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One Georgia city will welcome 2025 with a larger-than-average bang. The Macon-Bibb County Commission on Tuesday approved a plan to implode a vacant 16-story hotel at midnight on New Year's Eve. Macon-Bibb County spent $4.

5 million last year to buy the hotel in a federal bankruptcy proceeding. The city-county agreed on Tuesday to hire a demolition firm to blow up the building at a cost of up to $2.6 million, local news outlets report.



“We acquired this property to blow it up,” Macon Mayor Lester Miller told WMAZ-TV . Also Read: ₹ 90,000 for one night? Hotel prices shoot up before Coldplay's Ahmedabad concert The hotel was opened in 1970 and its guests included Elvis, but it was never a financial success. Most notably, the New York Banking Department seized the hotel in 1991, saying it was one asset that was part of a fraud and money-laundering scheme linked to the Bank of Credit and Commerce International.

The bank was accused of helping Saddam Hussein hide Iraqi oil profits and backing Oliver North’s arms deals with Iran. Last operating as the Ramada Plaza, the hotel on the northern edge of downtown Macon a block from the Ocmulgee River, has stood vacant since it closed in 2017. Also Read: Bengaluru chef claims latecomers at luxury hotel were made to stand with hands up for 2 hours The building was designed by noted architect Morris Lapidus, famous for Miami Beach hotels including the Fontainebleau.

But Miller said it isn’t structurally sound and can’t be renovate.

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