
There goes the old 70mm screen.
Dustin
They had sales, and they sold seats, which I still think is slightly amusing, as I would have to
imagine most of them could have been listed as some form of bio-hazard. It was well publicized
here in Lakewood, and it looked to me like maybe they sold 15-25 of them.
What got me on the last tour before it became unsafe to crawl around in was the other items left
behind. I have to believe there was at least 10,000 paper cups of various sizes still in the box. At
least one nearly new industrial mop bucket with new mop. Water fountains, pop corn boxes, and
fixtures everywhere.
With that in mind, everything is being recycled. I was talking with the site boss and he was saying
that just ten years ago it would have all gone to a landfill, and now he thought maybe 5 dumpster
might make it to the landfill. Even the broken bricks get reused again. Which strikes me as thinking
had any of us had known back in the 1900s, 20s, 30s, 40s, 50s, 60s, 70s, 80s, 90s, what we were
actually doing, we would be so much better off today.
But I guess that is why it is called growing and learning.
More images later.
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