BREAKING: Capital One Tower will be demolished; bids out for implosion-style demolition
Published 3:29 pm Tuesday, March 19, 2024
It is likely the Capital One Tower will be demolished well ahead of November.
That’s the deadline the city of Lake Charles gave building owner Hertz Investment Group to restore or get rid of the icon turned eyesore.
On Tuesday Louisiana Radio Communications employees were working to come up with a plan for relocating some of the communications equipment now located atop the 22-story, 375-foot structure built in 1983, which has been known as the Calcasieu Marine, Hibernia and the Capital One Tower.
Perry Vincent, LRC owner, said the roof of the building is home to communications equipment that benefits internet connectivity, cellular service, broadcast stations, civil air patrol operations, HAM radio operations, and oil and gas and petrochemical industry communication. That equipment will have to be relocated and the timetable for doing so has been moved up. Vincent hates to lose what was not only the city’s most iconic building, but a vital communication point.
“What was nice about that building,” Vincent said, “was that rain or shine, a repair person could gain access to the equipment that needed service, troubleshoot the problem and return immediately after the weather event was over to make the necessary repairs. You can’t climb towers in the rain.”
The first phase of an asbestos study has been completed, one of two required to demolish the building, according to Bob Schlogel, Hertz vice president of capital projects and engineering. Bids have been received for an implosion-style demolition.
Louisiana Radio Communications handles applications of wireless communications including sales, service, warranty, two-way radio systems, design and construction of wireless computer networks, antenna systems, tower sales service and erection, fiber optics, voice and data installation.
The tower was damaged by Hurricanes Laura and Delta in 2020. Hertz told the city it wanted to repair the tower in June 2022. More time was needed to settle with its insurance company. A construction company was hired to begin work. Then work stopped. After Hertz received its insurance settlement, it was announced in March 2023 that the building was on the market.
In an effort to protect the interests of the city, the administration intervened in the Hertz lawsuit against its insurance company to provide for $7 million to be held in escrow to demolish the building if Hertz did not do it by November 2024.