Dallas' Famous Leaning Tower Finally Falls

'Leaning Tower of Dallas' held on for more than 2 weeks after failed implosion
By Newser Editors and Wire Services
Posted Mar 3, 2020 8:47 AM CST
Dallas' Famous Leaning Tower Finally Falls
A woman poses in front of the remains of the "Leaning Tower of Dallas" on Monday in Dallas.   (Juan Figueroa/The Dallas Morning News via AP)

The "Leaning Tower of Dallas," the iconic remnant of a high-rise building implosion gone awry, finally collapsed in a cloud of dust Monday after two weeks of being whacked with a headache ball. The tower collapsed about 3:15pm after a few last whacks with a wrecking ball swung by a high-rise crane. No injuries were reported, per the AP. The tower was the core of an 11-story building that was imploded with explosives on Feb. 16. The 11 floors surrounding the core duly collapsed, but the solid concrete core containing the stairway and elevator shafts remained standing at an angle.

The demolition contractor has been whacking away at it ever since with a 5,600-pound wrecking ball. A spokeswoman for De La Vega Development, which is redeveloping the site, had said immediately after the implosion that the tower's demolition could take up to four days. It ended up taking almost four times that before it was taken down. In the meantime, the tower drew hundreds of people who took often-whimsical photographs of themselves with it in the background. Per CBS Dallas-Fort Worth, De La Vega is asking people to put pictures up on social media of the erstwhile leaning building using the #DiscoverTheCentral hashtag; the images will appear in a gallery space on the site when it's fully built.

(More strange stuff stories.)

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