Showing posts with label Demolition pictures. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Demolition pictures. Show all posts

Thursday, October 7, 2010

What Demolition Wrought – The Other Side


Photo by Corey Hengen

Often, only one side of demolition is acknowledged in the process; frequently, that element focuses on taking components away from the local landscape. The central aspect of much of our work signals the beginning of something new, enhanced, and greatly improved.

There is a strong current of nationwide activism that advocates alternatives to demolition. Such campaigners readily cite environmental factors in an effort to postpone or deny knocking buildings down. Never realized in these debates is the fact that the environmental quality through these initiatives is greatly improved.

I can confidently decree that our company does more to improve the environment and health of people on any given day than most of these activists could accrue in a lifetime.

Our results are measureable and can be quantified; Champion Environmental Services, Inc. mitigates harmful lead, removes asbestos/PCB’s/mercury/Freon/ and ensures the extensive recycling of materials as opposed to the simple encumbrance of landfill dumping.

When Champion Environmental Services, Inc. demobilizes from a job site, we leave knowing that a cleaner, safer, and healthier environment for generations to come is accessible.

The Following article appeared yesterday in the “Daily Reporter”. Champion Environmental Services, Inc. is the asbestos abatement and demolition contractor for the Westlawn Project in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.

Our endeavor will provide a desirable resolution to a weathered problem. The redevelopment will eventually provide clean, safe, affordable housing to low-income families, the elderly, and those with special needs.

I want to acknowledge that the article was written by Marie Rohde; the photograph was taken by Corey Hengen, and future rendering of the site is from the Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee.

Welcome to the neighborhood: Westlawn ready for remake (UPDATE)
Published: October 6, 2010
By Marie Rohde

The city of Milwaukee is ready to tear down the largest public housing project in the state and replace it with a neighborhood.

“When you drive by Westlawn, there’s no mistaking that it’s a housing project,” said Paul Williams, a spokesman for the Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee. “We want to change that.”
The Westlawn housing complex, a series of barracks-style buildings, is on 75 acres bordered by 60th and 64th streets, Silver Spring Drive and the Lincoln Creek.

The redevelopment is intended to break down the boundaries that isolate the complex from the rest of the community. The new Westlawn will be a mixture of privately owned homes and housing for seniors, the disabled and the poor.

Homes that will sell at market rates will be built around the perimeter of the complex. Carolyn Esswein, adjunct assistant professor of the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee’s Department of Urban Planning who is familiar with the plans, said those homes are attractive because they will be on 35- to 40-foot-wide lots while the average city lot is 25 feet.

“That’s been done elsewhere and the homes have sold quickly,” she said. “But it could be a matter of timing, and the economy right now could have an impact. There are a lot of people who want to buy vacant lots in the city, but they can’t get over the hurdles of financing.”

The market rate homes, according to city plans, will not be built until at least 2012.

Westlawn’s isolation was like that of other public housing built in the 1950s, and the redevelopment reflects changing attitudes toward public housing across the country, Esswein said.

The new Westlawn, for instance, would have streets connecting the complex to the rest of neighborhood.

“Right now, Westlawn is cut off from the rest of the neighborhood,” Esswein said. “When they connect the streets to the rest of the neighborhood and people can walk in and out, the residents will feel like part of the larger community.”

The plans also call for a small pharmacy and 12,500 square feet of commercial development for North 60th Street and West Silver Spring Drive. That was a response to requests from residents and another effort to connect the complex to the broader community, Williams said.

Residents who live in the east half of the complex have been moved to temporary housing, and demolition of those buildings has begun, Williams said. Those residents will be offered units in the new development, he said.

Construction on the eastern half, estimated at $101 million, is expected to begin in March and be completed in 2012.

The housing authority’s nonprofit partner, Friends of Housing, an organization involved in the senior housing portion of the development, will share part of that cost, Williams said. The project also got $7.4 million in tax credits to provide incentive for the development of affordable housing for low-income residents.
The second phase of the redevelopment will be built after 2012 and be about the same size and cost.

Williams said there is a need for low-income housing in the city. The waiting list for Westlawn has been closed for six months and has some 3,000 applicants awaiting
housing assignments.

Nancy Frank, a UWM urban planning associate professor, said the renovation of other housing projects has been controversial, such as with Chicago’s infamous Cabrini Green complex, where a mixed-use development replaced a traditional housing project.
“The question is whether they will provide fewer housing units for the poor,” Frank said.

The housing in the first phase will include one building with 94 single-bedroom units set aside for seniors and the disabled, Williams said. Another 160 town houses for families will be built there, he said.

Jim Bartos, executive director of the Silver Spring Neighborhood Center, said the remake will help the housing complex better mesh with the surrounding area.

“I think it’s going to be transformative for the whole neighborhood,” he said. “It’s going to be a stimulus for other development.”


Rendering by the Housing Authority of the City of Milwaukee

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Century City Update

The building separation at Century City is complete. Our selective cut, while an extremely complicated undertaking, proved rather successful. Extensive site work which included concrete slab removal – up to 8 feet thick in some areas – continues. Note the third picture below, the size of the concrete block in relation to the dump truck, this illustrates the magnitude of concrete we have encountered during removal.







Monday, April 19, 2010

Tower Automotive-Century City

Champion Environmental Services, Inc. is kicking off the redevelopment of Milwaukee’s shuttered Tower Automotive property as part of the city's $34.6 million plan to redevelop an 84-acre portion of the site. Most of the area is being transformed into a business park; Spanish train manufacturer Talgo is the first tenet to lease a portion of the development.

Century City will be the new venue for U.S. high-speed passenger rail manufacturing and assembly creating 125 direct jobs in Wisconsin and about 450 indirect jobs through vendors throughout the Midwest.

In January, Governor Doyle announced Wisconsin will receive $823 million in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act funds to build high-speed rail service to connect its centers of commerce. Wisconsin is receiving $810 million to build high-speed passenger rail service between Milwaukee and Madison, $12 million to improve service between Chicago and Milwaukee, and $1 million to make final determinations on a route between Wisconsin and the Twin Cities – the next step toward connecting Chicago, Milwaukee and Madison with the Twin Cities.

Champion Environmental Services, Inc. is proud to support this important economic initiative. Some pictures of our demolition work are below.










Thursday, December 3, 2009

More From Marquette University

The “Daily News” seems to have keen interest in our efforts on behalf of Marquette University as their photographer John Krejci was out again yesterday documenting the work in progress.

We appreciate the coverage by the “Daily News”.

Wednesday, December 2, 2009

Marquette University



Another photograph from our work at Marquette University published in the “Daily Reporter”. Photo credit goes to John Krejci.

Monday, November 30, 2009

Tuesday, November 17, 2009

Just In From The Field – Marquette University

Demolition began yesterday for Marquette University’s new engineering school; below is a picture sent in from our Field Superintendent.

Thursday, October 15, 2009

Friday, October 9, 2009

Just In From The Field

A project manager just relayed some photos from a job site out of state for a private client.




Tuesday, October 6, 2009

Just In From The Field

A project manager just relayed some photos from a job site out of state for a private client. More to come as pictures are dispatched into the office.



Thursday, August 27, 2009

Demolitionnews.com A Fine Resource For Industry Updates

I encourage you to visit a fine demolition news site facilitated by Mark Anthony of Epsom, England. The link to the page is at www.demolitionnews.com.

The focus of Demolition News is to “ . . .bring demolition contractors, visitors, readers and subscribers the very latest in demolition developments from across Europe and the world. Although we work in close conjunction with many of the demolition trade bodies across the world, we have no specific affiliation with any of them, meaning we can deliver up-to-the-minute industry news, views, videos and comment, regardless of a company’s membership status”.

The postings are informative and enjoy solid commentary from those who visit the site.

Monday, August 24, 2009

Bio-Chem Univeristy of Wisconsin, Madison

Champion Environmental Services, Inc. is finishing up work at the Bio-Chem building at the University of Wisconsin, Madison. Today, CESI sawcut and removed a precast concrete slab 11 stories above ground. The edifice housed the mechanical room for the building.

The critical phase was performed under strict safety standards and completed without incident.

The picture below was taken from the job site this morning.

Lattof Chevrolet Demolition Arlington Heights, Illinois

The following is a link to an article by Deborah Donovan run in the “Daily Herald” on 8/21/09 concerning the demolition of the former Lattof Chevrolet in Arlington Heights, Illinois. Pictures by Mark Black accompany the story.

http://www.dailyherald.com/story/?id=315216

Thursday, August 20, 2009

Demolition Photo Update

True Teamwork















The following is a pictorial representation of several projects underway throughout Wisconsin.