'I think the power station was a lovely building'
BBCFor more than 55 years, the cooling towers at Cottam Power Station stood as a landmark of north Nottinghamshire's industrial heritage and might.
It opened in 1968, and at its peak employed 750 people and produced 2,000 megawatts - enough to power 3.7 million homes.
Now the towers have been demolished, with all eight coming down simultaneously in what is a new Guinness World Record.
For Alf Jaworski, who lives in Cottam, the loss of a local landmark will take some getting used to.
"We have lived here for eight years and they sort of grow on you," said Mr Jaworski.
"I'm going to miss them really, because I think the power station was a lovely building.
"The power station grows on you. If you go away, you look at the towers and you think 'not far, soon be here'."

Rikki Isgar, explosive demolition manager for Brown and Mason, led the project to bring down the towers, and had the honour of pressing the button.
His team's work earned a Guinness World Record for bringing down the most cooling towers in a simultaneous operation, something he said was a proud achievement.
"It's been a long process, but there was a lot of hard work that went into the modelling and preparation works, and it was obviously a finale that won't be matched hopefully in a long time," he said.
"Obviously getting the world record as well is quite an experience... it was the reward for all the hard work that the entire team had put in across so many months."

Elizabeth Tilstone, who lives in nearby New Ollerton, was one of the crowd of photographers preserving the collapse for posterity.
"When the Ollerton pit was demolished I was working, so I couldn't see that - this one is another landmark, and I didn't want to miss that," she said.
"I feel a bit sad in one way, because it's been here for a while, and once it's gone the landscape is different... but we've got to change with the times."

Chris Birkett worked at Cottam for 13 years from 1985, before moving to the gas turbine station next door.
Now living in New Zealand, he interrupted a family holiday to see the demolition.
"I thought it would be worth coming and seeing, to say goodbye to the old girl," he said.
"It's the end of an era - they were cathedrals of power, we're not going to see the likes of those again."

After watching the wind take the dust from the demolition away from his home, 72-year-old Mr Jaworski said it was poignant to watch the towers that dominated the skyline get reduced to rubble.
"All I can see now is dust," he said.
"It's just a shame... I'd like to have seen them stay."
Additional reporting by Liam Barnes and Dan Martin

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