Video – Matthews goes back to school…

Time-lapse video captures demolition alongside live school building.

Sussex-based Matthews Group recently completed a sensitive project alongside a live school building in Acton, West London.

The scheme was an enabling contract to separate the two storey entrance buildings and a first floor pedestrian link bridge from the main school building, in advance of the complete redevelopment of the area.

“We were on site for eight weeks and contracted directly by the ESFA to undertake these works,” says development manager Robert Williamson. “The remaining school remained live and we had to deal with all of the usual trials and tribulations, asbestos and CFC foam work.”

Video – Shenango stacks shenangone…

Blast fells relic of Pittsburgh’s industrial past.

Stalwarts of Pittsburgh’s more industrial time, the Shenango smokestacks, passed into the history books with an echoing blast and a crushing fall to the ground on Tuesday.

“The blast went as well as planned, and the weather cooperated, “said Independence Demolition General Superintendent Rich Wilk.

“The demolition was completed without any issues,” Health Department Director Dr. Karen Hacker said. “Wind direction forced the dust that was created from the implosion away from the Sewickley and Ben Avon boroughs, and the dust settled within a few minutes. Based on the first set of hourly data that we received from the Avalon monitor, the implosion had no impact.”
The smokestacks are in piles now and the cleanup of the site will continue for a couple more years.”

Crew gets nasty surprise…

Work halted after body falls out of building.

A man’s body fell out of a home on North Calhoun Street in west Baltimore’s Sandtown Tuesday morning as crews worked to demolish the building.

Detectives processed the scene as the coroner removed the body.

The medical examiner still needs to identify the man and determine a cause of death, but police told FOX45 there were signs of trauma.

“We do believe some trauma was found on the body, but was that trauma the reason this person was deceased? That’s something we have to wait on to find out,” said Baltimore police spokesperson T.J. Smith.

About an hour after the body was found, demolition crews went right back to work.

Video – Grimsby skyline changing…

Time-lapse video captures demolition of massive tower block.

The changing face of Grimsby skyline has been captured in a remarkable time-lapse video. (Fast forward to the six minute mark for the high reach action)

Dominating the East Marsh skyline for over 50 years, the video captures huge specialist demolition machines dismantling Nelson House – the first of six concrete structures to be deconstructed.

Birmingham-based specialists DSM Demolition Ltd are disassembling the blocks from the top down minimising disruption to local people and businesses.

The ultra high-reach machine is expected to be visible from across the town for months as they continue to dismantle the blocks in a safe and efficient manner. It is estimated to take three weeks to demolish each tower.

Demolition TV – Intermat 2018 special…

The French show was a demolition man’s dream. And our cameras were there to see it.

For a variety of reasons, our trip to Paris was on, then off, then on, then off again. And then we got a call from the Arden Equipment team that put it back on again. And we’re so glad it did.

Under glorious blue skies, the Intermat 2018 was a demolition man’s delight with excavators and attachments a’plenty, awesome demonstrations, and a dedicated demolition village all vying for attention.

If you couldn’t make it, sit back and let us give you the guided tour.

Triple prosecution over partial collapse…

Client, principal contractor and demolition contractor fined after building collapse.

A client, principal contractor and demolition contractor have been fined following the uncontrolled collapse of part of a building that was being demolished in Kilmacolm, Inverclyde in 2015.

Paisley Sheriff Court heard that Taylor Grange Developments of Birmingham were the client for the demolition and new build project at the former Kilmacolm Institute. They engaged Glasgow based Allied Contracts Limited to act as Principal Contractor and they in turn appointed Altan Plant Hire Limited of Glasgow to carry out the demolition of the three-storey building.

The Court heard that, on 2 June 2015, workers with no demolition training were inside the building hand demolishing internal walls when a wall and ceiling collapsed onto one of them. One worker, Richard O’Hagen, was taken to hospital suffering from fractures to his neck, back and ankle.

An investigation by the Health and Safety Executive (HSE) found that, as the client, Taylor Grange Developments Limited had failed to make suitable arrangements for managing the demolition project, failed to make suitable arrangements to ensure that demolition work could be carried out without risks, failed to take reasonable steps to ensure that the principal contractor they appointed complied with their legal duties.

The investigation also found that, as principal contractor, Allied Contracts Ltd failed to plan, manage and monitor the construction phase to ensure that the demolition work was carried out without risk to health and safety. They failed to appoint a demolition contractor who had the necessary skills, knowledge, experience and organisational capability to carry out the work safely, failed to regularly check standards of health and safety on site.

Furthermore, the investigation found that, as the contractor, Altan Plant Hire Ltd failed to plan the demolition safely and failed to take into account the risks to workers from structural collapse. The contractor failed to provide a safe system of work as they chose to use hand demolition methods rather than remote demolition by machine, they failed to ensure the electrical supply was isolated, failed to plan work for the safe removal of asbestos cement sheets, failed to provide edge protection around holes in the floor.

Taylor Grange Developments Limited of Water Street, Birmingham pleaded guilty to breaching Regulations 4(1), (2)(a) and (2)(b) of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015. The company was fined £4500.00

Allied Contracts Limited of Norfolk Street, Glasgow pleaded guilty to breaching Regulations 13(1) and (4) of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015. The company was fined £6000.00

Altan Plant Hire Limited of Aitkenhead Road, Glasgow pleaded guilty to breaching Regulations 15(7) and 20(1) of the Construction (Design and Management) Regulations 2015. The company was fined £20000.00

Speaking after the hearing HSE Principal Inspector Graeme McMinn said: “This serious accident could have led to multiple fatalities and was caused by three separate duty holders not complying with their legal duties.

“Altan Pant Hire used inexperienced and untrained workers to demolish the three-storey building. They wrongly decided to use hand methods to demolish the building when remote demolition by machine was a much safer option. Allied Contracts Ltd failed to appoint a competent contractor to who could carry out the work safely and then failed to make any checks on how the work was done. Taylor Grange Developments Limited, as client, set the tone for the project by failing to make suitable arrangements to ensure the demolition work would be carried out safely and failing to ensure that the principal contractor they appointed was complying with their legal duties.

This accident is a stark reminder of what can happen when clients, principal contractors and contractors fail to comply with their legal duties.”

Comment – Right Time, Wrong Man…

End of an era as David Darsey steps down from NFDC Executive.

In order for DemolitionNews to have any credence or credibility, it is important that I personally remain impartial and objective; which I manage to do about 98 percent of the time. What follows stems from the other two percent in which personal feelings interject and influence. And so, if that’s not your thing, if you are utterly devoid of sentiment, or if for some reason David Darsey is not your cup of tea, then please feel free to skip the rest.

I served as Darsey’s press officer for the duration of his presidency and – in my opinion – he was the finest of the three and a half presidents under which I served. And yet, in many ways, his presidency was conducted in the toughest circumstances. He was wearing the chains of office when the recession hit, drowning a good many demolition contractors in its wake. He also inherited the unenviable task of making the Federation’s Accredited Site Audit Scheme compulsory AND a pre-requisite of membership. And he held the reins when the Federation transitioned from a poky office in Staines to a purpose-fitted premises in Hemel Hempstead that is home to the NFDC to this day.

I saw first-hand that Darsey is comprised of contradictions. He is a walking paradox; proof that it is impossible to judge a book by its cover.

Darsey speaks with the sort of London accent that those that don’t know better would perceive as cockney; he sounds like every “geezer” that has ever been portrayed in a gritty London-based drama. During meetings, he can be tough and uncompromising; and while he was rarely the loudest voice in the room, there was never any question of the influence he was capable of wielding.
Yet he wore (and continues to wear) that influence lightly. He works a room like no other; no man’s hand goes unshaken with Darsey in attendance; he is seemingly friends with just about everyone.

But it runs deeper than that. Way deeper. And I say that from personal experience.

During the opening of the “new” Resurgam House in 2009, Darsey handed over a cheque to the founders of the Lily Foundation, his chosen charity at that time. There was an unmistakable tear in his eye as he did so.

My wife couldn’t attend the NFDC Convention in Kilarney in 2009 – perhaps Darsey’s finest hour – because our eldest daughter had been the victim of a “mild” assault. Darsey noted her absence and – even though he had formal duties to perform – took time to offer his support and his counsel.

A few years later when I wrote A Site for Sore Eyes to help raise money for the families of those killed in the Didcot disaster, Darsey was the first to place an order; and a sizeable order at that. A few months later still, after I had a whack on the head, he was the second person to call me to check on my wellbeing (and he was only second by about 20 seconds).

He can appear gruff, his hoarse rasp of a voice adding to his “cockney” accent to reinforce that “geezer” persona. He presides over one of the largest and fastest-growing demolition companies in the world, a company that has won multiple awards over the past decade or more. You don’t achieve any of that without a degree of ruthlessness and hard-nosed business acumen.

But I have always found Darsey to be a gentleman in the finest tradition of that word.

I am conscious of the fact that this is starting to read like an obituary; and that was never the intention. He is only 50 years old; he has another half a year at the helm of the Institute of Demolition Engineers and he is taking up a position on the board of the European Demolition Association. He is also retaining his position as an NFDC Honorary Life Vice President and on the Federation’s National Council. He is not going anywhere anytime soon.

But his passion, commitment, dedication, enthusiasm and – most importantly – influence will be a huge loss to the NFDC Executive Committee. And while it might be the right TIME for Darsey to step aside, I can’t help thinking it’s the wrong MAN doing the stepping.

Darsey steps down…

Former president resigns from NFDC Executive Committee.

Erith Contractors’ David Darsey, president of the National Federation of Demolition Contractors from 2009 till 2011, has formally resigned from the Federation’s Executive Committee of which he has been an and influential integral part for some 16 years.

Darsey’s resignation reflects a changing structure within the Executive Committee that has come under intense criticism in recent months. In response to that criticism, the committee is being restructured to include just three Honorary Life Vice Presidents; and Darsey – who is president of the Institute of Demolition Engineers until November – has used this opportunity to step down in order to concentrate on his own business interests.

He retains his Honorary Life Vice Presidency and his position on the Federation’s National Council, and he has recently been elected to the board of the European Demolition Association.
But his resignation frees him up from the Executive Committee’s monthly meeting schedule.

Speaking to DemolitionNews, Darsey says that he believes the timing of his resignation is right. “I have been very frustrated during the past year or so,” he explains. “But the ship has now been steadied and it feels like the right time to step aside and make way for some new people and some new ideas.”

Video – MailTime competition #2…

Time to win yourself a big box of Steelwrist goodies.

The launch episode of our new MailTime video feature proved to be a HUGE success, attracting more than 600 entrants. And congratulations to Sharon Eustice of TMS Services SW who corrently answered our question about that show’s sponsor – Molson Group – to walk away with the spoils.

But don’t worry if you missed out first time around. Not only do we have a new show and competition for you – this time in conjunction with tilt rotator supremo Steelwrist – but this time you have twice the chance of winning.

So just watch the exclusive video below and send your answer to manthony@markanthonypublicity.co.uk. The two winners will be selected from the correct answers received. And the competition closes on 14 May 2018.

Breaking News – Maidenhead scaffold collapse…

Parked cars damaged as scaffold falls into street.

Scaffolding erected to facilitate the Colonade demolition for the Chapel Arches project has collapsed, damaging several parked cars.

The scaffolding collapsed this around noon today (Monday) at the Colonnade, High Street, Maidenhead.

Thames Valley Police said: “We were called shortly before midday to reports that scaffolding had fallen in the High Street, Maidenhead.

“No-one was injured in the collapse, but five vehicles were damaged. Our officers attended to assist in the road closure, and there is likely to be disruption in the area for several hours.”

Read more here.