Posted on 11/20/2017 8:39:25 AM PST by BenLurkin
The dome that opened in 1992 was flattened in 15 seconds at 7:30 am. The Georgia World Congress Center Authority said prior to the blast that it should take 12 seconds for the explosives to go off plus another 3 seconds for sections of grandstands to be on the ground.
The 71,250-seat dome -- which was the site of high school football state championships, Peach Bowls, SEC championship games, two Super Bowls, 1996 Olympic basketball, three Final Four NCAA basketball tournaments, concerts, pro wrestling and other events -- has been replaced by the $1.6 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium next door.
(Excerpt) Read more at foxnews.com ...
Disposable taxpayer resources.
They are probably still paying for the recently demolished stadium.
Here in Pittsburgh we imploded Three Rivers Stadium after 30 years (and owed more money on it than we did the day that it opened).
Sorry to have to break this to you, but unless your washer/dryer is over 30 years old, it was designed for a 7 to 10 year lifespan.
Really. My family has been in the repair biz for 45 years. Little is designed for longevity anymore, because you don’t make money selling product that lasts.
Ha ha true. But it was a perfectly acceptable facility.
The Pontiac Silverdome...the Generalissimo Francisco Franco of abandoned stadiums.
At least the Los Angeles area sports venues seem to last:
Memorial Coliseum (1923)
Dodger Stadium (1962)
Angel Stadium (1966)
Rose Bowl (1922)
Even the Sports Arena lasted 57 years.
Like I said - ask Governor Chickenlooper’s cronies how that gravy train runs.
Dodger Stadium is the third oldest in MLB after Wrigley and Fenway. Seems impossible to believe.
The NFL.
That thing collapsed faster than the Falcons did in last year’s Super Bowl.
I ran a 'West Coast Video' store and had a side gig doing repairs - saw the shift from repairable to replaceable in real time with VCR's.
I have a higher-end oven, replaced the controller board once (issue with the triplex from the pole, blew a number of things). Few years later, baker element wouldn't heat, ID'd the issue (poor workmanship/component on the replacement board). The controller board was no longer available, anywhere.
Ended up finding a suitable relay in my "stuff that I can't get rid of because I may need it someday" pile.
Is the Silverdome still standing? The fabric roof has been gone for years. Some Canadian picked it up in a bankruptcy auction for $500K.
I was only half serious. My point is, a structure built with taxpayer money should probably be expected to last longer than a spring flower.
It was just renovated a few years back as well...
M.ore
B.s.
A.bove
Several hundred million, to be paid by Atlanta residents and visitors (hotel tax).
I presume the tax slaves are still on the hook for a lot of the original cost.
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