Watch the Trump Era in Atlantic City End With 3,000 Sticks of Dynamite

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ATLANTIC CITY, N.J. — It was not the biggest or the best implosion ever.

An auction for the right to detonate the dynamite to begin the implosion of Trump Plaza Hotel and Casino in Atlantic City, N.J., fizzled.

Front-row seats to view Wednesday morning’s spectacle were sold on the cheap. Onlookers in cars hoping to witness the symbolic finale of the former president’s casino empire in the seaside resort city were charged $10 and herded into a lot most recently used as a pandemic-era food distribution site.

The implosion of what was once the premier gaming destination in Atlantic City came less than a month after its best-known former owner, Donald J. Trump, left the White House after losing re-election and became the first president in history to be impeached twice. He was acquitted on Saturday of inciting the deadly Jan. 6 riot at the Capitol.

The tower came down shortly after 9 a.m. amid a huge cloud of dust and an eruption of cheers.

“It’s an end of a not-so-great era,” said Jennifer Owen, 50, who bid $575 to win a front-row seat at a V.I.P. breakfast in an oceanfront pavilion with a direct view of the implosion.

Ms. Owen, who lived in Atlantic City for decades before moving two years ago to Rochester, N.Y., said she was not a fan of Mr. Trump and was eager to say goodbye to the skyscraper that once bore his name.

“It’s symbolic for sure,” she said. “Him. Everything ending.”

Roy M. Foster, president of the Atlantic and Cape May Counties Central Labor Council, said the event was bittersweet.

“It’s a good day. It’s a bad day,” he said. “A lot of us worked on that building.”

Trump Plaza was the first of three casinos Mr. Trump owned before his gambling businesses in Atlantic City cratered and went bankrupt for good, leaving a trail of unpaid contractors and suppliers — and a bad taste for the Trump brand in this struggling city of 38,000.

To detractors, including the Democratic mayor, Marty Small, Wednesday’s demolition was the vivid embodiment of a long-awaited end.

“This is not about President Trump, because, quite frankly, the people of the city of Atlantic City knew how the presidency was going to play out on a national stage because we’re one of the cities that knew him best,” Mr. Small said after the implosion.

“It’s a place where a lot of families got together,” said Mr. Raimer, 60, who lives in nearby Galloway, N.J. “It was an establishment that really took care of a lot of Atlantic City people. It gave us a lot of jobs.”

The Trump Plaza tower had been largely gutted, with much of the concrete removed. Demolition crews were at the site most of last week placing an estimated 3,000 pieces of dynamite that used the reinforced-concrete structure’s own weight to bring its 34 stories cascading gracefully to the ground.

The implosion lasted only seconds. Because the building had no basement, and no cavity to absorb the debris, the pile of remaining rubble was an estimated 70 to 80 feet high. The goal is to clear the debris by summertime, city officials said.

As the clock ticked several minutes past 9 a.m., groups of eager onlookers waited, cellphones aloft.

“Looks like the Plaza is getting acquitted, too,” George Tibbitt, president of the Atlantic City Council, quipped. Soon came a series of loud booms that preceded the main event. After the building fell, an enormous cloud of dust filled the sky, chasing people who had been watching near the ocean off the beach.

Mr. Small said the brief delay was related to making sure a drone that was spotted near Caesars casino was cleared out of a no-fly area surrounding the demolition site.

The demolition was done by a Maryland company, Controlled Demolition Inc., which has imploded 28 buildings in Las Vegas and other structures in Atlantic City.

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