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Adamo
will utilize the most state-of-the-art technology available
in the demolition industry, including the Apex 70 Ultra High
Demolition Excavator, a machine developed mainly for
demolition. The demolition of Ford Auditorium will mark the
first time the Apex 70 is used in the United States.
(Photo by HB Meeks/Tell Us Detroit) |
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THE END
OF AN
ERA:
DEMOLITION
BEGINS
ON FORD
AUDITORIUM
DETROIT
(Tell Us
Det) -
Friday
morning
the long
awaited
demolition
began on
Ford
Auditorium.
Mayor
Dave
Bing,
administration
officials
successfully
advanced
a
project
that had
been
stagnated
for
decades.
“The
demolition
of the
Ford
Auditorium
is
another
step
forward
for the
City of
Detroit,
the
city’s
downtown
and the
emerging
waterfront,”
said
Mayor
Dave
Bing.
“We have
seen
great
improvement
to the
waterfront
and are
now
presented
another
opportunity
to
increase
access
to the
river.”
Funded
by bond
dollars
the
demolition
of Ford
Auditorium
will
cost
approximately
$780,000.
Detroit
based,
Adamo
won a
competitive
bid to
demolish
Ford
Auditorium.
Adamo
will
utilize
the most
state-of-the-art
technology
available
in the
demolition
industry,
including
the Apex
70 Ultra
High
Demolition
Excavator,
a
machine
developed
mainly
for
demolition.
The
demolition
of Ford
Auditorium
will
mark the
first
time the
Apex 70
is used
in the
United
States.
Originally
built in
1955 and
opened
in 1956,
the
56-year-old
Ford
Auditorium
was once
the home
of the
Detroit
Symphony
Orchestra.
Historic
speeches
from
Malcolm
X and
Rev. Dr.
Martin
Luther
King Jr.
took
place at
Ford
Auditorium.
Vacant
since
1989,
Ford
Auditorium’s
acoustic
difficulties
proved
too
difficult
to
overcome.
The
Aeolian-Skinner
organ,
original
to Ford
Auditorium
was
dismantled
by
volunteers
and
donated
to the
congregation
of St.
Aloysius
Catholic
Church,
which
hopes to
have the
2,800-pipe
instrument
installed
and
operational
by 2013.
A
smaller
1,200
pipe
organ,
which
operated
from the
same
console,
has been
given to
the DSO
who will
use it
to
perform
17th and
18th
century
pieces
in
Orchestra
Hall.
The Bing
Administration
has made
eradicating
blight a
top
priority
and has
demolished
over
3,000
dangerous
and
abandoned
residential
structures
throughout
the
city.
Mayor
Bing is
committed
to
demolishing
a total
of
10,000
abandoned
residential
structures
by the
end of
2013.
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