Disaster Condo collapse in Miami-Dade kills at least one; search and rescue combing through rubble

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Condo collapse in Surfside kills at least one; search and rescue combing through rubble​

https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/miami-beach/article252324218.html (archive)

A 12-story oceanfront condo tower partially collapsed early Thursday morning in the town of Surfside, spurring a massive search-and-rescue effort with dozens of rescue crews from across Miami-Dade and Broward counties.

The ocean-facing portion of Champlain Towers South Condo, completed in 1981 with more than 100 units at 8777 Collins Ave., collapsed around 2 a.m., leaving a heap of rubble.

Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett confirmed that 10 people were treated for injuries on-site, two transported to the hospital, and at least one person has died. Authorities anticipate more fatalities.

A little after 8 a.m., Frank Rollason, director of Miami-Dade Emergency Management, said emergency workers believe they have cleared all survivors from inside the tower, which has more than 130 apartments. He said more than 70 of them have been destroyed or damaged.

“Everyone who is alive is out of the building,” he told the Miami Herald.

Several people have gathered at the town’s community center, where the Red Cross is assisting those who are waiting to hear about missing loved ones. Burkett said the building manager does not keep a log of residents, but logs visitors. First responders are using the list to try and account for the missing.

“They brought dogs who can sniff for survivors in the rubble,” said Surfside Commissioner Eliana Salzhauer. “They aren’t turning up very much. No one is celebrating anyone being pulled out.”

Salzhauer said the building was beginning its 40-year recertification, and the building’s roof was being redone, but it is unknown if any construction activity contributed to the disaster.
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Rescuers were desperately trying to get a trapped child out of the garage at the Champlain Towers shortly after 8 a.m. Thursday, who was discovered by a Miami-Dade Fire Rescue dog.

The searchers believe the child was with his or her parents, who are deceased, Rollason said.

“It’s bad,” he said.

In another case, Rollason said, rescuers saved a mother and her child, but the mother’s leg had to be amputated to get her out.

“We got some people out. They had to cut away railings,” he said.

Because workers haven’t determined the stability yet of the collapsed structure, they haven’t yet started to remove the pile of rubble that remains attached to the building.

Rollason said the building to the south, which is newer, is far enough away that it appears to be fine for now. The building on the south, he said, is older and has been evacuated. The Solara Surfside hotel, which is next to the tower, has also been evacuated.

Santo Mejil, 50, was roused out of bed when his wife called from a unit on the ninth floor of the south condo, one of three buildings that make up the Champlain Towers complex. She is an overnight caretaker for an elderly disabled woman.

“She said she heard a big explosion. It felt like an earthquake,” Mejil told the Miami Herald.

As he recounted rushing over to the beach from their home near Miami International Airport, his phone rang. It was his wife.

“They’re bringing you down?” he said. Tears welled in his eyes. “Thank God.”

Adriana Chi waited outside Jackson’s Ryder Trauma Center shortly before 7 on Thursday morning, worried about two relatives inside and another she can’t locate.

She said her brother, sister-and-law and teenage niece live in a ninth-floor unit there. She was able to speak to her niece ahead of her emergency surgery at Ryder. She said the 16-year-old recalled being awoken by her mother to a shaking building, then had the sensation of the floor giving way.

“She felt the building shake,” said Chi, a nurse practitioner. “Then everything collapsed.”
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Chi said her sister-in-law, a psychologist, was brought to Ryder as well but she doesn’t know the whereabouts of her brother, a lawyer.

Chi said her father has owned the unit for about 30 years. She said leaks were a chronic problem, leading to a nagging worry for her.

“The last time I was there, I looked at him and I said: ‘I am serious,’” she recalled between tearful cellphone calls by hospital’s driveway and hugs with other family members gathered outside. “‘This building is going to collapse.’”

Burkett, the mayor, noted that the building is not as old as many in the surrounding area, and that “there is no reason for a building to come down like that.” There are one-foot gaps between stories where there used to be 10, he said.

“This doesn’t happen,” he said. “I’ve been here my whole life, and I haven’t seen anything like this happen.”

When asked if he believed the collapse was an accident, Burkett wouldn’t say.

“What I can say is that a building has fallen down .... I expect that this building is not salvageable at this point.”

He said there had been construction work on the building’s roof over the last 30 days, and that “we’re certainly going to look at that.”
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A South Florida-based home insurance inspector who asked not to be named said she had visited Champlain Towers in February 2020 to verify impact windows and doors for a client.

She said the building is reinforced concrete and should not have collapsed the way it did.

“As someone who has been in this business for years, it defies logic,” she said. “It defies everything that we know.”

The area around 88th Street and Collins and Harding avenues have been shut down for several blocks. Dozens of fire engines and rescue vehicles are lining the streets. According to the county’s fire rescue call list, 113 Fire-Rescue units are on scene.

The building is a block north of Miami Beach city limits. The town of Surfside runs along Collins Avenue, south of Bal Harbour. Condos and motels line Collins Avenue.

Miami-Dade Fire Rescue has set up a family reunification center. Anyone looking to connect with loved ones from Champlain Towers can call 305-614-1819.
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This happened around 2am. There is way more than one dead.
 
Water leaks that bad?

That shit tore up the inside spacing, weakened (rusted) steel beams, and ate under the concrete as well as slowly weakened the concrete.

Add in cranes, new roofing, and adding apartments and that fucker gave it up.

But damn, that's gotta suck.

I hope they find most of the people alive and the death toll stays low.

I did notice, they said that they were working on rescuing a child, who's parents were confirmed dead, but the death toll is still at one.
 
Holy fuck I used to walk past that place. I remember back in 2016 looking into apartments in the area before deciding to move away from Dade county.
 
I was watching sky news earlier and they were showing a press conference where some official was talking about how its a predominately Jewish community that lived in the area, then a few seconds later said made a statement in Spanish

Very offensive to the great state of Israel IMO :story:
 
Given the tolerances for buildings, complete failures like this are extremely rare across the entire globe. I mean even in china where they build 100 to 1 buildings of what we do, collapses are by and large very very rare events.

Of course, before someone starts posting links to China remember each year hundreds of thousands of tall buildings are constructed and again, very few failures.

There was a case - I forget it now - in the USA where about 80,000 homes starting experiencing exploding foundations 40 years after construction and it was due to contaminants in the concrete ash used that had chemical reactions take place 4 decades later causing them to literally explode.

All I can say is that the investigation that is going to follow a failure like this is going to check everything from geological forces, sinkholes to every single structural component in that building being tested, going back to suppliers and checking every other building that the company produced it and every concrete pour done by the company since...forever.

Right now the concrete company, their materials supplier, the builder and engineers are all lawyering up for the onslaught that is coming.
 
Lots of residents seemed to be from South America. The basic national news stories were reading like a list of partially failed South American shitholes for origin countries, Venezuela, Argentina, etc. (OK, Venezuela is pretty much true and honest Mad Max by now, but Argentina is barely holding together.)

If you look at the aerial photos, there's a line of towers at the beach, then single family homes behind that. Those low rise areas inland could very well be retired Jews from "back East" as they call the northeast US in Florida, but once you get into the high rises you get a totally different demographic. Lots of people own condos and only visit in December, or use them as pied-a-terre's in order to take advantage of Florida's tax laws (that's what Donboy was using Mar-a-lago for before his turn in DC, and only moved there full time because NYC didn't want him back), or use them as Airbnb income streams. They are admitting that they have no idea who was actually inside.

And yeah, could be lots of Jewish owners who use them for the above reasons. I'm not sure if $700k would be cheap for Miami Beach, it sounds like it, especially for ocean views. The legal owners may have been attracted by the cheap HOA fees that inevitably go along with a building nobody gives a fuck about. The north building was likely built at the same time but has different land owners than the south one.

Tolls of the missing are spiraling between 50 and 100, apparently nobody even kept a tally of who was living there which is one of the basic jobs of a condo tower HOA ffs. On the Left Coast buildings are required to be put on pilings sunk to bedrock. One condo builder in SF thought he could cheat the system and sunk pilings only partway, then the tower started leaning BADLY and the lawsuits started flying. (Millennium Tower.)

So, built in the 70s when you could bribe the important people to skimp on everything, then throw in a half dozen different land owners over the years til the owner becomes some hedge fund or REIT that only cares about the money it produces, then the place simply rots away until it collapses.
 
George Bush did 9-11.
 

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horrifying video

Jules (a resistor) on twitter is convinced they condo group knew the building was sinking 2 MM a year...big if true..

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horrifying video

Jules (a resistor) on twitter is convinced they condo group knew the building was sinking 2 MM a year...big if true..

View attachment 2292369
That works out to just 6.2cm (2.4in), which to my mind isn't enough to cause this. Of course, it may have accelerated recently for some reason and who knows if they've been monitoring it closely in the past few years.
 
I present to you, 8777 Collins Avenue, Surfside, Florida, view of the side of the building that yeeted itself today:

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In my layfag's opinion? Looks ghetto as fuck, especially looking at the buildings further north. Not sure when this shot was taken, but the sister building was apparently demolished a while ago. To your left (south) is where the former south tower was, but was apparently ripped down. If you go on Google Earth and take a look at the buildings further north on Collins Avenue, you can see just from the roofs that most of them are far better maintained. Also, the balconies appear to be a half dozen different colors, a red flag of a HOA/land owner that doesn't give a flying fuck about the place and hasn't for a very long time. The place looks like there is literal fucking mold growing on the roof ffs. Provided the cops can figure out who owns the land/HOA besides a hall of mirrors of LLC's, somebody is gonna go to fucking prison, especially if lots of Jews lost lives/property. Orthodox Jews play hardball.
 
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