Europe South Asia Asia Pacific Americas Middle East Africa BBC Homepage World Service Education
BBC Homepagelow graphics version | feedback | help
BBC News Online
 You are in: World: Americas
Front Page 
World 
Africa 
Americas 
Asia-Pacific 
Europe 
Middle East 
South Asia 
-------------
From Our Own Correspondent 
-------------
Letter From America 
UK 
UK Politics 
Business 
Sci/Tech 
Health 
Education 
Entertainment 
Talking Point 
In Depth 
AudioVideo 


The BBC's Andy Beatt
Fans "happy to see it disappear in a cloud of dust"
 real 28k

Monday, 27 March, 2000, 03:07 GMT
Stadium stages final spectacular
Seattle Kingdome
The Kingdome had stood for 24 years ...
Seattle's Kingdome stadium put on perhaps its greatest public show when it was destroyed in a spectacular controlled explosion.

The 24-year old indoor sports centre was reduced to dust on Sunday to make way for a more profitable outdoor football field.

In only 16 seconds, 50,000 tons of concrete was reduced to rubble, sending spectators in central Seattle hurrying for cover.

After explosions were set off in a carefully orchestrated sequence, rippling along the ribs of the structure's roof, the dome was reduced to piles of rubble 8m (25 feet) high.

Windows in some nearby buildings were shattered.

Seattle Kingdome
... 50,000 tons of concrete came down ...

Until last year the Kingdome was home to the Seattle Mariners baseball team and the Seattle Seahawks football team.

The Mariners have moved next door into a new stadium, Safeco Field, and the Seahawks new $430m stadium will now be constructed on the Kingdome site.

Controlled Demolition, the Maryland-based company that took the Seattle landmark down, is headed by company president Mark Loizeaux, who says he has been blowing things up since he was eight years old.

Controlled Demolition has taken down 7,000 structures, from missile sites in the former Soviet Union to earthquake-damaged buildings in Mexico and the remains of the bombed US federal building in Oklahoma City.

Seattle Kingdome
... and 16 seconds later there was nothing but rubble
Search BBC News Online

Advanced search options
Launch console
BBC RADIO NEWS
BBC ONE TV NEWS
WORLD NEWS SUMMARY
PROGRAMMES GUIDE
Americas Contents

Country profiles
Internet links:


The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites

Links to other Americas stories are at the foot of the page.


E-mail this story to a friend

Links to more Americas stories