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Thursday, January 20, 2022
GoLocalProv News Team
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The demolition of three structure on Gano street took place this week
This week, three buildings were torn down on Gano Street next to a city park including the now-former Holy Rosary Band masonry hall and a multi-story structure that previously housed a hair salon.
By the end of this week, the existing structures at 157-163 Gano Street will be gone and a new proposal for a residential real estate project is expected soon.
Owner and developer Bahman Jalili confirmed to GoLocal that he plans to go before the City Plan Commission in the coming weeks with his plans.
We have some preliminary drawings, he confirmed to GoLocal on Wednesday.
The Holy Rosary Band Society sold the 5,760-square-foot masonry building for $1 million in 2021. According to Societys Facebook page, they are moving to a new location on Taunton Avenue in East Providence.
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The now former location of the Holy Rosary Band Society -- and a 5,700 masonry building. PHOTO: GoLocal
Jalili, who owns Pizza Pie-er on Wickenden Street, owns a number of developments in the city.
The location has the potential to be one of the largest upcoming real estate developments on the East Side.
As GoLocal reported in July 2021:
In May, GoLocal first reported that Monahan Drabble Sherman Funeral Home on the East Side of Providence, which has handled the funeral arrangements of many of Rhode Islands most wealthy and influential over the decades, was sold to a developer.
The history of the funeral home goes back over 140 years. The Victorian home on the corner of Waterman Street and Wayland Avenue will be demolished as part of the development plan.
Now, developer Steve Lewinstein has submitted plans to the City of Providence to demolish the funeral home and build a significant five-story residential and retail structure.
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Demolition on GanoIs This The East Side's Next Big Residential Real Estate Project? - GoLocalProv
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Miriam Postigo and her children outside their home / Sur
Two families, with three children between them, face being homeless if an order to demolish their semi-detached houses in Benajarafe is acted upon.
Ral Postigo, who is married to Miriam Medianero and their two school age children, Miriam, 12 and Samual, six, live next door to their aunt Miriams sister Cristina and her six-year-old son Juan Antonio.
They built the semi-detached houses in 2004 in the Los Puertas area of Benajarafe Alto on a plot of 13,000 square metres. In addition, they planted about 300 mango trees. There has been an order to demolish the homes in place since 2018.
"It is very unfair, that 18 years later they tear down our houses when we are surrounded by hundreds of houses built without a licence," said Ral who added that the local council is trying to help the family as much as possible.
The families were informed on 3 January that they have six months to demolish the houses and if they do not comply could be charged with a crime of disobedience against judicial authority.
"In 2018 the town council paralysed a demolition order because three children live in the houses, Social Services are helping us, we need the court to pay attention to our situation," said Ral. Both families have been paying property tax for years, he maintained.
With the new Andalusian urban planning law, LISTA, we believe that the houses can be legalised, he added.
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Demolition of rural houses in Benajarafe will leave families homeless - Surinenglish.com
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Video: We spoke with residents about the report and the issues that go beyond this one event. (Produced by Joanna Hernandez)
Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Thursday rejected calls to release the full investigation completed by Chicagos former inspector general into the botched implosion of a smokestack in Little Village.
The implosion at the former Crawford coal power plant sent a plume of dust over six blocks of homes in April 2020.
Lightfoot did not respond to a question from WTTW News about whether she thought it was appropriate for her appointees to reject the inspector generals recommendation to fire an employee of the Chicago Department of Public Health and punish two other employees of the Department of Buildings responsible for approving and overseeing the implosion of the smokestack.
City health officials were warned 213 days before the demolition that the dust from an event like this is almost cataclysmic, according to the summary of the report released by interim Inspector General William Marbeck. Fifty-one days before the demolition, health officials were told that dust would be an unpreventable byproduct of the operation, according to the report.
In addition, senior officials in the Chicago Department of Public Health predicted that the demolition would be a disaster, according to the report.
One senior official in the Chicago Department of Public Health will be reprimanded in writing, according to the Chicago Department of Public Healths response to the inspector general.
Ald. Mike Rodriguez (22nd Ward) told WTTW News that a single written reprimand for one employee seems light given the great tragedy of what happened after the smokestack was imploded. The full report should be released to the public, he said.
Kim Wasserman, executive director of the Little Village Environmental Justice Organization, echoed Rodriguezs call for the full investigative report to be released in the interest of transparency.
The Lightfoot administration has not fulfilled its promise to ensure that Little Village residents get justice after the incident that turned the sky over Little Village gray with dust, Rodriguez said.
Their salaries are paid for by taxpayers, and they deserve more accountability, Rodriguez said. This doesnt restore justice to my community.
During the 2019 mayoral campaign, Lightfoot vowed to root out corruption at City Hall while increasing transparency. Her campaigns commercials vowed she would bring in the light.
In July, the City Council approved an ordinance backed by Lightfoot that gave the citys top lawyer the power to release investigations from the inspector general about cases involving deaths or felonies. However, Lightfoot has released no reports that detail misconduct during her time as mayor.
After the incident, city officials did a very thorough deep dive and updated inadequate and antiquated rules, Lightfoot said.
City officials took the steps necessary to prevent another implosion from traumatizing a community and imperiling their health, Lightfoot said.
The inspector generals probe found Hilco at fault for failing to ensure that the implosion did not endanger the health of the public and faulted officials for not taking steps to ensure a plan to protect the surrounding neighborhood was in place and would be followed.
Hilco has not been held accountable by the Lightfoot administration, Wasserman said.
Three firms involved in the implosion of the smokestack at the former Crawford Power Plant paid $370,000 to settle a lawsuit filed by Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul. In addition, city officials hit Hilco and two other firms involved in the implosion with 16 citations, which officials told the news media came with $68,000 in fines.
Hilco paid $19,500 to resolve five citations, city officials said.
That is only a slap on the wrist, Wasserman said.
Two other firms MCM Management and Controlled Demolition Inc. each paid an additional $17,000 to resolve citations related to the implosion.
In all, the three firms paid $53,500 to resolve 11 citations in connection with the implosion, officials said.
Initially, the city levied an additional $17,000 fines against HRP Exchange 55, the subsidiary created by Hilco to handle the demolition of the coal plant and construction and operations of a new warehouse, now leased to Target,
However, Hilco and HRP Exchange 55 are the same corporate entity and could not be fined separately, so five citations were dropped, said Cesar Rodriguez, Lightfoots press secretary.
In addition to paying its fines for violations of the public health code, Hilco was required by the city to pay for state-of-the-art measures to monitor and assure air quality on and around the site going forward, Cesar Rodriguez said. The costs of these measures, in the hundreds of thousands of dollars, was borne by Hilco.
After the incident, which touched off widespread outrage, Lightfoot crafted new rules governing the rarely used demolition method to require community meetings to take place before permits could be issued as well as increased monitoring during the work by a variety of city agencies.
Note: This story was originally published Jan. 20. It has been updated to include our Chicago Tonight: Latino Voices conversation.
Contact Heather Cherone:@HeatherCherone| (773) 569-1863 |[emailprotected]
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Mayor Lori Lightfoot Rejects Calls from Little Village Leaders to Release Full Probe of Botched Smokestack Implosion - WTTW News
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Highlights
After an over four-year low in September, demolitions resumed in October, albeit at a rate below this years monthly average.
Some 20 per cent more structures have been demolished or seized in the first ten months of 2021 compared with the equivalent period in 2020; with almost 25 per cent more people were displaced.
Two EU-funded structures were demolished this month, and five others are at risk of demolition.
In October, the Israeli authorities demolished, forced people to demolish, or seized 43 Palestinian-owned structures across the West Bank, including East Jerusalem. Thisresulted in the displacement of eight people, and affected the livelihoods, or access to services, of about 2,000 others. All the structures were targeted due to the lack of building permits, which are nearly impossible for Palestinians to obtain in Area C and East Jerusalem.
The number of structures demolished or seized, and people displaced in October remains one of the lowest recorded months since the beginning of the year. So far in 2021, the number of structures demolished or seized and people displaced has recorded an increase of 19 and 23 per cent, respectively, compared with the equivalent period in 2020. Also this year, 328 structures, or 56 per cent of all structures targeted in Area C, have been seized without, or with very short, prior notice, utilizing various military orders, effectively preventing people from objecting in advance.
Two structures funded by the EU or its member states were demolished or seized in October, both in Area C. These included a water network in the Massafer Yatta area, which destruction resulted in cutting off access to piped water for over 1,100 people. The other structure is part of a school providing education to around 50 students from five Bedouin communities in the Jorday Valley. Five other EU-funded structures, at a value of about 9,700 Euros, received warning or stop-work orders. Additionally, dozens of trees and saplings provided by the EU, were reportedly vandalized by settlers, ahead of the olive harvest season.
Also in Area C, two agricultural roads were demolished, which undermined the access of 470 people, including farmers and their families, to their land, in Tayasir (Jordan Valley) and in Yabad (Jenin). Five of the total structures were demolished on the basis of Military Order 1797, providing a 96-hour notice only and very limited grounds, for legally challenging a demolition.
Twelve structures were demolished in East Jerusalem, of which nine were demolished by their owners, including a house in the Wadi al Joz neighbourhood, displacing a family of four. Since the beginning of the year in East Jerusalem, 77 structures have been demolished by their owners.
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West Bank demolitions and displacement: An Overview | October 2021 - occupied Palestinian territory - ReliefWeb
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A revised concept for the next stage of redevelopment at Hawthorn Mall in Vernon Hills will improve the original vision and increase investment in the estimated $252 million project, village leaders have been told.
"We're completely committed to this village and to this project," Jon Meshel, senior vice president of development for mall owner Centennial Real Estate explained to village trustees. "This is a double down."
Meshel and others on Tuesday presented a revised Phase 2 of the project, known as Hawthorn 2.0, which calls for 250 luxury rental apartments on the mall property.
The building was to have been located south of the former Sears location, which is now under construction for a mix of 313 luxury apartments in two buildings, retail and other amenities known as Hawthorn Row.
The revised vision for the second phase calls for the former Carson's anchor store to be demolished and the Dave & Buster's restaurant relocated, making way for a mix of 250 apartments and 28,000 square feet of retail/restaurant space.
Shifting the location of those apartments would extend an outdoor plaza area and create more retail spaces facing the plaza outside the mall proper.
That would allow Centennial to adapt to a "shrinking universe" of mall tenants, according to Meshel.
"These are all very intentional moves to right size the interior of the mall, to reinvest in the retail (by) creating outward facing retail, taking advantage of tenant demand for this sort of space," he said.
Retail space was not originally envisioned for Phase 2. Meshel didn't discuss specifics but said the reworked plan represents a "very, very large" investment.
The expanded plaza would become an outdoor area flanked on three sides with street-level retail and residential above, village officials were told.
"This is more exciting than what we showed you before," said Vicky Lee, vice president of development for Focus, a developer and residential development firm. The two firms also partnered on The Atworth apartment component of the Mellody Farm retail center across Milwaukee Avenue east of Hawthorn Mall.
"Our thought was if we are to make this plan complete and whole, why build Phase 2 where it used to be?" Lee said.
By demolishing Carson's and repurposing the space, the plaza would be expanded and utilized as a center in the overall plan more quickly, Meshel said.
"A residential project (in the original location) doesn't do as much for the mall as what we're proposing," he added.
The village board advanced the concept for detailed review by the village's planning and zoning commission, which will hold a public hearing before a final version is presented for board consideration and official action.
"Moving it (residential building) closer will make it more inviting and appealing to actually be there," said Trustee Thom Koch Jr.
Construction is anticipated to take two years and be complete about January 2025.
"This is what we knew we were getting involved in three or four years ago," said Mayor Roger Byrne. "This is different in a good way."
A third proposed part of development involves a plan by Integrated Development of Northfield for 162 units of senior housing in a six-story building north of Hawthorn Row and east of the AMC Theater.
"We're hoping that matriculates and is approved," Meshel said. "It is an independent application, although it is part of an overall campus plan."
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Carson's demolition key to revised second stage of Hawthorn Mall redevelopment - Daily Herald
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As ever, Ash Barty the person was understated. And in customary style, Ash Barty the tennis player was ruthless. Another qualifier down, another round deeper into the Australian Open womens singles draw. This time her victim was Lucia Bronzetti, an Italian ranked 142 places lower than the Australian world No 1. She snatched two games off the Wimbledon champion, which was one more than Lesia Tsurenko managed in the opener. But it is really splitting hairs when the scoreline ends at 6-1, 6-1.
This was as routine as it gets for Barty, a 52-minute stroll in the sun at Rod Laver Arena. She rolled out the wicked serve, the backhand slice and the top-spin forehand and calmly, almost quietly, slipped the win into her satchel she hopes will be full to the brim come the end of next week.
Next on the list on Friday is another Italian in 30th seed Camila Giorgi, before a potential fourth-round encounter with Naomi Osaka.
She [Giorgi] is an incredible ball-striker one of the most athletic girls out here, Barty said. Not afraid to stand on the baseline and put you under time pressure from the first strike. I will have to are have my running shoes on get the backhand slice out and bring in variation and see how it goes.
That variation was also on show on Wednesday, when Barty kept her opponent to seven points in the first five games and broke her five times en route to extending her unbeaten run in 2022 to six matches, having already won the season-opening Adelaide International.
I felt like we had a good preparation in Adelaide, she said. We played well, played throughout tough matches. [Coach] Craig Tyzzer is the master. Hes good in the business and spoilt to have him in my team. Grateful he has the tactical knowledge communication and the way we talk to each other is incredible. Hes going to love hes on the big screen. I feel like our whole team works extremely well together. Were enjoying our tennis and being able to produce some pretty good stuff.
The victory came on the Australian Opens inaugural First Nations Day, of which Bartys fellow Indigenous Wimbledon champion Evonne Goolagong Cawley is an ambassador.
Shes an incredible human being, Im extremely lucky to call her a friend and know shes only a phone call away, she said. Were connected through our heritage. Shes an incredible woman who has paved a path and been able to guide so many of the Indigenous youth coming up in the last however many years through her work off the court. I love her to death.
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Ash Barty shows ruthless side in second-round demolition job at Australian Open - The Guardian
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The University of Missouri last week announcedplans to demolish itsMizzou North facility on the Business Loop.
While the university museum collections housed and displayed there will move on campus to Ellis Library, the demolition will also impact anon-university program that operates out of the basement of Mizzou North.
This is the CoMo Cooks shared kitchen,a partnership ofThe Loop Community Improvement District, Regional Economic Development Inc. and the Missouri Women's Business Center.
Here's a look at whatthe planned demolition of Mizzou North later this year or in early 2023means for the shared kitchen program:
Previously:Cooking, baking, sharing COMO Cooks kitchen rental space opens on The Loop
"We knew when we went into this kitchen that we had a clock on it," Loop Executive Director Carrie Gartner said.
This maker space, much like the MACCLab in the Parkade Center, is a business incubator program on The Loop as part of the Cre8CoMo Initiative.
The CoMO Cooks programreceived grants for small-scale manufacturing from Smart Growth America,the federal Economic Development AdministrationandRecast City. The grants also helped in the planning of surveying community needs, Gartner said.
These grants meanta commercial kitchen space was needed almost immediately, she added.
Mizzou North fulfilled that need.
"Our idea was, we have an empty kitchen, let's open it in a hurry and we would not have to build a kitchen," Gartner said.
By having the kitchens at Mizzou North available right away, CoMo Cooks could build up a client base in preparation of securing a different, permanentlocation and moving to the new facility, also on The Loop.
Grants from Etsy and MasterCard Center for Inclusive Growth allowed for branding, promotion and building a related website for the kitchen space and Cre8CoMo.
The CoMo Cooks kitchen will move its facilities from Mizzou North into one of the strips of businesses next to Carlito's Cabo and across the street from Bob McCosh Chevrolet.
The new location will be about 1,000 to 1,200 feet from the Mizzou North property.
"It actually is a better space. It has a storefront so we can do events or pop-up retail," Gartner said.
It also allows for easier pick-up opportunities due to its accessibility compared to the Mizzou North basement, she added.
The new facility is 3,500 square feet. Offices will move into the space, along with building out the shared kitchens.
The program will use a temporary kitchen location as the build-out happens, so clients can continue their work.
Based on supply chain issues and COVID-19 spikes, Gartner expects that it will be at least afew months before the kitchens are in operation at the new facility. Office space will be ready and in use within the next month or so, she added.
The CoMo Cooks program has put in a request to the City of Columbia for American Rescue Plan funds to help with the build-out of the new kitchen facility.
"There is a section of (Rescue Plan funds) dedicated to workforce development, and our kitchen applied," Gartner said, noting Job Point and the MACCLab Maker Space also are applicants.
Gartner is excited for the move because of the ability to have a storefront and pop-up events in the future.
"(Pop-ups) are really key. We can provide a low-cost option for businesses," she said. "Retail pop-ups really help launch a business nicely."
The storefront does not mean pop-up events will focus solely on food-related businesses, Gartner said. The grants received allowed for the creation of an online maker directory, which features just about every type of creative business.
"We do maker markets twice per year, and during the height of the pandemic we were doing online auctions for locally made products," Gartner said, adding the pop-ups will provide locally made products to the community.
The CoMo Cooks kitchen has 14 clients using the space, with five more conducting preparations to eventually start using the kitchens.
REDI and Missouri Women's Business Center providebusiness coaching and make sure clients have all the necessary documentation in place touse the kitchens.
Gartner expects once CoMo Cooks moves to its temporary and eventually permanent location, they will be able to bring in multiple clients at the same time to use the space.
CoMo Cooks is also working on partnerships with The Root Cellar and the Greenbelt Land Trust of Mid-Missouri.
"We are working to bring in farmers from the region to do small-batch production as well," Gartner said.
Farmers who want to make a value-added product to what they already producecould connect with CoMo Cooks for product development. A dairy farmer could start making cheese, or other items could be made by farmers who grow more than just typical row crops of corn and soybeans.
"Locally made food is so important with COVID interrupting the supply chain," Gartner said. "Our kitchen will be the place where farmers can jumpstart a business with value-added products."
The partnerships could also help people who already use the kitchen to source local ingredients from farmers.
"When you are starting a business, all of those connections can help you think differently and help a business grow or expand more quickly," Gartner said.
The university is keeping the Mizzou North property even after the building is demolished, and Gartner hopes to work with the university on any plans it has forthe space.
Decisions are not yet made on the property's future use, MU spokesperson Christian Basi said last week.
"It is quite an opportunity to have that much space in the middle of town," Gartner said about the property's potential.
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What the planned demolition of Mizzou North means for the CoMo Cooks program - Columbia Daily Tribune
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The residents of Bharathi Nagar in Soolai have urged the district administration to postpone the demolition of their houses for road widening works, until they were provided alternative accommodation.
In their petition to the District Collector, which they dropped in the petition box, the people said that there were 100 houses in their area in which those belonging to Adi Dravidar and Dalit communities have been residing for over 50 years. The State Highways Department had served a notice recently asking them to vacate their houses for road widening project. Most of the people were daily wage earners. If their houses were demolished, they have no place to live and would be forced to take shelter along the road. The petition wanted the administration to allot them houses under government schemes and until that their houses should not be demolished.
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Residents of Bharathi Nagar in Erode oppose demolition of their houses - The Hindu
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Compliance code: Demolition – WorkSafe -
February 20, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
If your work involves demolition sites, there are specific duties and obligations you need to comply with under the Occupational Health and Safety Act (OHS Act) 2004 and Occupational Health and Safety Regulations (OHS Regulations) 2017. This compliance code gives you practical guidance on how to comply with those duties and obligations.
This information is particularly relevant for you if youre an employer, self-employed person, principal contractor or someone who has management or control of a workplace that involves demolition work. It is also relevant for employees, people who install, erect or commission plant, and people who design buildings and structures. It uses examples and tools you can apply to your own situation.
It includes information on:
It is recommended that you follow the compliance code. If you comply with a code, you are deemed to comply with the Act or Regulation duty covered by the code. However, codes are not mandatory and duty holders may choose to use some other way to achieve compliance.
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Compliance code: Demolition - WorkSafe
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Precision Demolition -
February 20, 2021 by
Mr HomeBuilder
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Precision Demolition
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