Bu içerik, Newcastle’daki Hexham House kulesinin kontrollü bir patlama ile yıkılmasını ve bu eylemi gerçekleştiren üç çocuğu konu almaktadır. Yıkımın, yenileme çalışmalarının bir parçası olarak gerçekleştirildiği belirtilmektedir. Kuleyi yıkmak için patlama düğmesine basan çocuklar, siteyi yeni evler için temizledikten sonra sertifikalar ve bina resmi içeren bir pasta ile ödüllendirilmiştir. Ayrıca, yıkımı gerçekleştiren Thompsons of Prudhoe şirketinin proje yöneticisi Paul Tirbitt’in açıklamalarına da yer verilmiştir. Yıkımın ardından, yerel ilkokul öğrencilerinin deneyimlerine dair detaylar ve insanların tepkileri de aktarılmıştır. Yıkımın detayları ve olayın yaşandığı ortam hakkında bilgi veren bir içeriktir.
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Kaynak: www.bbc.com
Watch: Hexham House tower block in Newcastle demolished
Three children have demolished a tower block in a controlled explosion after winning a competition.
Hexham House in Walker, Newcastle, came down at about 11:30 GMT on Saturday as part of regeneration work.
It was the first demolition using explosives in Newcastle for 16 years and was delayed by 20 minutes by the final residents leaving the block.
Thompsons of Prudhoe (Thompsons) were appointed to carry out the work by Newcastle City Council.
Project Manager Paul Tirbitt said there was a “little issue” early on as “some residents who didn’t want to leave their properties”.
“People’s safety is our number one priority,” he added.
Three primary school children from the area won competitions to be the team that pressed the demolition button.
Frankie, six, won her contest by making a cardboard model of the tower painted with rainbows.
Emily-Jane, nine and Aidan, 10, wrote poems about life in Walker.
After the event, they were presented with certificates from the council and a cake featuring an image of the building.
Reporting from the scene
The countdown was met with the enthusiasm you’d expect for the first controlled explosion on Tyneside in more than a decade.
All day members of the public repeated to each other: “This is the biggest thing to happen in Walker in years.”
We hit zero, and three local Primary School children pressed the button.
For two of them they were about to dramatically change the view out of their own bedroom windows.
The pause was unexpectedly long.
The sequential nature of the explosions meant the “bang” wasn’t a deafening clap, but the shock wave that hit moments after penetrated deep into chests.
A cloud of dust very quickly obscured the building.
But after a couple of minutes the air had cleared and a flat-topped mound of rubble and concrete shards, about 15m (50ft) high, now lay in its place.
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