World

Demands for answers in aftermath of Florida building collapse

Wing of oceanfront complex suddenly pancaked on itself about 1.30am on Thursday

Updated 5 years ago · Published on 26 Jun 2021 5:30PM

Demands for answers in aftermath of Florida building collapse
Completed in 1981, Champlain Towers South was due to be recertified this year in line with Miami-Dade county safety regulations – which require a review every 40 years – and roof work was ongoing as part of that process. – AFP pic, June 26, 2021

WASHINGTON – Rescuers are still searching for survivors in rubble of the collapsed Florida apartment tower, but pressure is building – from families of missing residents to the state’s governor – for answers on how such a disaster could have occurred.

A wing of the oceanfront complex suddenly pancaked on itself about 1.30am on Thursday, with 55 apartments collapsing in a cloud of dust, leaving 159 people still missing yesterday.

Completed in 1981, Champlain Towers South was due to be recertified this year in line with Miami-Dade county safety regulations – which require a review every 40 years – and roof work was ongoing as part of that process.

But county officials stressed there was no indication of a causal link between the refurbishment work and the collapse, which so far has a confirmed death toll of four.

In addition to the loved ones of the dead and missing, and those who are suddenly homeless, “there’s a lot of other people throughout this community and really throughout Florida who want to know, well, how could a building just collapse like that?” Governor Ron DeSantis said.

He called for a “timely” explanation, adding that families “have a right to know”.

Mike Salberg, who is waiting for information on five missing family members, including his parents, echoed the sentiments.

“I want answers,” the New Yorker told AFP. “The families are sidelined.”

Settling 

Attention has turned, however, to a study led by Florida International University’s Shimon Wdowinski, based on space-based radar data, which found signs of land subsidence at the site between 1993 and 1999.

“I don’t know if the collapse was predictable. But we did detect that the building moved in the 1990s,” the environment professor said on CNN.

“It’s very subtle. It’s 2mm per year but it’s still detected by the satellites,” he explained, describing what was happening as a “slow process” of settling, rather than sinking.

“In this case, it’s a very localised signal of that building,” he said. 

“And, it means that it’s not necessarily the building moved into the ground. It can be that the building moved within itself – if there were some kind of structural damage within the building.”

‘Going to take some time’ 

FIU cautioned in a post on its website that “land subsidence in and of itself likely would not cause a building’s collapse”.

The university also noted that the subsidence observed in Surfside was significantly slower than other parts of the planet Wdowinski has studied – Mexico City, for example, is subsiding at a rate of 38cm per year, 2,000 times higher.

Another of the university’s experts, Atorod Azizinamini, chair of its civil and environmental engineering department, cautioned in an online video that it was too soon to speculate on a cause.

He said structural engineers would collect vast quantities of data on the building’s design plans and construction methods, take samples of steel and concrete, look at signs of corrosion, examine the foundation for signs of settlement, and try to detect any unusual event before the collapse.

“Once we have all the information we can simulate exactly different scenarios, and we can pinpoint how the collapse took place,” Azizinamini said. “Unfortunately that is not going to be happening in a matter of days, weeks.”

“It’s going to take some time.”

But Matthys Levy, a consulting engineer and professor at Columbia University interviewed by USA Today, said even the minor subsidence detected could have an impact.

“A millimetre may seem like a small number, but when you add them up over many years, it becomes a big number,” Levy said – who pointed to the fact that one part of the building is still standing as potentially significant.

If one part of a building is well-founded and the other is not, he explained, it can cause distortion in the floor slabs and “suddenly, you get cracking, breaking and fracturing”. 

That can lead to what is called progressive collapse – as happened during the September 11, 2001 attacks in New York.

“If one part of the building fails, it drags the rest with it,” Levy said. “There’s nothing there to stop it, there’s no strong elements to hold it back. It’s a cascade.”

US media have separately reported that a 2015 suit from an owner alleged that the building’s management failed to maintain an outside wall, resulting in water damage and cracks. – AFP, June 26, 2021

Related News

World / 1mth

Lufthansa employees injured after Boeing 787’s nose landing gear collapses at Frankfurt airport (video)

Malaysia / 1mth

Main Sandakan-Lahad Datu road in Sukau collapses, thousands of users affected

Malaysia / 1mth

Two cars damaged by objects thrown from apartment, police begin investigation

Opinion / 6mth

In good times and bad. PH will not survive without DAP, say analysts

Opinion / 1y

The Trump dilemma and reclaiming balance: The urgent need for fair global trade

Malaysia / 1y

Netizens urge government to reward ‘unsung heroes’ who battled pipeline fire

Spotlight

Malaysia

“I will meet him. He is also my friend,” Zahid says on Nga’s resignation remarks

Malaysia

King accords Singapore President full state welcome at Istana Negara

Malaysia

Sports YouTuber seriously injured in suspected assault at PJ petrol station (video)

Malaysia

PRN Johor: Take accountability, not blame others – former MP tells PH

Malaysia

Zara Qairina showed no evidence of persistent suicidal intent, psychologist tells court

Malaysia

DAP retains eight incumbents, unveils three new candidates for NS polls

Malaysia

Syed Saddiq: Court decision a strong endorsement of judicial independence

Sports & Fitness

France vs Spain World Cup 2026 semi-final set to be billion-dollar showdown

You may be interested

World

Air strikes continue, tankers come under fire as US-Iran conflict escalates in Hormuz Strait

World

Beijing warns against ‘stirring up trouble’ over 2016 arbitration ruling

World

Deadly Bangkok pub fire claims 27 lives, dozens critically injured (videos)

World

Strong 6.3-magnitude earthquake strikes southeast of Loyalty Islands

World

Netanyahu faces four key challengers as Israel sets general election for Oct 27

World

US-Iran conflict escalates as missile strikes spread across the Gulf to a closed Hormuz Strait