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    Call Of Duty MW3 Dome Demolition Gameplay 40 Kills – Video - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Call Of Duty MW3 Dome Demolition Gameplay 40 Kills
    Hey guys its Xx-INFAMOS-TBSxX Playing some demolition on dome had a decent game .so yeah guys hope you guys enjoy and subscribe.

    By: Xx-INFAMOS-TBSxX

    More here:
    Call Of Duty MW3 Dome Demolition Gameplay 40 Kills - Video

    Demolition Race – Video - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Demolition Race

    By: Sebastian Esquerdo

    Original post:
    Demolition Race - Video

    Demolition job – Video - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Demolition job
    The former Arctic Insulation building in Magnolia, Arkansas, which was damaged by a fire earlier this year, was demolished on Monday, September 29, 2014. http://www.magnoliareporter.com video.

    By: Mike McNeill

    See the original post here:
    Demolition job - Video

    KOBELCO SK 480 LC w. Demolition Shear / Abbruch Neckarbrcke A 6 Mannheim, Germany, 29.02.2004. – Video - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    KOBELCO SK 480 LC w. Demolition Shear / Abbruch Neckarbrcke A 6 Mannheim, Germany, 29.02.2004.
    Kobelco SK 480 LC w. Demolition Shear / Abbruch Neckarbrcke A 6 Mannheim, Germany, 29.02.2004.

    By: Benjamin Beytekin

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    KOBELCO SK 480 LC w. Demolition Shear / Abbruch Neckarbrcke A 6 Mannheim, Germany, 29.02.2004. - Video

    Residential demolition changes urged at neighborhood summit - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Neighborhood activists trying to slow the pace of residential demolitions have formed a new organization, launched an online petition, and set a meeting to finalize a series of policy changes to be presented to the City Council.

    The steps were taken at a Demolition Summit held on Monday evening. Around 70 people from 17 neighborhood associations attended the meeting, which took place Sept. 30 at Grant Park Church in Northeast Portland.

    "I was very pleased with the turnout and the enthusiasm for moving forward. There was a lot of positive energy," says Al Ellis, one of the organizers and a former president of the Beaumont-Wilshire Neighborhood

    Association.

    During the meeting, the group adopted the name United Neighbors for Reform. While the current focus in on demolition and infill development projects, it may work on other issues in the future.

    The group also approved a two-track approach to changing city policies regarding residential demolitions and infill projects.

    First, it authorized an online petition supporting current efforts by the Development Review Advisory Committee of the Bureau of Development Service to address some of the issues. A DRAC subcommittee is looking at possible changes in city policies regarding public notification of pending demolitions, compliance with state rules regarding the handling of potential toxic materials, demolitions classified as remodeling projects, and demolition delays to allow neighbors to explore options for preserving properties.

    At the meeting, the activists said they also want the city to encourage the deconstruction of houses instead of demolition. Deconstruction allows more building materials to be recycled and reduces debris going into landfills.

    Ellis says those at the meetings were pleased that the subcommittee is addressing many of their issues.

    "That's been a pleasant surprise," says Ellis. "I think it's a sign that City Hall realizes this is not just a handful of people complaining about something happening in their neighborhoods."

    Originally posted here:
    Residential demolition changes urged at neighborhood summit

    Residential demolition changes urged at Monday summit - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Neighborhood activists trying to slow the pace of residential demolitions have formed a new organization, launched an online petition, and set a meeting to finalize a series of policy changes to be presented to the City Council.

    The steps were taken at a Demolition Summit held on Monday evening. Around 70 people from 17 neighborhood associations attended the meeting, which took place Sept. 30 at Grant Park Church in Northeast Portland.

    "I was very pleased with the turnout and the enthusiasm for moving forward. There was a lot of positive energy," says Al Ellis, one of the organizers and a former president of the Beaumont-Wilshire Neighborhood

    Association.

    During the meeting, the group adopted the name United Neighbors for Reform. While the current focus in on demolition and infill development projects, it may work on other issues in the future.

    The group also approved a two-track approach to changing city policies regarding residential demolitions and infill projects.

    First, it authorized an online petition supporting current efforts by the Development Review Advisory Committee of the Bureau of Development Service to address some of the issues. A DRAC subcommittee is looking at possible changes in city policies regarding public notification of pending demolitions, compliance with state rules regarding the handling of potential toxic materials, demolitions classified as remodeling projects, and demolition delays to allow neighbors to explore options for preserving properties.

    At the meeting, the activists said they also want the city to encourage the deconstruction of houses instead of demolition. Deconstruction allows more building materials to be recycled and reduces debris going into landfills.

    Ellis says those at the meetings were pleased that the subcommittee is addressing many of their issues.

    "That's been a pleasant surprise," says Ellis. "I think it's a sign that City Hall realizes this is not just a handful of people complaining about something happening in their neighborhoods."

    Original post:
    Residential demolition changes urged at Monday summit

    Once-popular local Guidepost pub the Queen's Head is flattened - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    Bulldozers have moved in at a once-popular Northumberland drinking hole.

    People at Guidepost, near Ashington, have bemoaned the loss of the Queens Head pub, which is being demolished to make way for a proposed convenience store.

    The Front Street pub has been closed for over a year, but photographs taken of the demolition in progress show glasses still visible in the bar area.

    Michael Hood-Dodd, who worked at the pub and lived there, said: It once was a local as in the word, always full, music, laughter, Ive seen many a child have a christening and then saw them grow up and buy their first pint, sad times, good memories.

    It was very sad as they opened up the wall to the bar to see glasses and pumps still in same place as the last customer left it.

    We had christenings, funerals, weddings, birthdays, Christmas partys for the local elderly folk, it is just a shame it could not continue.

    Other residents questioned the need for the planned store given the shops already at Guidepost.

    Emily Rose Watson, 21, of Riverside Avenue, who is self employed, doing products demonstrations for a field marketing agency and working for a beauty company, said: It is being demolished to make way for a Nisa store which people are not really happy about - we have a square full of shops.

    Miss Watson said she would prefer the site to be used for something of benefit to the community, such as a community centre, coffee shop or youth club.

    Meanwhile, local authority chiefs are investigating after it emerged the demolition has begun without planning permission having been granted for the shop - although those behind the proposals have insisted they have the necessary consent to flatten the pub.

    Continued here:
    Once-popular local Guidepost pub the Queen's Head is flattened

    NHCP stops Admiral Hotel demolition - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    The National Historical Commission of the Philippines (NHCP) has issued a cease-and-desist order on the demolition of the Admiral Hotel along Roxas Boulevard in Manila, one of the city's "heritage buildings" placed under "redevelopment" efforts.

    Tourism advocate Carlos Celdran posted a copy of the order, issued last Friday, on his Facebook page on Monday, saying that demolition is still ongoing despite it.

    Cultural activists have expressed outrage over the demolition, which they said happened under the guise of redeveloping the property, designed by eminent architect Fernando H. Ocampo, into a 150-room boutique hotel to be completed in the last quarter of 2016.

    The faade of the structure has already been demolished, as the demolition started last September 20, Heritage Conservation Society president Ivan Henares said.

    The NHCP earlier said it found "no historical events that transpired" at the landmark structure when Anchor Land Holdings, Inc., the company in charge, requested a certification of its cultural significance "to remove the presumption that the Admiral Hotel is an important cultural property."

    However, it recommended that Anchor Land apply "adaptive reuse" on the redevelopment of the property, as well as to approach "pertinent cultural agencies" particularly the National Commission for Culture and the Arts (NCCA), which may find the architecture's "Old World-charm... worth of conservation."

    In the cease-and-desist order, the NHCP stressed that Anchor Land had merely asked for "information on the historical significance" of the hotel "rather than permission for its demolition."

    Anchor Land also failed to secure permission from other agencies, such as the NCCA and the National Museum, it added.

    "This Commission thus has nothing to do with the Demolition Permit issued by the Office of the Building Official of the City of Manila to the Admiral Realty Co., Inc., dated 4 September 2014," the Order read. "Moreover, the Commission notes that Anchor Land failed to obtain permission for the demolition from other cultural agencies that may have an interest in the Admiral Hotel as a cultural property."

    See the article here:
    NHCP stops Admiral Hotel demolition

    Date remains fluid for Williamsburg Stryker building demolition - October 1, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder

    WILLIAMSBURG Demolition of the city's Stryker Building, in preparation for construction of a new building to house both City Council chambers and conference rooms and offices for the Williamsburg Library, is officially late.

    Demolition had been scheduled to begin in September.

    Last week City Manager Jack Tuttle said it was "day-to-day" on setting a firm start date for demolition.

    The holdup is negotiation of the construction schedule between the building's architects David Stemann and Edwin Pease, and builder Daniel & Company.

    "We only want to start work on the site one time," Tuttle said. "We don't want to do the demolition and then have to open the site again for construction.

    Tuttle said that delays in doing the demolition work will put the project behind schedule.

    "Fortunately, we can operate as we are now, with Council meeting in the Municipal Building, indefinitely," he said. "There's no firm deadline the building has to be finished by."

    Nothing about replacing the vintage 1967 Stryker Building, formerly home to not only council chamber but to the Williamsburg Redevelopment and Housing Authority and the voter registrar's office, has come easy.

    Following an unsolicited proposal to redesign or replace the building, City Council launched put our a request for proposals. But it didn't like any of the first proposals. It restarted the process and finally, after 10 months, chose the winning design a much more contemporary looking building than the present Stryker.

    Council chose a design that called for the complete demolition of the building which has been plagued by mold problems rather than re-use of the building.

    View original post here:
    Date remains fluid for Williamsburg Stryker building demolition

    Barry Butlins Holiday Camp Demolition – Video - September 29, 2014 by Mr HomeBuilder


    Barry Butlins Holiday Camp Demolition
    Barry Butlins Holiday Camp Demolition.

    By: Roger Williams

    Read the rest here:
    Barry Butlins Holiday Camp Demolition - Video

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