Cliffs next door will be soon going down same route, the shock on our last visit not to mention the smell, such a shame these old lady’s are at the hands of quick buck merchants, the lack of any real maintenance is criminal to my mind.
Its in a very very unstable condition, speaking to the owner, he didn't want this to happen, 2 people have been arrested with starting the fire and now all his hopes and dreams of turning the building into Apartments are crumbling like the bricks on the old New Hacketts hotel. RIP
It’s not like he was gonna fix it back up again, it was left abandoned as you probably know since 2018, set in fire 3 times and now a 4th time, so it’s very unstable anyway after 3 fires to renovate it up. Too much damage and way too much money. The bank wouldn’t loan you that much I think….it’s a goodbye and he should’ve insured it….
These places are our history could they not keep the front bays and beautiful red brick and modernise at the back I know that the drainage and electric wires ect need replacing but to spoil our the historical heritage is beyond me Surely because of housing shortage this seems over kill
I am an historian and preservationist. It sounds like you and I hold the same love and sentiments regarding vintage buildings. However, in many instances like this, the heat of the fire actually weakens or compromises the structure of the individual bricks or stones themselves. In these cases, even the masonry 'shell' walls (even though the blaze didn't bring them down) can't be saved to become historic facades with new construction behind. It's common for people to find this perplexing because, in the mind, masonry construction is connected with the idea of being 'fire proof.'
@@milels6917 I have the impression that, in this case, no investigation was even done regarding whether the historic, brick 'shell' of the building could be preserved. Maybe it was salvageable (excluding the rear wall) and could've been made safe and sound by infilling the shell with new construction. Or maybe not. Sadly, we'll never know because it was a rush to 'rid the city' of a structure that local government was biased against as it saw only a long string of code violations.
Cliffs next door will be soon going down same route, the shock on our last visit not to mention the smell, such a shame these old lady’s are at the hands of quick buck merchants, the lack of any real maintenance is criminal to my mind.
1:02 A Walk on the Wild Side!
Какой-то он картонный, там были деревянные перекрытия? Старинный? Какого года постройки?
Nice one for recording this for the future!
I’m your 100th subscriber!!
Did they take down the entire structure or did they stop at the fire wall.
They took it all down up to the wall of the next hotel along
is it done yet?
Its in a very very unstable condition, speaking to the owner, he didn't want this to happen, 2 people have been arrested with starting the fire and now all his hopes and dreams of turning the building into Apartments are crumbling like the bricks on the old New Hacketts hotel. RIP
Sad to hear that :(
Wasn’t there some issue with several people being ripped off?
It’s not like he was gonna fix it back up again, it was left abandoned as you probably know since 2018, set in fire 3 times and now a 4th time, so it’s very unstable anyway after 3 fires to renovate it up. Too much damage and way too much money. The bank wouldn’t loan you that much I think….it’s a goodbye and he should’ve insured it….
@@leeshepherd6512 according to walk on the wild side legend Stephen cheatley, yes.
So much plant sitting about on site and the only machine moving has a driver instead of an operator.
These places are our history could they not keep the front bays and beautiful red brick and modernise at the back I know that the drainage and electric wires ect need replacing but to spoil our the historical heritage is beyond me Surely because of housing shortage this seems over kill
The whole building was structurally unsafe after the fire - demolition was the only option
I am an historian and preservationist. It sounds like you and I hold the same love and sentiments regarding vintage buildings. However, in many instances like this, the heat of the fire actually weakens or compromises the structure of the individual bricks or stones themselves. In these cases, even the masonry 'shell' walls (even though the blaze didn't bring them down) can't be saved to become historic facades with new construction behind. It's common for people to find this perplexing because, in the mind, masonry construction is connected with the idea of being 'fire proof.'
@@mugwump242 Thanks for your answer but if it takes a bulldozer to take it down it still could be made safe or is it I’m a bit thick here.?
@@milels6917 I have the impression that, in this case, no investigation was even done regarding whether the historic, brick 'shell' of the building could be preserved. Maybe it was salvageable (excluding the rear wall) and could've been made safe and sound by infilling the shell with new construction. Or maybe not. Sadly, we'll never know because it was a rush to 'rid the city' of a structure that local government was biased against as it saw only a long string of code violations.
That didn't take them long.
It was in a very unsafe condition, so the prom can't be reopened until its knocked down
Would have been better if you could have zoomed in while up there, instead i`ve had to squint watching it all.