Calgary's Cecil Hotel faces demolition

Empty lot to become part of East Village development

Media | Photographer George Webber on the Cecil Hotel

Caption: Photographer George Webber talks about the demolition of the Cecil Hotel, the subject of one of his series.

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The infamous Cecil Hotel is finally being torn down today and no one is standing in the way of its demise.
The faded blue and grafitti-scribbled building at Fourth Avenue and Third Street S.E., built in 1912, had become a blight on the downtown city block. It closed in 2008 after being a magnet for crime, prostitution and drugs.
A recent heritage assessment was the final nail in the coffin when it found "very little of the building is intact and in good enough condition to save in its entirety."
A fire in the early '80s and the flood in June 2013 sealed its fate, after mould and water leaks made the building unsuitable for renovations.

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According to the assessment, the Cecil's only salvageable elements include the building's neon sign, tin roof cornice, north and west masonry facade, and a number of cast-iron radiators, bathtubs and sinks.
The parcel of land will become part of the East Village multi-use project.
The demolition is expected to take five to seven days.

Image | Cecil Hotel demolition

Caption: Demolition crews started smashing down the notorious Cecil Hotel Tuesday, a process that's expected to take five to seven days. (Evelyne Asseline/CBC)