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sbp
10-11-2003, 08:57 PM
St. Louis has the Arch. Seattle has the Space Needle. New York has the Statue of Liberty.

And now Tom Overby wants to create a monument for his hometown of Kansas City, Kan.: a 650-foot-tall tornado — 45 feet taller than the Space Needle, 20 feet taller than the Arch and 345 feet taller than the Statue of Liberty — that would anchor a tourism district with a theme based on The Wizard of Oz.

http://www.lemonizer.com/upload/uploadsOct/tornado.jpg

The giant tornado "would be a state landmark," said Overby, whose nonprofit development company Avenue Area Inc. has been working for years to spruce up down-at-the-heels Kansas City.

As Overby envisions it, visitors could take an elevator to the top, where they could eat at a restaurant and enjoy the view. The area surrounding the tornado would include buildings made to look like they were destroyed by a twister. Inside those buildings would be gift shops. The base of the tornado would include a museum with information on the history and science of twisters.

"I think Kansas can really capitalize on using something that it's known for, and building a structure of this magnitude would certainly be a draw," Overby said.

But the twister is still far from becoming a reality.

Don Denney, a spokesman for the governments of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kan., is reserving judgment until state officials and local residents react.

"It's obviously an off-the-wall concept," Denney said. "It definitely brings chuckles if not full-out laughter when people first hear about it, but I suppose the same thing was done when they first built the Arch."

There's a risk that the project could offend people who have suffered from tornadoes.

"I don't think that would be a problem. It's not a problem with me," said Paul Dary, whose 81-year-old brother, Ralph Dary, was the only Kansas City area fatality during a spate of powerful May tornadoes that scoured the Midwest. Dary would like to see a plaque honoring tornado victims as part of the plan.

Overby is hoping government officials will endorse the project, and says he has investors lined up to fund the projected $50 million cost for the project.

Architecture experts said the impact of a giant tornado that would loom over the city's downtown wouldn't necessarily be a bad idea.

Richard Sommer, architect, associate professor and director of urban design at the Harvard Design School, said that as part of a network of attractions and art and entertainment venues "this could be a boon to downtown," but added that people probably won't want to live or work near the structure.

DaFunkyUnit
10-11-2003, 10:01 PM
... only to be knocked down 2 years later by a tornado...

thatonefilipinoguy
10-12-2003, 11:08 AM
Originally posted by DaFunkyUnit
... only to be knocked down 2 years later by a tornado...

:bigmouth:

The next question I ask is that how exactly is this going to attract tourism?

nickel
10-12-2003, 11:10 AM
just like the world's biggest ball of twine does :P

dbax791
10-12-2003, 11:17 AM
I assume this will be built in the middle of a trailer park? :P

DaFunkyUnit
10-12-2003, 01:52 PM
Originally posted by nickelback
just like the world's biggest ball of twine does :P

or the world's tallest thermometer (its in Baker, CA, if you're wondering)

Jenny
10-12-2003, 01:56 PM
Originally posted by dbax791
I assume this will be built in the middle of a trailer park? :P

Hey! :P

bachviet
10-12-2003, 09:50 PM
Originally posted by dbax791
I assume this will be built in the middle of a trailer park? :P
:stupid:

whitak24
10-12-2003, 10:18 PM
Originally posted by sbp
As Overby envisions it, visitors could take an elevator to the top, where they could eat at a restaurant and enjoy the view.
um, what would the view be of? :confused:

coleslaw
10-12-2003, 10:22 PM
Originally posted by whitak24

um, what would the view be of?

The amber waves of grain... ;)

sbp
10-13-2003, 12:53 PM
My first reaction was this guy needs to go to Oz and get a brain :dodgy:

Talk about an idea that sweeps everything aside.

http://www.cjonline.com/stories/092003/kan_tornado.shtml

But Mark Shapiro, the head of Kansas State University's Kansas City, Mo., architecture program, said people shouldn't immediately rule out the project "just because it's tall."

"My opinion is that Kansas City, Kan., can use all the help it can get," Shapiro said. "And something to really sort of market and give it, in fact, a more image-able skyline I think wouldn't be a bad thing."lol!

whitak24
10-13-2003, 05:51 PM
everyone wants a skyline with a tornado in it :heh:

topane
10-14-2003, 04:56 AM
Originally posted by dbax791
I assume this will be built in the middle of a trailer park? :P That's only if he wants it to get knocked over.