|
||||
|
Building 7 BurnsIn August 2006, demolition of the Waynesboro Outlet Village was well underway. Some buildings had been demolished by conventional means, and some were burned to the ground by the Waynesboro Fire Department for various training purposes. On August 12, 2006, Building 7, the former home of Borg-Warner Staffing, where I was hired for my first job as a directory assistance operator for CFW Information Services down the street, was torched by the fire department for training purposes. Since this was very much on-the-fly, I took all of these photos with my cell phone. Big Mavica was unavailable for this particular event due to its being at home. Before we get into the actual burning of the building, though, let me show you a few "before" photos of Building 7, with an excerpt from a photo set that I did seven months earlier...
By August 12, three nearby buildings had already been burned for training purposes. This would be the fourth building to be demolished by fire. I discovered this particular training exercise in progress while I was heading back home from the Blue Ridge Parkway, where I sometimes go to kind of chill out after work. I had a wonderful time. I hung out for a while in the Sable at the Rockfish Valley Parking Overlook (view here), went over to the Humpback Rocks visitors center, and then headed back. Coming down I-64, I saw a plume of smoke:
With my still being well up on the mountain, and with the smoke appearing to originate from somewhere on the mountain, my first thought was that it might be a forest fire, or perhaps the Iris Inn or some other building up in the Chinquapin neighborhood was on fire. As I got closer to Exit 94, it dawned on me - the fire was coming from the Outlet Village, and another training exercise was underway. I was getting off at Exit 94 anyway to head home, so this was a side trip that was not far off route. I just turned onto Shenandoah Village Drive, and headed on over, in my first visit to the Outlet Village property since January. From 340 at the turn onto Shenandoah Village Drive, the smoke was quite visible. I parked the Sable on the side of Shenandoah Village Drive, just east of the Outlet Village. There were a lot of people nearby. I commented at the time that this is the most visitors that the Outlet Village has had in a very long time, and that if they wanted people to visit, they should have torched a few buildings a long time ago. I was a safe distance away from Building 7, but you could certainly feel the heat coming from that very hot fire, and I was amazed by the amount of smoke coming from this exercise. When I arrived, Building 7 was already fully involved: In this photo, the roof had collapsed in several sections, though not in all sections. Here, the cupola had not yet fallen, but it was close, as the roof to one side of it was already gone, and the cupola itself was on fire. The smoke coming off the building was dark and thick. The cupola soon fell, and fire began to engulf the last section of roof still standing. The round light spot high in the middle right of the smoke in the lower photo is the sun. The smoke completely blocks the sun in the upper photo. With the roof mostly gone, the fire started to burn through the walls. My comment at this time was that I was glad the Outlet Village never had a significant fire during its operational life, because it went down pretty quickly. With the roof completely gone, the structural integrity of the walls was being compromised as the fire slowly destroyed them. Next to Building 7, a ladder truck was parked, spraying water towards the building. I am not exactly sure what kind of training was going on. All I saw was fire and smoke. Next door were the remains of Building 5, which had burned to the ground a few days before. With a little help from firefighters, the severely-weakened and already-leaning walls soon collapsed, leaving only a few structural members still standing. As a testament to the original construction, the large concrete fire block walls stood unscathed, and by the end of this exercise, they were the only things still standing. By the end, it was a little bit of flame, and a whole lot of smoke. After this, I returned to the Sable and took a quick drive around the property to check on the progress of the demolition. Building 14 (interior here) was tagged with spray paint, saying "DO NOT DEMO" in big letters. My guess is that 14 will be used for a future training exercise. The result of some of the conventional demolition on the other side of the complex is definitely striking. Compare for a moment - the "before" photo set, to now: I was also amazed about the full extent of the Outlet Village's identity crisis. This sign, branding the Outlet Village as "Shenandoah Outlet Village", is one that I'd missed during my original photo set back in January. I'd photographed signs showing "Waynesboro Outlet Village" and "Waynesboro Village", but this is ridiculous... As you can see, the Outlet Village is definitely on its way out. I remember it in its heyday, but now its days are very numbered. |
||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
|
|