Lodi News-Sentinel

Georgia Dome implodes in Atlanta

- By Jeff Martin

ATLANTA — One of the nation’s largest domed stadiums collapsed Monday into a pile of jagged concrete and a vast cloud of dust in a scheduled implosion in downtown Atlanta.

Nearly 5,000 pounds of explosives were used to blast the Georgia Dome in Atlanta to smithereen­s at 7:30 a.m. Onlookers gathered at skyscraper­s’ windows, at a restaurant atop the city’s tallest hotel, in parking lots and on nearby streets to watch the destructio­n of the landmark stadium.

The dome opened in 1992, and it was flattened in just about 15 seconds. The Georgia World Congress Center Authority, which includes the 71,250-seat dome, had said it would take 12 seconds for the explosives to go off plus another 3 seconds for sections of grandstand­s to hit the ground.

The explosives went off in a spiral around the stadium as it collapsed on itself. A vast debris cloud hovered over the site before slowly drifting across downtown.

The dome has been replaced by the $1.6 billion Mercedes-Benz Stadium next door.

A 5-story tall industrial strength curtain between the two stadiums had been erected to protect the new venue from damage, officials said. Only 83 feet — less than 30 yards — separated the two venues. The Georgia World Congress Center, Atlanta’s main convention center, is also just feet away.

Protecting both of those structures was “one of the unique challenges” of Monday’s blast, said Morgan Smith-Williams, a spokeswoma­n for the Georgia World Congress Center Authority, which includes the dome as well as the new stadium.

“There was no damage to Mercedes-Benz Stadium or the Georgia World Congress Center,” she said Monday morning, after a postblast briefing from the Detroit-based Adamo Group that’s demolishin­g the dome.

The new stadium is home to the NFL’s Atlanta Falcons and Major League Soccer’s Atlanta United.

In addition to the retractabl­e roof that opens like a camera lens, Mercedes-Benz Stadium boasts a 1,100-foot “halo board” video display and a giant steel sculpture of a falcon with its 70-foot wingspan at one of the main entrances.

Several streets and parts of Atlanta’s transit system were closed to accommodat­e the blast and spectators.

The idea for the Georgia Dome dated to the mid-1980s, when civic leaders recommende­d a domed football stadium adjoining the city’s largest convention center, the Georgia World Congress Center. It cost $214 million.

The dome 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.

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON ?? The Georgia Dome comes crumbling down in a ball of dust on Monday in Atlanta, Ga. More than 300 pounds of explosives collapsed the steel in the upper ring and about 4,500 pounds of dynamite crumbled the concrete columns of the Atlanta institutio­n of...
CURTIS COMPTON/ATLANTA JOURNAL-CONSTITUTI­ON The Georgia Dome comes crumbling down in a ball of dust on Monday in Atlanta, Ga. More than 300 pounds of explosives collapsed the steel in the upper ring and about 4,500 pounds of dynamite crumbled the concrete columns of the Atlanta institutio­n of...

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