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Crews melt estimated 1 million wads of used chewing gum off famous Seattle wall

A note that reads "Goodbye gum wall, we will miss you," sticks to a wall partially obscured by gum, Monday, Nov. 9, 2015, at Seattle's "gum wall" at Pike Place Market. Besides gum, people leave pictures, business cards and other mementos. AP Photo/Ted S. Warren

SEATTLE – A piece of Seattle history is coming down – or rather, 1 million little pieces.

Crews are cleaning up the city’s famed “gum wall” near Pike Place Market, where tourists and locals have been sticking their used chewing gum for the past 20 years.

The wall is plastered with wads of gum in a kaleidoscope of colours, some stretched and pinched into messages, hearts and other designs. People also have used the gooey gobs to paste up pictures, business cards and other mementos.

On Tuesday, powerful steam cleaners were melting it all off.

WATCH: Famous Seattle Gum Wall to be cleaned after 20 years

Market officials decided now was as good a time as any to wipe clean the wall, but they expect people will start leaving gum on the space again soon.

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“I just hope that the citizens of Seattle don’t hate me for removing the gum wall,” said Kelly Foster, general manager of Cascadian Building Maintenance, the contractor hired by Pike Place Market to take on the cleaning.

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The market and contractor chose steam over pressure washing to conserve the historic market’s brick walls.

“It’s an icon. It’s history,” said onlooker Zoe Freeman, who works near Pike Place. “The market is famous for the gum wall. But it also draws rats.”

People first began sticking their gum to the wall while waiting for shows at the nearby Market Theater. Since then, the “gum wall” has expanded beyond one wall and onto other walls of an alley, pipes and even the theatre’s box office window.

Emily Crawford, a Pike Place Market spokeswoman, said the cleaning crew will collect and weigh the gum each day it is removed. The cleaning is expected to take three days.

By Crawford’s rough calculation, there are about 2,200 pounds of gum on the walls.

“We’ll find out at the end of the week how right my guesstimate really is,” she said.

Market officials hope to contain where people put their gum in the future but say they aren’t holding their breath.

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