View allAll Photos Tagged Demolished

Demolition of this church at 10th and F Streets, NW, is well under way. Behind the rubble is another, older church building.

The old Lunde Ungdomsskole ready for demolishing.

2016 September 1, Demolishing K-Marts Nikon D7200

A parking lot to what was once home to many Love Canal residents.

These are the remains of what appear to be either flats (apartments) or houses. The colours painted on the walls caught my attention as I was walking past them.

This stately brick veneered Victorian mansion is currently in the beginning stages of demolition, as the Cincinnati Children's Hospital across the street continues to expand its footprint and demolish the neighborhood's historic building stock. The amount of disruption and displacement to low-income individuals this expansion will do is not going to be mitigated, and the economic gains from the expansions of medical institutions in Avondale have done little to help the low-income residents of the neighborhood, regardless of the "economic benefits" that the current mayor likes to bring up at every opportunity. The loss of the neighborhood's historic architectural heritage, which is among the best in the city, is an act of vandalism that goes unaddressed by the city government, and needs to be mitigated in the future for the sake of the residents of the neighborhood, and for the neighborhood's ability to effectively reinvigorate itself.

Think the two towers were once here

Misc photo from wandering around Bristol.

On top of an old building near Talbot St, not sure the name of the factory. Basically half the building was demolished leaving a clear view of the new development and the remaining shell of the Chef factory

 

Shot on Kodak Gold 100 in 2004, processed in June 2011

Canon 3000V with a Canon EF 35-80mm f/4-5.6 lens

reconstuction of central library

This partially demolished wall bears the character 拆 (chāi), meaning "demolish."

NOTE: this account is not monitored regularly for emails and comments.

 

Photo by Barry Moynes.

Heron's Head Park at Hunter's Point in San Francisco

demolition player about to get run for cheap play. www.growlhockey.com

This small battery to the west of Padstow represents the peaks and troughs of British coastal artillery across the last 200 years. The first guns were reported to have been mounted here around 1780 in order to protect what was then the important shipping port of Padstow. The battery saw activity during the early Napoleonic era, was upgraded in 1855 and 1868, as well as being manned during the First World War and armed (twice!) for the final time during the Second World War.

 

What remains today is a selection of remains spanning all periods, and while much has been demolished the context of this little battery has not been lost.

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Jr's demolision demolished this one so a new chase bank could be built to replace the branch that was demolished at 75 and Mockingbird for the George Bush Library.

Former Clensmore Business Park & industrial area currently being cleared (Dec 2011) to make way for residential development.

This area has been in a disused state for sometime & development will brighten it up.

Built in 1931, this complex of sandstone-clad Art Deco-style buildings at the edge of Amherst, Ohio were designed by architect Frank Wooster Bail and constructed to house terminally ill tuberculosis patients in Lorain County, utilizing easy access to fresh air and ample natural light to help alleviate their symptoms, and being constructed with beautiful details and a warm-colored stone exterior. Following the advent of effective cures for tuberculosis, the building fell out of use for housing people afflicted with the disease, and became a nursing home in 1967, replacing the old Lorain County Home, with a major renovation and addition being carried out on the building in 1979. In 2015, owing to a lack of funding, the nursing home was closed, and the building has since sat vacant, with a proposal to convert it into an addiction treatment center being rejected by Lorain County voters in 2017. The building, as of Spring 2022, was being offered for sale to developers, and was undergoing asbestos abatement at the time. By November 2022, the building had been demolished.

Five homes at Berryessa and N 15th St have been proposed to be demolished to make way for new houses.

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