How will the year "2025" be welcomed in Georgia? Be surprised to know

 

 The world is preparing to welcome 


2025. The US state of Georgia will 


welcome the New Year in an 


incredibly unique way.




Every year, every country in the 


world welcomes the New Year at 12 


o'clock at night on December 31st, 


local time. On this occasion, the 


New Year is celebrated in different 


ways in different countries, but the 


enthusiasm is the same.




2024 is also now rapidly 


approaching its end and the world 


has started preparations to 


welcome it with the arrival of 2025. 


However, the US state of Georgia is 


going to celebrate this year in such 


a unique but incredible way, which 


everyone will be surprised to know.




The New Year is being welcomed in 


the southeastern US state of 


Georgia with a huge explosion, 


which has also been approved by 


the Georgia County Commission.




According to foreign media, a 16-


story empty building will be blown 


up in Georgia at 12 o'clock between 


the night of December 31st and 


January 1st.




How will Georgia celebrate the New 


Year? Amazing plan revealed....




According to the report, the 


building was once a magnificent 


hotel and was purchased by Macon 


County last year for $4.5 million and 


is now being prepared to demolish 


the building, for which a $2.6 


million contract has been signed 


with a firm.




The hotel was opened in 1970 and 


was also visited by the late singer 


Elvis Presley, but the hotel has 


never been very profitable for its 


owners.




The New York Banking Department 


also sealed the hotel in 1991 on 


charges of fraud and money 


laundering.




The hotel building was last used as 


a Ramada Plaza and is located near 


the Okmulgee River in the 


northern 


part of downtown and has been 


vacant since 2017.




The building was designed by 


famous architect Maurice Lapidus



However, Morris later said that the 


building was structurally unsound 


and could not be renovated.




Mayor Miller says the city 


administration has not yet decided 


how the land will be used, but 


whatever takes its place will be 100 


times larger.

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