Massachusetts

WATCH: Closed Power Plant's Cooling Towers Demolished in Controlled Implosion

It took just a matter of seconds for two 500-foot cooling towers from Massachusetts' last coal-fired power plant to be reduced to rubble Saturday.

"It was a big explosion, and it was very loud," eyewitness Mark Calvano said.

Calvano heard and felt the implosion from several blocks away, and he rolled on it all with his phone.

"The whole ground shook. It was kind of scary," he said.

But Calvano says he is glad to see the towers go.

"In the summertime, it would actually block the sun," he said.

Calvano added that the towers just didn't fit in the neighborhood.

"It's just an eyesore, you know? I mean they were right there. They were huge. You could see them from everywhere— from the highway, from up the road here," he said.

Spectators, who were kept a safe distance by authorities, crowded nearby streets and bridges to watch the structures fall. Helicopters, planes and drones flew overhead.

Ross McLendon, of Warwick, Rhode Island, told the Herald News of Fall River that he got his three children out of bed early so they could come and watch the event. But it almost happened too quickly.

"I wasn't paying close enough attention to the time and missed the first few seconds,'' said McLendon. "We came because it seemed like something fun for the kids to do. They had never seen an implosion.''

The controlled demolition went off as scheduled at 8 a.m. at the former Brayton Point Station in Somerset. Video showed the giant towers along Mount Hope Bay crumple to the ground and a large cloud of dust rise into the air.

The plant had burned coal since 1963, though the cooling towers were not added until decades later. The plant closed in 2017 as environmental groups pushed for cleaner sources of energy generation.

The new owners of the property, Commercial Development Co., plan to turn the site into a multi-use facility mainly dedicated to supporting off-shore wind farms.

The company said the hulking concrete structures were believed to be the tallest power plant cooling towers ever brought down in a controlled demolition anywhere in the world.

Some nearby residents had expressed concern about the implosion, wondering if it could cause dust contamination, but officials said they did not expect the dust to drift into nearby neighborhoods.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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