300,000 to the developer.
"Hines is extremely excited to move this project forward, and finally, after all these years, participate in the demolition of that hideous structure," Hines represented Nick Wood said. "It's been a blight for way too long in Chandler."
MORE: New development proposed for Elevation Chandler site
After Elevation Chandler is razed, construction by Hines of Chandler Veridian, a mixed-use development with retail, office buildings and multi-family residential, will come in phases and begin from the southern end of the 26-acre site.
The multi-family residential housing will sit on 14 acres and house 335 residential units in six four-story buildings and a seventh building with both a clubhouse and residential.
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Elevation Chandler demolition OK'd