Home Builder Developer - Interior Renovation and Design
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Due to the pandemic, we have included a special section on the Impact of COVID 19 on the Air Duct Cleaning ChemicalsMarket which would mention How the Covid-19 is Affecting the Industry, Market Trends and Potential Opportunities in the COVID-19 Landscape, Key Regions and Proposal for Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals Market Players to battle Covid-19 Impact.
The Air Duct Cleaning ChemicalsMarket report is one of the most comprehensive and important data about business strategies, qualitative and quantitative analysis of Global Market. It offers detailed research and analysis of key aspects of the Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market. The market analysts authoring this report have provided in-depth information on leading growth drivers, restraints, challenges, trends, and opportunities to offer a complete analysis of the Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market.
Top Leading players covered in the Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market report: Water Treatment Products, Heat Seal Equipment, Bio-Cide International, Abatement Technologies, ComStar International, OdorX and More
Get PDF Sample Report With Impact of COVID-19 on Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals [emailprotected] https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/Request-Sample/69576
The report offers clear guidelines for players to cement a position of strength in the global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market. It prepares them to face future challenges and take advantage of lucrative opportunities by providing a broad analysis of market conditions. the global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market will showcase a steadyCAGR in the forecast year 2020 to 2026.
Market Segment by Type covers:FungicidesBactericidesAlgaecidesDeodorizersMarket Segment by Application covers:ResidentialCommercialIndustrial
Our Complimentary Sample Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market Report Accommodate a Brief Introduction of the research report, TOC, List of Tables and Figures, Competitive Landscape and Geographic Segmentation, Innovation and Future Developments Based on Research Methodology.
Inquire and Get Up to 30% DiscountBy Clicking Here!https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/Request_discount/69576
Regions Covered in the Global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals Market: The Middle East and Africa (GCC Countries and Egypt) North America (the United States, Mexico, and Canada) South America (Brazil etc.) Europe (Turkey, Germany, Russia UK, Italy, France, etc.) Asia-Pacific (Vietnam, China, Malaysia, Japan, Philippines, Korea, Thailand, India, Indonesia, and Australia)
Years Considered to Estimate the Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals Market Size:History Year: 2015-2019Base Year: 2019Estimated Year: 2020Forecast Year: 2020-2026
Highlights of the Report: Accurate market size and CAGR forecasts for the period 2019-2026 Identification and in-depth assessment of growth opportunities in key segments and regions Detailed company profiling of top players of the global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market Exhaustive research on innovation and other trends of the global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals market Reliable industry value chain and supply chain analysis Comprehensive analysis of important growth drivers, restraints, challenges, and growth prospects
For More Information:https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/69576/Air-Duct-Cleaning-Chemicals-market
Customization of the Report:Market Info Reports provides customization of reports as per your need. This report can be personalized to meet your requirements. Get in touch with our sales team, who will guarantee you to get a report that suits your necessities.
Get Customization of the [emailprotected]:https://www.marketinforeports.com/Market-Reports/Request-Customization/69576/Air-Duct-Cleaning-Chemicals-market
Contact Us:Mr. Marcus KelCall: +1 415 658 9988 (International)+91 84 839 65921 (IND)Email: [emailprotected]Website: http://www.marketinforeports.com
Read more:
Global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals Market with Covid-19 Effect Analysis | likewise Industry is Booming Globaly with Key Players Water Treatment...
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on Global Air Duct Cleaning Chemicals Market with Covid-19 Effect Analysis | likewise Industry is Booming Globaly with Key Players Water Treatment…
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Share this idea!
This is the third in a series of five articles that help you find ways to reduce your carbon footprint by looking at the main carbon culprits in the average Americans lifestyle.
If owning a big house in the suburbs is part of the American dream, a lot of people are living the dream. The average American single-family home built in 2018 was 2,551 square feet. Second, only to Australia, the U.S. has the largest houses in the world you could fit 11.2 Chinese homes in the average American house. Thats got to be a good thing, right?
But it comes with a high environmental price tag, increasing transportation emissions through long commutes and encouraging the accumulation of lots of stuff. And it takes a lot of energy to heat and cool big homes. Home heating and cooling comprises 17 percent of Americans carbon footprint.
Because carbon dioxide emissions are a leading cause of climate change, measuring the amount of carbon dioxide released by a particular activity is a useful shorthand for environmental impact. This measurement is called a carbon footprint.
There are many ways to calculate your familys carbon footprint. On average, each American generates 18.55 tons of carbon dioxide emissions each year. This is 3.5 times the global average of 5.3 tons. And for most Americans, home heating and cooling is the third-largest source of those emissions.
Your familys heating and cooling footprint could be much different from the average. A household in Idaho may not even have air conditioning. But they might run the heater up to 10 months of the year. Two such houses may have very different emissions depending on their heat source. A home in Arizona may spend hundreds of dollars per month on air conditioning most of the year.
Unless your only form of climate control is opening or shutting the windows, you can improve your heating and cooling footprint.
A good place to start is by looking at your habits. Do you set your air conditioner to a lower temperature in summer than you set your heater in winter? Do you turn on the heater on the first chilly day or wait until it is actually too cold? Try dressing for the season and setting your thermostat as close to the outside temperature as is comfortable. Setting the thermostat back 7-10 degrees Fahrenheitwhile you are at work can reduce your heating or cooling load by up to 10 percent. Installing a smart thermostat can help you save energy, too.
Tap into energy-efficiency programs through your local utility. Keeping on top of home maintenance tasks like duct cleaning, servicing your furnace and air conditioner, and sealing windows will improve home efficiency. Even your choice of window treatments can make a difference in both cold weather and to combat the heat island effect.
Sealing air leaks will make your home perform better, saving 15 to 25 percent of the heat furnaces generate in winter and blocking the same amount of unwanted heat gain in summer. For most homes, insulating floors, walls, and ceilings can cut this leakage by about a third. Doors and windows are popular upgrades and at a combined one-fifth of leakage are not irrelevant. But ducts and fireplaces are still bigger culprits.
When upgrading your older furnace, choose a highly efficient model and consider the source of your electricity when you decide between gas or electric. If you live in a warm climate, fans use a fraction of the energy of an air conditioner. They also do not require chemical coolants, which are greenhouse gases. If you really need air conditioning, consider whether you can get by with a window unit, which uses a third as much energy as central air conditioning. Whatever air conditioner you end up buying, choose the most efficient model.
To really slash your home emissions, cut your square footage: Convert your house to a duplex or move into an efficient multifamily building or tiny home.
Whatever your square footage, if youre building a home, use passive design and other green building strategies like earth-sheltered construction to achieve net-zero energy use. And if you choose to move to a milder climate to avoid the need for heating and air conditioning entirely, just make sure you plan a low-waste move and recycle those moving boxes.
Original post:
Good, Better, Best: Cutting Carbon From Home Heating and Cooling - Earth911.com
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on Good, Better, Best: Cutting Carbon From Home Heating and Cooling – Earth911.com
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG HAS EXTENDEDTHE* FLOOD ADVISORY FOR...EAST CENTRAL MCDOWELL COUNTY IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...WEST CENTRAL BURKE COUNTY IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...* UNTIL 1215 PM EDT SUNDAY.* AT 1159 AM EDT, LAKE JAMES REMAINED ABOVE FULL POOL AT 101.25FEET. THE WATER LEVEL WILL CONTINUE TO SLOWLY FALL, BUT REMAINABOVE FULL POOL THROUGH THE NEXT 24 HOURS. THEREFORE, A FLOODADVISORY HAS BEEN EXTENDED FOR NUISANCE FLOODING AND WILL REMAININ EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING OR UNTIL THE FLOODWAVE HASPASSED.* ACTION/ADVISORY STAGE: 101.00 FEETMINOR FLOOD STAGE: 102.00 FEETFORECAST: DUKE ENERGY PROJECTS THE POOL TO CONTINUE TO FALL SLOWLYTHROUGH TONIGHT. EXPECT LAKE JAMES TO REMAIN ABOVE FULL POOLTHROUGH AT LEAST TONIGHT.IMPACTS: BETWEEN 101 AND 102 FEET...NUISANCE FLOODING OF LOW-LYINGAREAS ADJACENT TO THE SHORELINE INCLUDING RESIDENTIAL YARDS,CAMPGROUNDS, DOCKS, AND BOAT-LAUNCH AREAS IS ONGOING. LAKEWATERSMAY BE FLOODING MOOSE LODGE CAMPGROUND, MOOSE LODGE CAMPGROUND RD,AND HOUSEBOAT LANE.PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...BOATERS, FISHERMEN, KAYAKERS, AND OTHER LAKE USERS ARE ENCOURAGED TOEXERCISE CAUTION DURING ELEVATED LAKE LEVELS AND DOWNSTREAMRELEASES. AVOID AREAS ALONG THE STREAM BELOW DAMS RELEASING WATER.CAMPERS AND OTHER RESIDENTS ALONG THE LAKESHORE MUST BE PREPARED TORETREAT TO HIGHER GROUND IF LAKE LEVELS CONTINUE TO RISE.STAY WEATHER AWARE AND MONITOR LAKE LEVELS CLOSELY.&&
Read more here:
Watch Now: Keeping safe from COVID-19 at the pool this summer, and more virus stories - McDowell News
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on Watch Now: Keeping safe from COVID-19 at the pool this summer, and more virus stories – McDowell News
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
THE NATIONAL WEATHER SERVICE IN GREENVILLE-SPARTANBURG HAS EXTENDEDTHE* FLOOD ADVISORY FOR...SOUTH CENTRAL CALDWELL COUNTY IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...EAST CENTRAL BURKE COUNTY IN WESTERN NORTH CAROLINA...* UNTIL NOON EDT SUNDAY.* AT 1152 AM EDT, LAKE RHODHISS REMAINED ABOVE FULL POOL AT 101.2FEET. THE WATER LEVEL WILL CONTINUE TO SLOWLY FALL, BUT REMAINABOVE FULL POOL THROUGH THE NEXT 24 HOURS. THEREFORE, A FLOODADVISORY HAS BEEN EXTENDED FOR NUISANCE FLOODING AND WILL REMAININ EFFECT THROUGH SUNDAY MORNING OR UNTIL THE FLOODWAVE HAS PASSED.* ACTION/ADVISORY STAGE: 102.00 FEET.MINOR FLOOD STAGE: 104.00 FEET.FORECAST: DUKE ENERGY PROJECTS THE POOL TO GRADUALLY DECLINETHROUGH TONIGHT.IMPACTS: AT 103.0 FEET...ACTION/ADVISORY STAGE. NUISANCE FLOODINGOF LOW-LYING AREAS INCLUDING RESIDENTIAL YARDS, DOCKS, AND BOAT-LAUNCH AREAS IS ONGOING. WATER MAY APPROACH STRUCTURES OFF OFCATAWBA AVE BELOW THE DAM AND OTHER AREAS UPSTREAM OF THE DAM.* FOR MORE INFORMATION ON LAKE LEVELS, PROJECTIONS, OR DAM RELEASES,PEOPLE ARE ENCOURAGED TO VISIT http://LAKES.DUKE-ENERGY.COM ORCALL 1-800-829-5253.PRECAUTIONARY/PREPAREDNESS ACTIONS...BOATERS, FISHERMEN, KAYAKERS, AND OTHER LAKE USERS ARE ENCOURAGED TOEXERCISE CAUTION DURING ELEVATED LAKE LEVELS AND DOWNSTREAMRELEASES. AVOID AREAS ALONG THE STREAM BELOW DAMS RELEASING WATER.CAMPERS AND OTHER RESIDENTS ALONG THE LAKESHORE MUST BE PREPARED TORETREAT TO HIGHER GROUND IF LAKE LEVELS CONTINUE TO RISE.STAY WEATHER AWARE, MONITOR LAKE LEVELS CLOSELY, AND HEED GUIDANCEFROM LOCAL OFFICIALS AND EMERGENCY MANAGEMENT.&&
Visit link:
A colorful corner of the city - Morganton News Herald
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on A colorful corner of the city – Morganton News Herald
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
What happens when it gets really hot and the AC is blasting on full?
In much of the United States, the malls and restaurants are reopening to the public. Some of those states get really hot in the summertime. Sarah Goodyear, a writer and host on The War On Cars, posted an interesting tweet:
Recent research indicates that large droplets from sneezing can travel much further than 2 meters, even if there are no air movements. Small particles (
They have been studying the problem in Canada too. Professor Brian Fleck told the National Post that "this has been on peoples radar for quite a while. Somebody on a different floor sneezes The particle can stay airborne long enough to go all the way through the system and then pop out in somebody elses office."
There are various ways that the risk can be lessened, including use of filters that catch a greater number of those particles, and drawing more fresh air into a system... But each of those changes carries a cost. Adding more fresh air can require additional heat or air conditioning. Heavier filters means more energy is needed to push the air through them.
But it doesn't get as hot in Canada as it does in Arizona. Engineer and Professor Ted Kesik told TreeHugger that "we shall be greatly challenged retrofitting our existing buildings to eliminate dilution ventilation systems." This is especially a challenge in the heat of a southern summer, where the difference between inside and outside air can be 40F in Arizona or Texas. In the Southeast, there is also a lot of humidity with the heat. That's why the air is recirculated; the amount of energy needed to condition a mall's worth of outside air would be ridiculously high.
ASHRAE, the American Society of Heating, Refrigerating, and Air-Conditioning Engineers, had a look at the issue of the coronavirus and issued a statement in late April:
Transmission of SARS-CoV-2 through the air is sufficiently likely that airborne exposure to the virus should be controlled. Changes to building operations, including the operation of heating, ventilating, and air-conditioning systems, can reduce airborne exposures.
They issued technical guidelines in a position document on infectious aerosols:
Infectious aerosols can be disseminated through buildings by pathways that include air distribution systems and interzone airflows. Various strategies have been found to be effective at controlling transmission, including optimized airflow patterns, directional airflow, zone pressurization, dilution ventilation, in-room air-cleaning systems, general exhaust ventilation, personalized ventilation, local exhaust ventilation at the source, central system filtration, UVGI, and controlling indoor temperature and relative humidity. Design engineers can make an essential contribution to reducing infectious aerosol transmission through the application of these strategies.
That's fine, the engineers know what to do with new buildings. But what about existing ones? Here, they make some recommendations, and I try to add an explanation in italics.
All of these modifications are expensive, either in equipment or operating costs. All of these building owners and tenants have been bleeding money in the last few months. All of the companies making this equipment are going through the crisis, too. In short, it is probably safe to say it's not gonna happen, at least in the short term.
I have tried to get comments from engineers and experts, but the only one I have received so far is, "Yikes, I think that is a problem." I will add more comments as I receive them.
But I do believe that Sarah Goodyear has raised an interesting point. In my limited experience in Arizona in summer (two weeks in Scottsdale in July), I rarely saw anyone outside. And it's not even summer yet, but as one shopper in Arizona told NBC News after the mall opened, "We hit all the museums and this place because its hot."
See the original post here:
Coronavirus and the air conditioned nightmare - Treehugger
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on Coronavirus and the air conditioned nightmare – Treehugger
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
SOUTH WINDSOR, CT So ... what does it takes to re-open a international business in Connecticut that has already been trying to keep its work force of about 500 employed? South Windsor-based TicketNetwork Chief Executive Officer Donald Vaccaro was not shy about sharing the details Friday.
On Tuesday, Vaccaro said, TicketNetwork will begin the reopening process, and the number of employees returning to the South Windsor headquarters will continue to expand "as is prudent."
"TicketNetwork has taken the appropriate steps to control the access to the building to make sure that everyone who enters the building is safe," Vaccaro said.
The building is "ready," Vaccaro said, and here are the highlights of the changes:
(TicketNetwork/Sean Burns)
(TicketNetwork/Sean Burns)
Said Vaccaro, "TicketNetwork is preparing to reopen for its valued staff, most of whom have been working from home since late March, doing their part to help flatten the curve of the Covid-19 pandemic. As part of its reopening plan, company management and its facilities team reviewed a variety of best practices and developed a multi-tiered approach to bringing workers back in the safest fashion possible."
The rest is here:
TicketNetwork Outlines What It Takes To Reopen Larger Office - South Windsor, CT Patch
Category
Air Duct Cleaning | Comments Off on TicketNetwork Outlines What It Takes To Reopen Larger Office – South Windsor, CT Patch
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Fueled by existing civil unrest, heated protests involving clashes with the policeand at least one high-profile arresthave erupted in the Albanian capital of Tirana after officials proceeded with the planned demolition of the National Theatre of Albania (Teatri Kombtar). The in-disrepair but culturally revered landmark was completed in 1939 during the Italian occupation. The ongoing protests, which initially involved a few thousand people according to the Associated Press, were held near the Interior Ministry, and in defiance of the countrys lockdown orders during the coronavirus pandemic.
Added to European conservation group Europa Nostras 7 Most Endangered list this past March, the buildings fate has been murky since 2018 when authorities announced in 2018 that the historic theater would be razed and replaced with a new, roughly $33 million theater and cultural complex designed by Bjarke Ingels Group (BIG). Despite ongoing efforts from a large faction of artists, activists, intellectuals, conservationists, governmental opposition leaders and supporters, and others to preserve and restore the building, Albanian Prime Minister Edi Rama, a former mayor of Tirana, ordered the demolition to proceed so that work on the BIG project could commence. A definite start date, however, has not been established due to funding conflicts.
Per Reuters, demolition work at the site started on May 17 after authorities began dragging away two dozen actors and activists protecting the site, drawing a large crowd chanting shame and dictatorship. As of earlier this week, the protests have reportedly yielded 37 arrests. One police officer was hospitalized following a skirmish with activists, who claim that authorities have been employing unjustified violence and verbal abuse to control the crowds. As reported by Reuters, authorities have disputed any claims of aggressive action on the part of the police.
A rendering of BIGs bow-tie-shaped cultural center to replace the just-razed National Theatre of Albania. (Courtesy BIG)
This is no longer about the theatres demolition but the downfall of democracy and freedom. We are in a dictatorship, Reuters reported one member of the Alliance to Protect the Theatre, the organization leading the charge against the demolition, as saying in a Facebook video.
Now that the theater has been demolished, protestors are calling for current mayor Erion Veliaj to resign and for the Albanian people to start a civil disobedience campaign until Ramas center-left government is overthrown, according to the Associated Press. The opposition party, the center-right Democratic Party, has referred to the demolition as a macabre crime and flagrant violation of the constitution and the law.
More:
Protests erupt over historic theater demolition and BIG's replacement in Albanian capital - The Architect's Newspaper
Category
Demolition | Comments Off on Protests erupt over historic theater demolition and BIG’s replacement in Albanian capital – The Architect’s Newspaper
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Interior demolition work is underway at a Mies van der Roheinspired building in downtown Kansas City, Missouri. The modernist mid-rise structure, formerly home to the citys Board of Education and central library, will be fully razed in the coming weeks although the fate of the buildings colorful, beloved mosaic murals by prominent local artist, the late Arthur Kraft, remains murky.
Completed in 1960 and added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2017, the building was designed by Edward W. Tanner, an architect who left an indelible mark on Kansas City throughout the 20th century. Although another architect devised the site master plan, Tanner was intimately involved with the design of Country Club Plaza, a sprawling, water feature-studded shopping centerthe first in the world to accommodate car-commandeering shoppersopened by developer J.C. Nichols in 1923. An architectural fantasia leaning heavily on Moorish-inspired design, Country Club Plaza and its collection of Seville, Spain-inspired buildings is one of Kansas Citys most significant (and decidedly peculiar) architectural offerings. Tanner, who eventually established his own firm, also designed thousands of private homes in a variety of styles and numerous landmark buildings around town, most of them, unlike his work at Country Club Plaza, markedly modernist.
The old Board of Education building, per a statement released by Historic Kansas City and shared by local NBC affiliate KSHB, is an outstanding example of the Modern Movement: International Stylespecifically the influence of Miesian design. In 2019, the same year that the building was acquired by local developer Copaken Brooks after a controversial plan to redevelop the site as a hotel property was ultimately yanked by Drury Hotels due to squabbles over the incentive plan offered by the city, Historic KC placed the building on its annual Most Endangered List.
As Historic KC noted: Good public policy should not incentivize the demolition of historic buildings. Another low dollar hotel will add to the already saturated hotel market; threatening existing healthy historic and approved yet/unbuilt new hotels. Further, even if you dont have affection for the modern architecture of the KC Board of ED Building, Drurys proposal was an affront to the monumental civic mall plan across the street, that includes the three iconic art deco designed buildings: City Hall, Municipal Court and County Courthouse.
The building also landed placed on the Missouri Alliance for Historic Preservations 2018 Places in Peril list.
As reported by Kevin Collison for the Flatland blog, the building has been vacant for four years and has become a magnet for vagrants and vandalism according to Jon Copaken. In addition to serving as headquarters to the Kansas City School District for decades, the building was also the longtime home to Kansas Citys downtown public library branch before it moved into a new, highly Instagrammable location at the old First National Bank building in 2004.
As for the circus-themed glass tile mosaic mural by Kraft, a renowned muralist as well as sculptor and expressionist painter, Copaken has pledged that it wont be reduced to rubble although nothing, at this point, is definite.
I have spent more time on the murals than the demolition itself, he explained to Flatland. We want to preserve them and have them open for public view. He added, however: The mosaics are affixed to a concrete wall. Cutting that out, removing it and preserving it in one piece is really expensive. We continue to work with groups, but we dont have anything worked out with someone who can pay to get it down.
Concludes the statement from Historic KC, penned by its executive director, Lisa Briscoe:
Recent changes to the federal and Missouri historic tax credit programs contributed to thwart several renovation proposals. The historic structure would be demolished in connection with a proposal at 13th and Grand, which thus far remains a proposal. Historic Kansas City recognizes the need for Downtown to evolve and adapt to a changing set of office, retail, and economic circumstances. Circumstances may be changing dramatically even at the present moment. We are not adverse to development but want it to proceed in a manner that reflects the historic and scenic nature of the Civic Mall plan, that includes the three iconic art deco designed buildings, City Hall, Municipal Court and County Courthouse. One of Downtowns strongest cultural attributes. Whatever the future holds for this site, any infill development proposal must be compatible with the Civic Mall plan. Further the colorful historic glass mosaic tile murals should be preserved in consultation with the Kansas City Municipal Art Commission.
View post:
Demolition work begins on NRHP-listed modernist building in Kansas City - The Architect's Newspaper
Category
Demolition | Comments Off on Demolition work begins on NRHP-listed modernist building in Kansas City – The Architect’s Newspaper
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Contractors are finalizing steps that will lead to the demolition of NOLA's Hard Rock Hotel, which began to collapse in October of 2019. Photo: WWL-TV
NEW ORLEANS - After months of delays, demolition contractors appear to be laying the groundwork for the demolition of the partially collapsed Hard Rock Hotel in New Orleans.
According toWWL-TV, on Thursday afternoon there was little movement at the site, but critical work is being done behind the scenes and at other locations.
This is called the mobilization phase, said UNO engineering professor Norma Jean Mattei. The contractor is mobilizing. He's getting all of his equipment in place.
Large wooden planks, known as cribbing, are being placed across Rampart and Canal streets in preparation to bring in more heavy equipment. The cribbing work appeared to be almost finished late Thursday.
Mattei says the cribbing will soon support massive cranes and other large pieces of machinery.
So what you do is you put down these massive timbers that spreads the load out so the street can safely carry that load, Mattei said. The cranes are a massive payload, and they will be used to bring down massive payloads as they start to bring down pieces of the building.
In order to bring down the main structure, the city granted Hard Rock developer, 1031 Canal, and main demolition contractor, Kolb Grading, emergency approval to tear down three buildings adjacent to the hotel.
The Old Post Office on Iberville was demolished last week. Two buildings on Canal, the former Alamo Theater and a smaller next to it, are scheduled to come down next.
Once those buildings are leveled, activity should start on bringing down the Hard Rock's upper floors, Mattei said.
I think we'll see some of those pancaked section, on the Rampart side, probably start to come down first, she said. They really want to get those pieces that are not stable.
It's likely that the first unsteady piece of the wreckage to come down will be the remnants of the tower crane that hangs over the sidewalk on Canal. The crane was partially brought down by dynamite in November.
Follow this link:
Contractors prepare for demolition of NOLA's partially collapsed Hard Rock Hotel - WBRZ
Category
Demolition | Comments Off on Contractors prepare for demolition of NOLA’s partially collapsed Hard Rock Hotel – WBRZ
-
May 24, 2020 by
Mr HomeBuilder
Days after Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced that another demolition at a shuttered coal-fired plant in Little Village would temporarily be halted, a group of community activists on Sunday pushed to prevent the building from coming down until COVID-19 passes.
Lightfoots administration gave the go-ahead Thursday to demolish a turbine structure at the site of the former Crawford power plant. But when protesters showed up at Lightfoots Logan Square home that night, she swiftly called off the demolition and said it will not move forward for the next several days.
However, activist Raul Montes Jr. fears the demolition is still imminent.
Montes and Blue Island Mayor Domingo Vargas led a news conference Sunday near the site and pushed for a moratorium on any demolitions at the site until October. They were joined by Kenneth Klein, a Little Village resident who believes he developed lung cancer and COPD from living near the plant.
We want transparency, Montes told the Chicago Sun-Times. People were not getting notice of the demolition that was going to occur. Theres no transparency, and we just feel that we want justice for this. Weve gone through enough already
The push for added transparency comes after an April 11 smokestack implosion at the site sent a cloud of dust billowing through Little Village. Local Ald. Mike Rodriguez (22nd) has also voiced his opposition to any immediate demolition work and has called for work crews to leave the site.
Montes worries the dust from the blast exacerbated the conditions of individuals like Klein and others with respiratory illnesses, who are particularly susceptible to COVID-19.
In the wake of the debacle in April, Lightfoot blamed Hilco Redevelopment Partners, slapped the firm with $68,000 in fines and vowed to overhaul a flawed city regulatory system that allowed it to happen. She also ordered a six-month moratorium on implosions at the site a ban that wouldnt have affected the recently delayed demolition.
Nevertheless, Montes believes the citys actions were nothing more than a slap on the wrist to a company that has a lot of money. Meanwhile, Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul has sued Hilco, MCM Management Corp. and Controlled Demolition Inc. for violating state pollution laws.
In reversing course last week, Lightfoot vowed to engage with the local community to discuss the structurally dangerous condition of that small building. But as far as Montes can tell, that hasnt happened, and he now fears that Lightfoot will simply go ahead with the demolition in the coming days.
Were being stonewalled, said Montes, who is also pushing for an evacuation of the area surrounding the site in the case of an explosion.
Lightfoots office didnt immediately respond to a request for comment.
Go here to read the rest:
Though Lightfoot halted demolition at shuttered Little Village coal plant, activists fear its still imminent - Chicago Sun-Times
Category
Demolition | Comments Off on Though Lightfoot halted demolition at shuttered Little Village coal plant, activists fear its still imminent – Chicago Sun-Times
« old Postsnew Posts »