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The Delta Tower was originally built between 1989 and 1990.
An 84-foot steel and concrete tower at Salt Lake City International Airport in Utah, USA, was demolished on Monday. A video released by the airport shows the massive Delta Tower crashing to the ground in the space of a few seconds, marking the transition into phase two of the airport s redevelopment project. It s just kind of a special day for everybody in moving forward with phase two, Mike Williams, program director of the Airport Redevelopment Program, was quoted as saying by Fox 13. Today, this 84-foot Delta Tower that was built in 1989 to direct aircraft to the gate was demolished, the Salt Lake City Airport wrote on Twitter while sharing footage of the demolition. Here is some footage Avalanche Studios took from the Delta Sky Club. The demolition marks a major timeline in the construction of Phase II of #TheNewSLC, the airport added.
Salt Lake City Int l Airport sends Delta Tower tumbling
and last updated 2021-02-15 22:09:24-05
SALT LAKE CITY â A mass of steel and concrete, known as the Delta Tower, came down at the Salt Lake City International Airport Monday, marking the transition into phase two of the Airport Redevelopment Program. It s just kind of a special day for everybody in moving forward with phase two, said Mike Williams, program director of the Airport Redevelopment Program.
SLC airport sends Delta Tower tumbling
(Video courtesy of Avalanche Studios and Salt Lake City International Airport)
At over 80 feet tall, the Delta Tower â known officially as the terminal two ramp control tower â was built in 1990. It is one of the last remaining structures from the original airport.
Chevron Spills 600 Gallons of Fuel Into SF Bay; Cleanup and Damage Assessment Underway
The Chevron refinery in Richmond had some sort of rupture or accident on Tuesday afternoon at a wharf where fuel tankers dock that leaked around 600 gallons of a petroleum-water mixture into San Francisco Bay.
As we learned late Tuesday afternoon, the leak was unleashing about five gallons of fuel into the Bay per minute, and it was reportedly stopped around 4:40 p.m. A statement from Chevron refers neither to a leak nor to what the substance was, simply calling it hydrocarbon, and says that the sheen was observed on the water at approximately 3 p.m.