Equilibria
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Suffolk has a site for construction updates: https://www.suffolk-lstreetstationboston.com/
In a couple public notifications and in discussions with the project team, they keep referring to the upcoming work as "deconstruction." Finally, I go, "Are you talking about demolishing the power plant." And the PM responded, "At Suffolk, we prefer the term 'deconstruction'."
I posted this 3 months ago. Sure enough, the home page of the web site Equilibria linked is titled: Deconstruction: L Street Station
I think they truly believe if they don't call it demo it won't be loud and messy.
Sure the smoke stacks and the tallest buildings right on L Street. But I have to imagine most of the buildings (particularly if they're set back from the road) are just going to get pulled down with a wrecker claw.I feel like there's a difference. Demolishing is just knocking something down and picking up the pieces. This will actually be deconstruction, with scaffolding surrounding the buildings and them taken apart piece by piece.
The deconstruction is scheduled to be done July 2023. Much of the demolition and removal is of what is called regulated material, which means demolition is piecemeal, and the material is loaded into special trucks for transport to special disposal sites, which may or may not be in Massachusetts.I thought that building was rehabbed by now. What's taking them so long?
The deconstruction is scheduled to be done July 2023. Much of the demolition and removal is of what is called regulated material, which means demolition is piecemeal, and the material is loaded into special trucks for transport to special disposal sites, which may or may not be in Massachusetts.
Clean-up of sites and buildings that are contaminated with hazardous and toxic substances can be VERY expensive. Clean-up of mercury contamination at a nuclear weapons facility at Oak Ridge was estimated to cost $3 billion five years ago. And that is not a huge facility; Just that they used most of the national stockpile of mercury to make hydrogen bombs.