This article first appeared on the Illawarra Mercury on February 20, 2014
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The Port Kembla Copper stack spent its final hours firmly in the limelight; a beacon for photographers, the sentimental and people who like to see things especially big things explode.
Even at 2am, there were dozens of visitors out paying homage.
Amateur photographers captured the mighty chimney in the orange light of the early hours, with fine fingers of cloud grazing the sky.
Arriving at 4.30am, Jeff Allen was the first to take a position on the viewing platform at Hill 60, where dozens of camera-toting onlookers would later join him.
For almost seven hours, he watched the changing light pass over the stack, building to a magnificent sunrise and a near-cloudless blue sky sunny with a slight westerly wind the most desirable conditions for the demolition.
Ill never see anything like this again, said Mr Allen, of Fairy Meadow.
As the sun rose higher, huge crowds formed on vantage points on Military Road, Gallipoli Park, Church Street, Gloucester Boulevard, King George V Park and Third Avenue.
Rob Gansl stood on the roof of his Dovers Drive house to get the best possible view. He would go to his neighbours place for a barbecue afterwards, he said, but not necessarily in celebration. He was going to miss the stack.
Its a bit like an old friend, he said.
On Church Street one of the best spots to see the full spectacle side-on the keenest onlookers brought folding chairs and positioned them so their knees almost pressed against the fencing.
By 9am, the crowd stretched back 100 metres from the exclusion zone.
Someone parked a ute on the side of the road and turned up the radio. It played a sappy song Robbie Williamss Feel. A police helicopter passed noisily overhead.
An alert issued by Port Kembla Copper showed the explosion was expected by 10.15am. But the deadline came and went. The crowds excitement waned. The radio faded.
By 10.30am, the crowd had grown fidgety. Some children walked along a nearby fence as though it were a tightrope. A dog sat on the bitumen, a dust mask draped around its neck.
Some seagulls flew lazily past the stack, about 200 metres out, and someone in the crowd speculated on how the birds would be surprised by the blast.
The sun beat down, moved higher in the sky. A few wisps of cloud offered no respite. An earlier, gentle breeze had stilled.
A child threw a tantrum in the Unigas station, where people not cars were parked beside the shaded bowsers.
The car radio flared again an announcement but the message was drowned out by the noises from the sky, where multiple helicopters now circled.
At 11.15.16 am, it happened.
A spattering of explosions so close together they made almost a single clap and the end was nigh. The mighty chimney flinched at first, then stopped, seemed to realise the seriousness of its wounds, and began its descent.
On Church Street, there were hoots and cheers and cries to God. Many others watched it in silence, the unchallenged doyenne of the Illawarra skyline, breathtakingly unseated.
From 198 metres up, a few bricks toppled off like crumbs. Puffs of white muck shot up and out of the ventilation holes and then it really was falling fast.
For a split second it seemed bound no more by bricks or concrete or any obligations of solidness, and looked to bow at its gut.
But the flexibility was only an illusion as the middle tore irreparably apart.
Just before the pieces disappeared behind the skyline, its tip disconnected and flew off in a plume of muck.
A beat, two beats maybe three then a fresh cumulus bloomed and a shuddering, deadened thud marked the end of it.
Ethan Gouveia, a student of St Francis of Assisi Catholic Parish Primary School, thought it sounded like a monsters step.
The impact shook the windows at the Leone family home on ODonnell Street where, weeping, Maria Leone, 78, needed a box of tissues brought to her viewing perch on the back balcony.
Looking over her small backyard, with its neat vegetable patch and lawn, she realised it all looked foreign without the stack sprouting up behind it.
I use to work at MM and every morning and afternoon I saw them building the stack, Mrs Leone said.
To not see it there is sad.
Paul OConnell travelled from Narwee, Sydney, to watch the stacks last moments.
He too would miss it, he said.
Ive done a lot of ocean racing up and down the coast on my boat, the Katinka, he said.
The flame coming out the top of it was a good landmark before the advent of GPS.
Thomas and Coffey employee Peter Buckley was granted rare access to the top of the Orica tank, off Old Port Road, and saw the spectacle from close proximity, a full 30 metres up.
It was, he said, spectacular.
Ive got before and after shots Ill show my grandchildren some day.
In those final hours, someone gave the stack a voice via a Twitter account created in her name.
Personified, she was chatty, witty and at peace. Death row had prompted some introspection and she confessed to an affair with blast furnace No 6, among other things.
I have no regrets, she told her followers.
And later at 11.13am A final note, Ill miss you all. Special thanks to Port Keoh god, oh god.