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At least six people have died and other 14 have been hurt after a building collapsed in the centre of the city of Philadelphia, officials say.

A four-storey building fell down, sending debris on to a building housing a bustling Salvation Army shop.

The collapse happened around 10:30 local time in the Center City neighborhood.

Emergency services frantically used their bare hands to rescue 14 people from the rubble of the Salvation Army shop after it came down on the corner of 22nd and Market at 10.45 a.m – the cause is yet unknown.

The building was being demolished, though the cause of the collapse was unknown, officials said.

Early reports said just one person had died, but rescuers continued working into the night.

Mayor Michael Nutter said the dead included five women and one man.

“If anyone else is in that building, they will find them,” he said.

Apartment building collapses on top of Philadelphia thrift store killing six people

Apartment building collapses on top of Philadelphia thrift store killing six people

Thirteen people were taken to hospital suffering minor injuries, Fire Commissioner Lloyd Ayers said.

Late on Wednesday, a 61-year-old woman was pulled alive from the rubble to become the 14th known survivor.

The four-storey building had both commercial and residential spaces.

Several witnesses said they had been concerned about the way the demolition was being carried out prior to the collapse.

“We’ve been calling it for the past week – it’s going to fall, it’s going to fall,” window washer Dan Gillis told the Associated Press.

Earlier, witnesses said they had heard a loud rumbling sound immediately beforehand.

“I was standing there looking out my window, watching the men at work on the building, and the next thing I know I heard something go kaboom,” Veronica Haynes, who was in an apartment building nearby, said.

“Then you saw the whole side of the wall fall down… on to the other building.”

Bernie Ditomo told a local NBC he was driving on a nearby street when he felt something “like an earthquake”.

“I said, <<What the hell is going on?>>,” Bernie Ditomo said.

“My truck is totalled. I am a little dusty and dirty, but I’m alright. I am one of the lucky ones.”

High school student Jordan McLaughlan said he saw several people on the ground being given oxygen by rescuers after the collapse as the air filled with dust.

Authorities asked news helicopters to clear the air over the scene so rescuers could hear people trapped under the rubble.

“This is delicate, it is dangerous work,” Lloyd Ayers said.

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A lone apartment building stands in the middle of a newly built road in the city of Wenling, in Zhejiang province, China, after an elderly couple refused to relocate.

Luo Baogen and his wife insist on living in the half-demolished building because they believe that the relocation compensation offered by the government is not enough.

Now the only building left standing, the five storey block is a strange sight as cars drive around it while the couple remains living inside.

To ensure the couple’s safety, adjacent rooms in the building have been left intact but all their neighbors have moved out, according to local media.

The road paved through the Xiazhangyang village leads to the Wenling railway station and is yet to be officially opened.

Luo Baogen and his wife believe that the compensation on offer would not be enough to cover their rebuilding costs.

In the People’s Republic of China, during most of the Communist era, private ownership of property was abolished, making it easy for residents to be moved on – but now the laws have been tightened up and it is illegal to demolish property by force without an agreement.

Luo Baogen and his wife insist on living in the half-demolished building because they believe that the relocation compensation offered by the government is not enough.

Luo Baogen and his wife insist on living in the half-demolished building because they believe that the relocation compensation offered by the government is not enough.

Property owners in China that refuse to move to make way for development are known as “Nail Householders” referring to a stubborn nail that is not easy to remove from a piece of old wood and cannot be pulled out with a hammer.

Earlier this year, Hong Chunqin, 75, and her husband Kung, who live in the two dilapidated buildings with their two sons, had initially agreed to sell the property in Taizhou, in Zhejiang province and accepted $12,000 in compensation.

But then she changed her mind and refunded the money once work on the road had started.

Earlier this year, Niu Chuangen and Zhang Zhongyun dared to stand in the way of a local property developer in Zaozhuang, in the Shandong province.

As a result, the resolute couple, both in their 60s, have been left stranded on their tiny spot of land, while all around them the ground is dug up and skyscrapers erected.

The distraught pair were regularly threatened by gangsters and have had to fend over a number of attempts to illegally demolish their ramshackle home.

They were cut off from utilities in 2009 when a local developer started the enormous earthworks involved in building dozens of high-rise residential buildings in the area.

In another case, one family among 280 others at the site of a six storey shopping mall being built in Chongqing refused to leave their home for two years.

Developers cut their power and water, and excavated a 10-meter deep pit around their home, which their family had inhabited for three generations.

The owners broke into the construction site, reoccupied it, and flew a Chinese flag on top and then Yang Wu, a local martial arts champion, used nunchakus to make a staircase to the house and threatened to beat any authorities who attempted to evict him.

The owners turned down an offer of $450,000 but eventually settled with the developers in 2007.