Sunday, September 8, 2024

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Well....... wellly...... well oh !!!!!!!.....well  ....does that not look  familiar  ...demolition  job ........hello!!!!!the twins ......9/11 .....look at that  prep job   ........  job  ...... just  like the  towers  ...if you .....if you cannot  see it   you are a  putz.......or  close to a putz  ........




A hurricane-damaged Louisiana skyscraper is imploded

SARA CLINE
3 min read
FILE - Debris surrounds damaged buildings, including the Hertz Building, in the aftermath of Hurricane Laura, Aug. 27, 2020, near Lake Charles, La. (AP Photo/David J. Phillip, File)
ASSOCIATED PRESS
FILE - This aerial photo shows broken windows of the Hertz Building from Hurricane Laura, Thursday, Aug. 27, 2020, in Lake Charles, La. (Bill Feig/The Advocate via AP, Pool, File)
ASSOCIATED PRESS

BATON ROUGE, La. (AP) — An abandoned, 22-story building in Lake Charles, Louisiana — once an icon in the city that became a symbol of destruction from hurricanes Laura and Delta — was imploded Saturday after sitting vacant for nearly four years.

The Hertz Tower crashed down in a matter of seconds after a demolition crew set off a series of explosions inside. The tower fell in a large cloud of dust into a pile about five stories high.

The building, formerly known as the Capital One Tower, had been a dominant feature of the city's skyline for more than four decades. However, after a series of hurricanes ripped through southwest Louisiana in 2020, the building became an eyesore, its windows shattered and covered in shredded tarps.

For years the owners of the building, the Los Angeles-based real estate firm Hertz Investment Group, promised to repair the structure once they settled with their insurance provider Zurich in court, The Advocate reported. The estimated cost of bringing the building back up to code was $167 million. Eventually, the two parties settled for an undisclosed amount.

The demolition was funded by $7 million in private money secured by the city. Hertz still owns the property and the future of the site is undetermined, according to the city.

Lake Charles Mayor Nic Hunter described the implosion of the building as “bittersweet.”

“I know how hard the city tried to work with several development groups to see it saved, but ultimately ... it proved to be too tall a task,” Hunter said before the implosion. He was in office during the hurricanes. “At this juncture, I am ready for a resolution. It’s been four years. It’s been long enough.”

Lake Charles, which sits on the banks of the Calcasieu River and is a two-hour drive from Houston, is home to around 80,000 residents. While the city is known for its copious amounts of festivals, bayous, casinos and its Cajun flair, it also has been labeled by the Weather Channel as America's “most-weather battered city.”

Hurricane Delta crashed ashore in southern Louisiana in October 2020 just six weeks after Laura took a similar, destructive path onto the U.S. Gulf Coast. At the time, Lake Charles was already reeling from damage caused by Laura, which battered roofs, claimed more than 25 lives in the region and left mud and debris filling streets.

The Hertz tower offers an example of the city’s long road to recovery following back-to-back hurricanes that inflicted an estimated $22 billion in damage, according to the National Hurricane Center.

While there are signs of rebuilding and growth in much of Lake Charles, there are still buildings that remain in disarray and residents living in the same conditions as four years ago — waiting for financial relief to rebuild their homes, looking for affordable housing after the hurricanes' destruction exacerbated the housing crisis or stuck in court with their insurance provider to get a fair payout.

Up next
Storyful

Louisiana Skyscraper Demolished 4 Years After Hurricane Damage

Storyful

The tallest building in Lake Charles, Louisiana, was imploded on September 7, after a four-year vacancy due to damage sustained from Hurricane Laura, local news reported.

The owners of the Capital One Tower, Hertz Investment Group, had originally put the 22-story building up for sale after it was badly damaged from the hurricane in August 2020, “but it soon became clear that repairing the building was too daunting a task for most developers to consider,” KSLA reported.

This video from Adam Janies shows the moment of the demolition and the tower collapsing into a large cloud of dust and smoke, marking the end of its 41-year lifespan. Credit: Adam Janies via Storyful

Up next

‘It’s going to be weird’: Locals react to removal of Capital One Tower in Lake Charles

Kye Price
1 min read

LAKE CHARLES, La. (KLFY) — The historic Capital One Tower was demolished Saturday morning, four years after being heavily damaged by Hurricane Laura.

Hundreds of people gathered to witness the tallest building in Lake Charles implode. The tower, which once stood as a staple in the community, is now a mere memory.

Tiffany and Richard Leleux said they traveled from their home in Breaux Bridge to watch the building fall.

“You actually feel the burst right now in your chest. I saw the little lights go out, the little explosions go up, but then the whole thing fell, it’s like it shook you to your core,” Tiffany said.

VIDEO: Capital One Tower demolished

Tiffany, who grew up in Sulphur, said the tower is the first thing drivers look at when driving across the bridge.

“It’s going to be weird to not see it [when] passing over the bridge. That’s the first thing that you look at,” Tiffany said, who grew up in Sulphur.

Tiffany said it was “crazy” that the building was damaged by Hurricane Laura when it had survived so many other past hurricanes.

Richard said the implosion of the tower represents more than just physical change, it represents a new era for future development in Lake Charles.

“I think a lot of people, with it being an eyesore right now, they ready for something new. Get rid of the old and just get something new,” Richard said.

Demolition crews will spend the next few weeks cleaning up the rubble from the property.

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