The San Remo is a luxury 27-floor co-operative apartment building and was constructed from 1929 to 1930 and was designed by architect Emery Roth in the Renaissance Revival style. The San Remo is 27 stories tall, with twin towers rising from a 17-story base.[1]
Coverage[]
The San Remo is featured in Home Wrecked Home.
It was introduced in 1 week after people when stately homes face an entirely different enemy like the luxurious San Remo apartments on Central Park in New York City as it look down on Manhattan devoid of man. The apartments of San Remo sold for up to $20 million in the time of humans. Steven S. Ross stated that it is a prestige building and the apartments are huge.
After people, the elite have moved out and the catastrophe move in, that stems from a material that epitomized luxury. The danger emanates from a high-end paint with an unusual ingredient. Steven S. Ross stated that many of the owners in the San Remo chose to use paints that were made with linseed oil rather than with solvent that evaporates because it provide a beautiful glossy sheen and takes color very well but if one's a painter, one will leave the rags on the can of linseed oil paint and if it's overnight it won't matter but after people the rags become time bombs. When linseed oil interacts with oxygen in the air, the chemical reaction produces heat and without adequate ventilation, spontaneous combustion can occur. It was a common cause of household fires in the time of humans and cotton rags soaked with linseed oil triggered a massive blaze in a Philadelphia high rise in 1991.
After a week without people, the paint soaked rags smolder and the San Remo burns and turns into a different kind of hot property as the rooms succumb to the blazing fire.