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Broken glass and window frames lay on the floor of the Sursock Palace in Beirut.
Broken glass and window frames lay on the floor of the Sursock Palace in Beirut.AP/Felipe Dana
The Sursock Palace in Beirut.
The Sursock Palace in Beirut.Haytham Al Achkar/Getty Images
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Staff inspect the damage at the Sursock Museum in Beirut.
Staff inspect the damage at the Sursock Museum in Beirut.PATRICK BAZ/AFP via Getty Images
The Sursock Museum in Beirut.
The Sursock Museum in Beirut.JOSEPH EID/AFP via Getty Images
A general view shows the damage at the Sursock Museum in the Lebanese capital Beirut.
A general view shows the damage at the Sursock Museum in the Lebanese capital Beirut.PATRICK BAZ/AFP via Getty Images
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A recently restored 19th-century palace was one of the treasured tourist attractions destroyed in last week’s massive chemical explosion, according to its devastated owner.

The Irish-born owner of Beirut’s landmark Sursock Palace and his American wife had finished a 20-year restoration of the landmark building from damage suffered in the country’s 1975-1990 civil war when 2,750 tons of ammonium nitrate exploded like an atom bomb last Tuesday.

“In a split second, everything was destroyed again,” said Roderick Sursock, owner of the palace that is treasured as one of the most storied buildings in the Lebanese capital.

The palace, built in 1860, lost the ceilings of the top floor along with many of the walls in the blast that officials now say killed at least 200.

Sursock told the Associated Press that the damage is at least 10 times what 15 years of civil war inflicted on the palace, which also survived both world wars and the fall of the Ottoman Empire.

The palace — a tourist attraction and popular wedding location — will only survive with yet another restoration “as if rebuilding the house from scratch,” Sursock said.

But he will not even contemplate starting until “a total change” in leadership in what he angrily called a nation “run by a gang of corrupt people.”

“I hope there is going to be violence and revolution,” he said.

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A heavily damaged room in the Sursock Palace after the explosion in the seaport of Beirut.
A heavily damaged room in the Sursock Palace after the explosion in the seaport of BeirutAP/Felipe Dana
The Sursock Palace in Lebanon's capital, BeirutSursock Museum/AFP via Getty Ima
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The Sursock Museum in Lebanon's capital Beirut
The Sursock Palace in BeirutSursock Museum/AFP via Getty Ima
Damaged windows are seen a the Sursock Museum in Lebanon's capital Beirut.
Damaged windows in the Sursock Palace in BeirutREUTERS/Aziz Taher
Roderick Sursock stands in a heavily damaged room of the Sursock Palace
Roderick Sursock stands in a heavily damaged room of the Sursock Palace.AP/Felipe Dana
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A heavily damaged room in the Sursock Palace after the explosion in the seaport of Beirut.
A heavily damaged room in the Sursock Palace after the explosion in the seaport of BeirutAP/Felipe Dana
Debris from the ceiling and walls cover the floor of a room in the Sursock Palace.
Debris from the ceiling and walls covers the floor of a room in the Sursock Palace.AP/Felipe Dana
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“Because something needs to break, we need to move on, we cannot stay as we are.”

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