House demolished based on GPS coordinates

SonnyDaze

Diamond Member
Jul 31, 2004
6,867
3
76
Originally posted by: TwiceOver
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/19715994/detail.html

Hope that company has a few million extra to pay out.


Don't know if it's a repost, searched House, GPS, and Demolished.

You should have searched rednecks with wrecking balls.

Sounds like someone needs to update their Garmin. But who goes to demo a house just on GPS coordinates? Wouldn't you want an actual physical address to the property? Especially if the place looks like it might be occupied.
 

funkymatt

Diamond Member
Jun 2, 2005
3,919
1
81
Originally posted by: SonnyDaze
Originally posted by: TwiceOver
http://www.wsbtv.com/news/19715994/detail.html

Hope that company has a few million extra to pay out.


Don't know if it's a repost, searched House, GPS, and Demolished.

You should have searched rednecks with wrecking balls.

Sounds like someone needs to update their Garmin. But who goes to demo a house just on GPS coordinates? Wouldn't you want an actual physical address to the property? Especially if the place looks like it might be occupied.

it sounds like it wasn't occupied and they has torn out the power box some time before. still sucks.
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,143
10
81
wtf they use a GPS? what about haveing a damn address? so what if it was not occupied they still had stuff in teh house!

wtf just an amazing story.
 

waggy

No Lifer
Dec 14, 2000
68,143
10
81
another article

Al Byrd received the shock of his life Monday when he checked his voice mail and listened to a message from his neighbor telling him his house was being torn down. Byrd called his neighbor just to confirm that he had heard correctly and listened in disbelief as his neighbor told him again that his house, at 11 Byrd Trail in Carrollton, had been demolished that afternoon.

?I said, ?you got to be kidding me, I?ll come down there,?? said Byrd, a Carrollton native who now lives in Atlanta.

On the way, he contacted the Carroll County Sheriff?s Office and was accompanied to the house by Deputy T. Cook. By the time he and the deputy got there, his 2,200-square-foot house and a barn, valued at $200,000, had been reduced to debris and dumped into four huge Dumpsters. The backhoe and crane were still in the yard.

Some of the neighbors said the house had been demolished around 3 p.m. Monday, Byrd said.

No one was living in the house at the time of the demolition.

?My dad built this house with his own hands in 1950,? Byrd said. ?Maple Street School burned down and he bought those bricks and they cleared off the old mortar and built this house for his 10 kids, he and my mom and his brothers.?

He was raised in the house. His older sisters were married there. It was the center of their family. His grandmother?s dining room set and china were in the house. So was the family Bible.

?This was more than just a house,? Byrd said. ?This was a whole history.?

According to the sheriff?s report, the demolition was ordered by Forestar Real Estate Group Inc. Forestar called Southern Environmental Services based in Marietta to inspect the house and contract with someone to tear down the residence. The report states that Larry Watts of Southern Environmental said his company contacted North Georgia Container in Franklin to do the demolition work.

Brandon Hannah of North Georgia Container said he called Southern Environmental when he arrived at the house and described it on the phone to confirm he was at the correct house, according to the report.

Byrd said he and Deputy Whitlock met with Larry Watts and Brandon Hannah at the site of the demolished house the next morning.

?Larry Watts came down and apologized,? Byrd said. ?(He) said he was just given GP coordinates and they lined up to my property.?

Byrd has since heard that the house intended for demolition is across the street and up the road about 150 yards.

He has contacted an attorney to handle the matter for him, but has made no decisions yet.

?As it stands now, we?ll assume it was a mistake, but I don?t know,? Byrd said.

Mistake or not, it?s a blow to Byrd?s family. The family heirlooms in the home are irreplaceable. He?s still in shock about the loss.

?All of us have fond memories and long-lasting memories of this place,? Byrd said. ?To just tear it down, it?s unconscionable.?


they missed the correct house by 150 yards and across the street...i bet you next time they will use an adress heh.

well i sure wouldnt use either of teh two business envolved. i bet both are trying to find a way to blame the other LOL
 

funkymatt

Diamond Member
Jun 2, 2005
3,919
1
81
Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
?You can?t imagine. It?s just incredulous that something like this can happen and no one contact the owner,? said Byrd.

English fail.

Byrd, a Carrollton native who now lives in Atlanta.

it's the south. they do what they want.
 

McCarthy

Platinum Member
Oct 9, 1999
2,567
0
76
"Have you any idea how much damage that bulldozer would suffer if I just let it roll straight over you?"
"How much?"
"None at all"
 

paulney

Diamond Member
Sep 24, 2003
6,909
1
0
Originally posted by: McCarthy
"Have you any idea how much damage that bulldozer would suffer if I just let it roll straight over you?"
"How much?"
"None at all"

:D
 
Oct 27, 2007
17,009
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Originally posted by: Born2bwire
Originally posted by: GodlessAstronomer
?You can?t imagine. It?s just incredulous that something like this can happen and no one contact the owner,? said Byrd.

English fail.

http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/incredulous
http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/incredulous%20

You guys need more dictionaries in the Outback.

WTF? I've never seen the word used in place of 'incredible', news to me. I stand corrected. And I'm not in the outback/Australia.
 

LTC8K6

Lifer
Mar 10, 2004
28,520
1,575
126
Who uses GPS coordinates to find a house rather than punching in the address?
 

Iron Woode

Elite Member
Super Moderator
Oct 10, 1999
31,277
12,791
136
Originally posted by: McCarthy
"Have you any idea how much damage that bulldozer would suffer if I just let it roll straight over you?"
"How much?"
"None at all"
but at least he had a great adventure.

Mr Byrd is just going to have lengthy court battles.
 

herkulease

Diamond Member
Jul 6, 2001
3,923
0
0
Originally posted by: RESmonkey
Wow . Was this house vacant for a while? Someone could have been inside...

doesn't seem like someone was inside. But maybe its their 2nd home since they had things inside it. from photos I think I see a book case?

but that's abotu it. Maybe some of it was already cleaned. I would think they'd check its empty but then again they didn't even bother using an address.

In any case, someone gonna be paying a few million for this.
 

rockyct

Diamond Member
Jun 23, 2001
6,656
32
91
"The man who cuts the grass told Byrd about a month ago that the power box was missing and there were holes punched into the walls. They both thought it was vandalism. Now, Byrd believes it was part of the preparation for the demolition."

It appears like they screwed up the location twice.
 

DayLaPaul

Platinum Member
Apr 6, 2001
2,072
0
76
You know he's just dramatizing the situation just to up the amount of cash he wins in a lawsuit. Seriously, if those items were so precious, that house so cherished, why was the house vacant in the first place? Sure, his house was demolished through no fault of his own, but it's not like he's out on the street now because of it. This was a spare house that nobody was living in, yet we are to believe it was filled to the brim with irreplaceable family heirlooms?
 

zerocool84

Lifer
Nov 11, 2004
36,041
472
126
Originally posted by: DayLaPaul
You know he's just dramatizing the situation just to up the amount of cash he wins in a lawsuit. Seriously, if those items were so precious, that house so cherished, why was the house vacant in the first place? Sure, his house was demolished through no fault of his own, but it's not like he's out on the street now because of it. This was a spare house that nobody was living in, yet we are to believe it was filled to the brim with irreplaceable family heirlooms?

How do you know it didn't have irreplaceble things in it? Did you go through the rubble like a homeless person?
 

ahenkel

Diamond Member
Jan 11, 2009
5,357
3
81
I can totally see a house full of things with no one living in it. My grandparents used to live this bizzare 70's mobile home, on top of a basement, wrapped in another house/deck thing for about 30 years it had their whole life in it. About 5 years ago they built a new house and they pretty much left everything non essential there. The new house is on the same property. Its kind of fascinating though its like a living episode of life after people. There are plants growing in the house, animals have moved in, and once a "family" of meth addicts stumbled upon it and tried living there.