RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule
By: WSBT-TV
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RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule - Video
RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule
By: WSBT-TV
Originally posted here:
RMG foundry demolition is ahead of schedule - Video
2014 Mott, ND Demolition Derby-Feature Pt. 2
The final part of the feature at Mott, ND #39;s 2014 demolition derby. Recorded July 12, 2014.
By: pipesrmylife
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2014 Mott, ND Demolition Derby-Feature Pt. 2 - Video
This section displays the last 50 news articles that were published.
LYONS FALLS, N.Y. -- After a lot of hard work, a paper mill that sat empty for nearly 15 years, may finally be on the way toward redevelopment.
"It was just the backbone of the community, there wasn't much else. Everybody in town that didn't have a business probably worked in the mill," said Lyons Falls native Roy Hammecker.
The Lyons Falls Paper Mill was one of Lewis County's largest employers during the late 1800s and early 1900s. Nearly 300 people were employed there. So when the mill closed in 2000, the area was devastated.
"It hit everyone's pocket book and it hit everyone's heart I think," Hammecker said.
"The people in the village, their spirit just plummeted and I didn't think it would ever come back up again because so many other paper mills are shutting down," said Lyons Falls Mayor Katie Liendecker.
By 2008, village, county and regional leaders were tired of seeing a site with so much potential continue to crumble away. The Lewis County Development Corporation started to put together a redevelopment plan and as of Tuesday, that plan was finally put into action.
"It's a very complicated process and it involves a lot of partners, both with supporting the project, engineering it, and also funding it. So it's taken us a while," said Larry Dolhof, president of the Lewis County Development Corporation.
Demolition is the first step toward redeveloping the more than nine-acre site. In phase one, most of the buildings on the property will be taken down in order to make room to expand Kruger Energy's hydro-electric facility.
Project leaders said it will take years to complete the demolition and clean up the site, but village residents are already brainstorming ways to redevelop the property.
Originally posted here:
Demolition Begins at Former Paper Mill
Updated JUL 15, 2014 8:53p ET
The Charleston RiverDogs will put their own spin on the infamous "Disco Demolition Night" on July 19, 35 years after the original event at Comiskey Park in Chicago.
On July 12, 1979, in the midst of a dismal season for the Chicago White Sox, the organization coerced fans into attending a double-header against the Detroit Tigers by blowing up a crate filled with disco records on the diamond. This was seen at the time to symbolize an allegiance to rock music and also resulted in a huge turnout of fans. The promotional stir remains well known in major league history and marks an extreme approach in attempting to spike attendance. It also marks the last time an American League game had to be forfeited, because a riot ensued on the field leading to postponement and eventually forfeiture of the game.
The RiverDogs plan to follow this infamous approach by holding an event labeled, "Disco Demolition 2: You Better Belieb It." In the RiverDogs version, the culprits to take the brunt of the beating will be pop stars Miley Cyrus and Justin Bieber, according to a press release from the team. The event is tabbed as a "modern sequel" to the original event and will feature the destruction of material and music pertaining to both Bieber and Cyrus.
The demolition sequence is set to take place after the contest between the RiverDogs and Augusta GreenJackets. According to the press release, merchandise of the two pop stars will be placed in a giant box and "blown to smithereens" for all of the patrons to enjoy.
Fans who bring merchandise or music from the illustrious collection of Cyrus or Bieber will be admitted at the price of $1. Inflation didn't hinder promotional fanhood as much as one would expect as patrons paid $0.98 back in 1979 to enter Comiskey Park.
Let's hope no riots take place this time around.
Also, for old times' sake, let's not forget the glorious RiverDog days of A-Rod:
Streeter Lecka-Getty Images North America
Alex Rodriguez with a mouth full of sunflower seeds while playing for the Charleston RiverDogs on July 2, 2013.
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Minor-league team's 'Disco Demolition 2' targets Bieber, Cyrus
Demolition of the SeaSide Inn Hotel begins Tuesday at Oakridge Boulevard and State Road A1A in Daytona Beach. Construction on a new luxury hotel and condominium project is scheduled to start this fall.
DAYTONA BEACH Much to the delight of people who have been losing patience with the boarded-up windows, chipped paint, weeds, chain-link fence and vagrants at an oceanfront motel thats been sitting vacant for four years, the 58-year-old SeaSide Inn building is coming down to make way for a luxury hotel and condominium project.
Demolition work started this week on the 100-room lodge at the eastern tip of Oakridge Boulevard, and the concrete structure is slated to be leveled in three to six weeks. At a city code hearing last week sparked by complaints about the State Road A1A property, a special magistrate ordered the 1950s-era motel to be toppled by Sept. 3, but a representative for the property owner told the magistrate it could be reduced to rubble by early August if everything goes off without a hitch.
Thats magnificent, Bob Davis, president and CEO of the Hotel & Lodging Association of Volusia County, said when he heard the motel would soon be no more.
Thats great news, agreed City Commissioner Pam Woods. Its another example of moving forward on the oceanfront. Ill be thrilled when its down and the lot is cleared.
The propertys owner, Russian developer Protogroup, plans to start construction on the site this fall to put up two 300-foot towers with 500 hotel rooms and 105 condos.
Protogroup, which owns hotels and supermarkets in Russia, bought the motel property north of the Oakridge beach approach and another piece of land south of the approach in March 2012. The companys vision for the 4.5-acre site is to create a $150 million complex that would be an independent four-star facility and take about two years to construct.
Unhappiness with the SeaSide property had been mushrooming, and more than 150 people signed a petition demanding the three-story structure be taken down.
Davis and Woods both helped get the demolition in gear a few weeks ago. At a recent City Commission meeting, Woods started a discussion about what was happening with the motel, and Davis jumped into action when officials with the neighboring Plaza Resort & Spa said they didnt want to see any more angry guests who expected a pristine ocean view and instead had to look at a dilapidated building.
Protogroup Vice President Alexey Lysich had planned to topple the motel in September just before construction, but when the complaints reached fever pitch a few weeks ago the citys code enforcement division ordered the motel to be knocked down by July 5.
Read the original here:
Dilapidated Daytona motel coming down as luxury hotel project moves forward
CHARLESTON, W.Va. As another brief summer storm rolled through Tuesday afternoon, Mark Welch was watching the clock and monitoring the skies, hoping everything would line up perfectly so he could get moving on the next step in ridding the Kanawha Valley of the now-infamous white chemical storage tanks at Freedom Industries.
Contractors were on site. New demolition and storm water runoff plans were in place. Now, if the weather would just cooperate, and if a special large shear the machine that will actually cut apart those white tanks would make it in from Cleveland.
Were this close, Welch said, holding his thumb and index finger an inch apart.
Welch, the court-approved chief restructuring officer in Freedoms bankruptcy case, was hoping it would finally be the day that a major part of the work of closing Freedoms Elk River tank farm and cleaning up the site would begin.
Under a deal with the state Department of Environmental Protection, Freedom agreed to start dismantling and removing all above-ground storage tanks, associated piping and machinery by, on or before March 15.
But the tank demolition has been slowed by a series of problems, most recently a finding that there were 650 pieces of asbestos not three, as a survey originally identified that needed to be carefully removed from the facilitys equipment. Welch said the asbestos cleanup set work back roughly two weeks and that its not clear that all of the material identified as asbestos really was. It was easier, he said, to simply assume the worst.
Its better to be safe than sorry, Welch said. During an interview and tour of the site, Welch used that phrase liberally, perhaps in recognition of how Kanawha Valley residents have come to view the chemical storage facility responsible for the January spill that contaminated drinking water supplies serving 300,000 residents in Charleston and surrounding counties.
Welch is a managing director of the financial advising firm MorrisAnderson. At Freedom, his real job is to oversee the company as it basically liquidates its assets in bankruptcy court, a forum where the desires of a companys creditors for payment can often conflict with the demands to spend money on expensive environmental remediation projects.
But with attention focused on Freedom and the site cleanup, much of Welchs focus is on that project, especially following two storm water spills on consecutive days in June. Welch proudly shows off some of the many steps that hes taken to try to ensure the demolition goes smoothly. There are additional storm water pumps to prevent any runoff from reaching the river, and vacuum trucks to suck up any chemicals that happen to seep out of the ground when the tanks all now empty of Freedoms products are demolished.
Walking from Freedoms office building toward the tank farm, Welch points to a red trash bin full of somewhat tattered, bright yellow booms. Welch says he replaced those booms, in place since the Jan. 9 spill, with 1,000 feet of new spill-containing booms, as an extra precaution should anything really go wrong.
Continued here:
Freedom Industries site demolition begins
Demolition Lander Planet Earth iPhone iPad Gameplay
Demolition Lander Planet Earth iPhone iPad Gameplay Description Introducing an awesome tribute to classic Atari space arcade Lunar Lander. Explore, destroy and conquer the Earth! Discover...
By: iPhone Game Trailer
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Demolition Lander Planet Earth iPhone iPad Gameplay - Video
Des Plaines Oasis Demolition
See the Des Plaines Oasis under demolition.
By: DailyHeraldClips
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Des Plaines Oasis Demolition - Video
Demolition Derby Event Videos
I created this video with the YouTube Video Editor (http://www.youtube.com/editor) Share my three youtube channels with family and friend for hours of viewing: Antiques, Cars, Tractors,...
By: Doris Anne Beaulieu
Demolition of Sir John Carling building in Ottawa
400 kilograms of explosives (2000 individual charges) + 11 storey building + seconds of time = 40000 tonnes of rubble + biggest blast in the history of Canada #39;s capital... The former headquarters of.
By: lukeru
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Demolition of Sir John Carling building in Ottawa - Video