high growth Supertech Twin Towers After months of preparation and planning in Noida, it was finally demolished at 2.30 pm on Sunday (August 28). The Supreme Court ordered the demolition in August 2021, when it found that the construction of the buildings, namely the Apex and the Cayenne, had violated the minimum distance norms. The demolition took just 9 seconds.
Watch the full demolition video here:
Mumbai-based Edifice Engineering did the demolition work of the towers. It used the waterfall blast method to bring down the buildings. It was estimated to leave behind a whopping 80,000-85,000 tonnes of debris. Of this, 50,000-55,000 tonnes will be used for filling at the demolition site and the rest will be taken to specific locations. Interestingly, it will take about three months to clear the debris.
Noida Police Commissioner Alok Singh told CNN News 18 that everything went according to plan and the teams performed excellently. “Follow-up work in progress.”
There has been no damage to the residential towers in the adjacent Emerald Court since the Supertech demolition, a building official told PTI.
Noida CEO Ritu Maheshwari said that there has been no major damage to the nearby housing societies. “Only some debris has come towards the road. We will have a better idea of the situation in an hour.”
Edphis engineering partner Utkarsh Mehta also says that everything is safe. “No harm to surrounding societies.”
About 3700 kg of explosives brought from Palwal (Haryana) were used for the demolition. It was a mixture of dynamite, emulsion and plastic explosives.
Indian blaster Chetan Dutta pressed the final button of the blast at 2.30 pm on Sunday.
Supertech, in a statement on Sunday, assured all its homebuyers that the Supreme Court order would not affect any other ongoing project and all other projects would continue, and that it would complete the construction and allocate flats as scheduled. Committed to. time, it said in the statement.
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