View Full Version : Tornado hits downtown Atlanta!


Ags2000
03-15-2008, 12:11 AM
http://www.cnn.com/2008/US/03/14/storm.atlanta/index.html

ATLANTA, Georgia (CNN) -- A tornado swept through downtown Atlanta Friday night, slamming trees into cars and homes, disrupting a college basketball game and damaging the building that houses CNN.

Atlanta Fire Department spokesman Capt. Bill May said there were numerous injuries and widespread damage reported in downtown Atlanta, with roofs ripped off and trees torn down.

The storm tracked from the northwest side of the city to the southeast, demolishing buildings and downing trees that crushed cars and ripped through the roofs of homes.

The National Weather Service had issued a tornado warning for the area, in effect until 10 p.m. The storm came through at about 9:45 p.m.

Inside CNN Center, water poured through damage in the ceiling into the building's atrium. Glass shattered, and parts of the building filled with dust.

Timothy Wood, 30, of Cumming, Georgia, took refuge from rain at Philips Arena. "First thing I saw were cups then I saw larger objects -- like parts of Philips Arena were coming off and being blown into the street," Wood said.

"People were just running to the closest place of safety they could find. Me and another guy were struggling trying to close the door to Philips and we saw another guy across the way and we waved him over. It probably lasted about two minutes. We went back outside after it was over and there were trees that were actually broken," he said.

Virtually all of the windows facing Centennial Olympic Park on the Omni Hotel, which is attached to CNN Center, were shattered. One employee said visitors to the hotel were being evacuated.

Windows also were shattered in the CNN.com newsroom. CNN's library was also damaged.

Outside the building, debris littered the streets and billboards collapsed onto parked cars. Centennial Olympic Park was also severely damaged.

Next door at the Georgia Dome, the SEC conference basketball game between Alabama and Mississippi State was halted. The storm visibly rippled the ceiling of the dome and caused some damage, video of the arena showed. Scaffolding holding the facility's scoreboard swayed 15 minutes after the storm hit.

Joe Bryson, 28, of Cumming, Georgia, was outside when the winds hit. Bryson had been trying to find tickets to the SEC game between Georgia and Kentucky, which had been scheduled for later Friday.

"When it started to drizzle a little bit, everyone got under some shelter, watching things develop. It started to pick up a bit. When the metal barriers fell over and started skidding along the ground that's when everyone started -- not panicking -- but going inside.

"I saw two fellas who were running to come to shelter and they were getting pushed from the back [by the wind]. They got knocked down but got right back up and followed everyone inside," Bryson said.

Catherine Niehaus, an iReporter, was inside the Georgia Dome when she said the roof split, scaffolding slipped and the scoreboard started to sway.

Lucas Shields, who also was at the Georgia Dome game, said, "It was actually in overtime, and the game was getting exciting, and I thought people from the Alabama side were hitting the bleachers trying to get some noise going. All of a sudden the TV went out, the overhead clock stopped working, and you hear that distinctive noise of a train."

The game resumed about an hour later, but the Kentucky and Georgia game was postponed.

The streets outside were smothered in slabs of metal and insulation material. Cars and emergency vehicles were scattered among the debris as hundreds of people, many of them attending the Southeastern Conference basketball tournament, wandered around talking on cell phones.

Heaps of bricks and sheetrock were pushed up against cars. Street signs were bent in half.

In the neighborhood of East Atlanta, resident Cameron Beasley said he could see four or five homes with storm damage, including trees knocked through their roofs, and several cars crushed by downed trees.

"Something really fierce came down," said Beasley who said he and his wife ran with their two children into their basement about 15 seconds before the storm hit. "It was just crushing cars, crushing houses."

Outside, construction cones and newspaper boxes were shoved into the street.

The National Weather Service issued another tornado warning for suburban Newton and Rockdale Counties southeast of the city.

According to the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration, the most recent downtown tornado in the United States hit Jacksonville, Florida, August 12, 2004. There were no deaths.

According to the NOAA, the deadliest tornado to hit a downtown area in the 20th century was May 11, 1953, when 114 people were killed in Waco, Texas.

Although downtown tornadoes are rare, it's a misconception they can't happen, according to The Tornado Project, a company that gathers and compiles tornado information. "That more 'cities' aren't struck by tornadoes is probably more coincidence than anything else," according to the project's Web site.

"There are very few 'big cities' with skyscrapers in Tornado Alley. In fact, there are only a dozen, and one of them, St. Louis, Missouri, has a long history of tornadoes in its central area."

D

TJ
03-15-2008, 01:08 AM
It looks like a big mess downtown. I'm a good 20-25 miles from downtown. We just had some heavy rain.

Photos of downtown:
http://projects.ajc.com/gallery/view/metro/weather/windstorm0314/#homepage_tab_newstab#homepage_tab_newstab#homepage_tab_newstab

friendsfan77
03-15-2008, 01:54 AM
^ Yeah I live about 20-25 miles northeast of downtown.

This was definitely a tornado. No question about it. Seeing the local news coverage, I saw metal wrapped around a pole, a metal light pole bent about 20 degrees. You just can't get that kind of damage with straight-line winds. Downtown is a mess. The city fared so well with injuries, there were only a few of them and most of them minor.

Dean Winchester
03-15-2008, 02:04 AM
I hate tornadoes, I've never been affected by one (fingers crossed) but I hate them

Brent88
03-15-2008, 02:14 AM
This is INCREDIBLE. I've never seen anything like this. I have been watching since the initial warning was issued(and recording, I'm going to put some highlights on YouTube). The storm didn't look that bad at first, and then when the first reports came in the tornado didn't seem that bad, but it certainly has been a big disaster. We're very fortunate there haven't been any deaths yet and only 1 serious injury... it could have been much worse. The Georgia Dome could have been a massive catastrophe had the tornado been stronger or perhaps a more direct hit.

I'm 80 miles SW of the city and we've had NOTHING, not even a drop of rain. It's very odd. I wasn't expecting much severe weather tonight which has me very concerned for tomorrow.

friendsfan77
03-15-2008, 02:17 AM
My mom has told me that a tornado hit across the street from us when I was 5, and I have dreaded storms ever since.

I really feel for the people downtown. The CNN Center and the Georgia Dome have a lot of damage. For a while it looked like people were stranded because their cars were completely damaged by the storm, and there's still glass and other debris all over the street. But I think the buses are starting again so they can get out now. It's truly a miracle no one was killed.

Chelsea
03-15-2008, 02:31 AM
The Atlanta CBS, after running news reports for the first hour or two, switched over to regular programming (Extra, and then paid programming). Absolutely shameful. The ABC, NBC, and FOX affiliates have stuck with the story.

There's a line of none-too-pleasant storms now crossing Alabama that are due to hit Georgia later today. This obviously will only compound the problem.

Stay safe everyone.

Scoobiedoo30
03-15-2008, 02:37 AM
did The Torando hit CNN in a Atlanta

friendsfan77
03-15-2008, 02:49 AM
The Atlanta CBS, after running news reports for the first hour or two, switched over to regular programming (Extra, and then paid programming). Absolutely shameful. The ABC, NBC, and FOX affiliates have stuck with the story.
I normally love their newscasts but that was pretty sad. I mean, I don't think people here care too much about Proactiv Solution right about now.

I am worried about tomorrow. It looks really threatening.

Brent88
03-15-2008, 03:26 AM
The Atlanta CBS, after running news reports for the first hour or two, switched over to regular programming (Extra, and then paid programming). Absolutely shameful. The ABC, NBC, and FOX affiliates have stuck with the story.

There's a line of none-too-pleasant storms now crossing Alabama that are due to hit Georgia later today. This obviously will only compound the problem.

Stay safe everyone.

CBS Atlanta sucks. I'm not surprised they went off early.

ABC/NBC/FOX have been PHENOMENAL. I just started receiving the NBC Atlanta station this week through HD and they have been great. I have always found in the past Atlanta TV to be blah when it comes to weather(even initially when the warning was ongoing tonight they were not that interested, not even on in some cases).

Here's some local coverage I just uploaded from WSB: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SQmld4mG3Tw

I hope to upload more tomorrow, I have tons of coverage and am still recording.

friendsfan77
03-15-2008, 03:38 AM
I think WSB did the best job. I love Monica Pearson, John Pruitt and Glenn Burns.

DLevine2
03-15-2008, 08:12 AM
I think WSB did the best job. I love Monica Pearson, John Pruitt and Glenn Burns.

Monica Pearson is who I love too. WSB and WXIA also does a good job to. We're suppose to have rain later on today too.

DLevine2
03-15-2008, 12:11 PM
I felt sorry about the CNN Center and the Georgia Dome getting destroyed from the Tornado. Now, I know people are hating that the St. Patrick's Day is now cancelled. I saw the damage on the news this morning.

Scoobiedoo30
03-15-2008, 12:15 PM
I also fely sorry for CNN

BarneyFife
03-15-2008, 01:02 PM
I was watching the SEC Tournament when it hit. It delayed the game for an hour and they had to cancel the next game until today. What a mess.

Scoobiedoo30
03-15-2008, 01:07 PM
what time did The Game get started.

BarneyFife
03-15-2008, 01:15 PM
Today's game started at 11:00 AM CST, and the winner of this game i believe, is gonna have to play again tonight. That will be tough to have to play 2 games in 1 day. BTW, it's halftime right now, and Kentucky leads Georgia 25 to 22

Scoobiedoo30
03-15-2008, 01:17 PM
The Game on WUPL started at 11:30 am Central Time

friendsfan77
03-15-2008, 01:45 PM
I felt sorry about the CNN Center and the Georgia Dome getting destroyed from the Tornado. Now, I know people are hating that the St. Patrick's Day is now cancelled. I saw the damage on the news this morning.
Yeah, they tried to give it another route but sadly it was of no use. Now areas to the north of us are getting hit with storms, and pretty hard.

BarneyFife
03-15-2008, 01:46 PM
My bad. It must of been a quick half, because when i turned it on at 11:55cst, it was already halftime. Most halves last about 50 or 55 minutes. So i guess they played the first half in 25 minutes. I've never seen a half played that quick.
We may be talking about different games.

Dr. John Becker
03-15-2008, 05:16 PM
I was watching the SEC Tournament when it hit. It delayed the game for an hour and they had to cancel the next game until today. What a mess.


I was watching also. Here is a clip of the basketball game when the twister hit.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7TT013NsSYc

Brent88
03-16-2008, 12:13 AM
More coverage from WSB I uploaded, Part 2 from last night http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=26Qu__v1zlc

Part 3 from today(I skipped over the severe weather coverage for the most part, and stuck with Atlanta focused news), at 3:37 was a major scare this afternoon(no tornado was confirmed but it set off a panic for a few minutes) http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=azAxRnD9PqM

It was a wild day with storm after storm hitting the same areas... glad it's over now. I got lucky here 80 miles SW of ATL and only had a couple of brief showers today.

friendsfan77
03-16-2008, 01:18 AM
My area and the parts south of Atlanta where my family lives were really lucky. Areas to the north and some to the south as well got it really bad. There were 2 fatalities confirmed further north.

WSB did a really good job again with the coverage. I'm not a big weather guru that much these days (like for instance I really don't spend hours on end watching The Weather Channel anymore) but I was really impressed with their technology and their guiding through the storms.