The first of more than a dozen buildings on the site of the future IKEA store came crashing down in a matter of minutes Thursday morning, a milestone that comes more than a year after the project was approved.

Nineteen buildings are being torn down to make way for a new 456,000-square-foot store, which will be the Swedish retailer's largest in the United States when it opens in spring 2017. It will be roughly 6,000 square feet larger than the current record-holder in Schaumburg, Ill., which opened in 1998, said Joseph Roth, director of public affairs for the company.

Officials from IKEA all wearing yellow shirts and from the city most wearing business suits donned white hard hats and gathered on a patch of asphalt in the 800 block of South San Fernando Boulevard to witness the destruction of the steel warehouse building, previously used by Western Studio Services for prop storage and, long ago, home to Menasco Aerospace.

Some elected officials even participated in the demolition, which began around 10:30 a.m., with Burbank Mayor David Gordon behind the controls of a tracked excavator.

Mayor Gordon got to take the first bite of the apple, so to speak, Roth said, as Vice Mayor Bob Frutos took his turn behind the controls.

With a jaw-like bucket at the end of its jointed arm, the machine battered, chomped and dragged sheet metal walls, while nearby workers sprayed water on the structure to keep the dust and debris down. The morning's demolition was the first physical work on the project, Roth said, calling it real progress.

There's much work to do, but it took a lot of work to get here, he added.

The City Council approved the project last March, but in April the nonprofit Citizens Advocating Rational Development sued Burbank and IKEA, claiming the city had not prepared an adequate environmental-impact report for the massive expansion. The group agreed to dismiss its suit following a settlement in September.

While Councilman Jess Talamantes politely declined his turn at the controls of the excavator, he said he was amazed at how quickly the building came down.

They take so long to put up, and see how fast they come down unbelievable, Talamantes said after the walls caved and the roof sagged to the ground with a metallic crunch at around 10:50 a.m.

Continued here:
Demolition crews clear the way for new IKEA

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March 31, 2015 at 7:08 am by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: Demolition