Material recycled from Tiger Stadium demolition could
turn up in new autos, parking lots.
By Ben Leubsdorf, Associated Press Writer
October 10, 2008, Detroit, Michigan – Going to a baseball game in Detroit used to mean
heading to Michigan and Trumbull, the intersection that became shorthand
for Tiger Stadium. Go there today, and all that remains is a small slice of
the arena that once drew throngs of fans to see legends like Ty Cobb and
Hank Greenberg play.
The rest of the ballpark, which hosted thousands of games between 1912
and 1999, has been demolished, loaded into trucks and driven away.
But it's not gone forever.
Bits and pieces of the old stadium may soon turn up in the body of a new
Ford F-150 truck or underneath a freshly paved Wal-Mart parking lot in the
suburbs.
More than 94 percent of the demolished part of the stadium is being
recycled. That includes over 11.4 million pounds of steel and almost 17.4
million pounds of concrete and other debris.
Some of it won't go far -- crushed structural concrete from the ballpark will
likely be used in southeastern Michigan as fill material under roads,
parking lots and foundations. Some of the metal, like steel from the
stadium's blue structural beams, could end up in anything from new cars
to kitchen appliances.
"That's the beauty of metal," said Chip Hering, executive vice
president of Detroit-based Ferrous Processing & Trading Co., which
processed scrap metal from the stadium. "Metal has no memory of
what it used to be."
Tiger Stadium has stood empty since the last major-league game was
played there on Sept. 27, 1999. The Tigers moved to nearby Comerica
Park at the start of the 2000 season.
The old ballpark is one of many vacant buildings in Detroit left standing for
years on end, victims of decades of urban flight to the suburbs that has
seen the city's population drop from over 1.8 million in 1950 to fewer than a
million today.
With scrap prices sky-high -- the price of scrap steel has increased 251
percent in the last five years -- aggressive recycling has become more
profitable. A recent survey by the National Demolition Association, an
industry group, found about 75 percent of demolition material is typically
reused or recycled.
The city of Detroit, which owned the old stadium, didn't have to pay any
money out of pocket for the demolition, which started in June. Instead, the
joint venture doing the work, Farrow Group Inc. of Detroit and MCM
Management Corp. of Bloomfield Hills, looked to turn a profit by selling the
ballpark off as scrap.
"This project lent itself well to recycling," said Michael Brehse, MCM's vice
president, who supervised the demolition. "There's not a whole lot here ...
that can't be reused."
The companies wouldn't say how much they've made from the demolition.
Initial projections put the value of the stadium's materials around $1 million.
Starting in July, long-necked excavators munched on the stadium's walls,
smashing apart steel beams and slabs of concrete. Under streams of
water sprayed by snow machines to smother the dust, workers sorted and
separated the heaps of rock and twisted metal before weighing the
materials and shipping them out.
The concrete -- far less valuable than steel and other metals -- went to an
MCM-owned yard in Highland Park, where chunks of the stadium sat piled
in late September. The rubble will be crushed into a pebble-sized material,
likely to find use as filler on construction sites or in road and pavement
projects in the Detroit area, Brehse said. Other masonry material will be
used to make temporary roads in landfills.
The steel and nonferrous metals -- 89,000 pounds of aluminum,
copper and other valuable commodities from the demolished
portion of the stadium -- traveled to Ferrous Processing & Trading
yards in and near Detroit to be cut to size or shredded before being
sold to be re-melted.
Scrap metal is big business. The United States exported 34 million tons,
worth $15.7 billion, to 143 countries in 2006, according to the Institute of
Scrap Recycling Industries Inc., an industry group. Turkey, China and
Canada are among the top destinations.
Hering, the company's executive vice president, said local
destinations for Ferrous-processed steel include the SeverStal North
America Inc. mill at the River Rouge industrial complex in Dearborn
and the North Star BlueScope Steel mill in Delta, Ohio.
SeverStal's Dearborn plant produces steel for the auto industry as well as
other products, and the company is a supplier to many automakers,
including General Motors Corp., Chrysler LLC and Ford Motor Co. North
Star BlueScope makes steel with a long list of applications, including
manufacturing goods.
Die-hard fans will probably never know exactly where the stadium's
remains end up. But workers at local scrap yards took note when the
stadium's distinctive blue beams showed up on the site.
"They got a kick out of it," Hering said. "But we're recycling Detroit
every day."
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