On Jersey Shore, crumbling Trump Plaza hotel is demolished
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[February 18, 2021]
By Andrew Hofstetter
ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. (Reuters) - Crowds
cheered as the Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City was
demolished on Wednesday, the oceanfront eyesore bearing the name of the
former U.S. president disappearing in a cascading collapse.
Trump, a Republican who was a real estate developer before moving to the
White House, opened the hotel and oceanside casino in 1984 but lost
control of the property in a 2009 bankruptcy.
A rapid series of explosive dynamite booms heralded the deliberate
destruction of the blighted skeletal building, which dissolved into a
pile of rubble that sent enormous brown clouds swirling around
surrounding structures in the Jersey Shore resort city known for
gambling, beaches and its boardwalk.
It took the decrepit building about seven seconds to completely collapse
onto the sand, vanishing from the boardwalk skyline shortly after 9 a.m.
local time.
Air horn blasts, whistling and cheers erupted as crowds of several
hundred people, most of them wearing masks to guard against the spread
of COVID-19, milled around pickup trucks parked nearby to watch the
spectacle.
Onlookers were charged $10 for a prime viewing spot in an area that was
recently used as a food distribution site for the struggling city of
38,000 people.
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A combination picture shows the Trump Plaza Casino as it collapses
after a controlled demolition in Atlantic City, New Jersey, U.S.,
February 17, 2021. REUTERS/Carlo Allegri TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY
His former hotel came down in the wake of Trump becoming the first
president in U.S. history to be impeached twice. Last week, the
Senate acquitted Trump of inciting a mob that stormed the Capitol on
Jan. 6.
It was Atlantic City's tenth casino and, in addition to gambling,
hosted heavyweight boxing prize fights.
Trump's name remained on the business as part of a license agreement
until 2014, when the casino closed as Atlantic City struggled as a
gambling resort, with growing competition in other states.
Billionaire investor Carl C. Icahn acquired it out of bankruptcy in
2016.
(Additional reporting by Barbara Goldberg in Maplewood, New Jersey,
Editing by Rosalba O'Brien)
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