"Two structural support beams on the 21st floor of a 38-story under-construction building in Manhattan started buckling Tuesday morning, triggering a mass evacuation, street closures and a large emergency response, officials say.
The FDNY said it got a call around 8 a.m. about bricks falling from the building at 235 East 42nd Street, between Second and Third avenues. The NYPD says it got a 911 call about the incident less than 15 minutes later.
When cops got to the scene, the NYPD says officers were told that construction workers on the 21st floor of the commercial building saw the columns beginning to collapse."
Originally posted by downtownv: Were the beams defective or the workmanship?
Workers are claiming there was no shoring put into place in a cost-cutting effort, naturally accusations of union versus non-union hiring are being thrown around; the project is a renovation from offices (Pfizer) to residential which included adding floors.
Go to 8:30 for details
Posts: 16128 | Location: Wine Country | Registered: September 20, 2000
I’m sure when the socialists get more control, these kinds of problems will disappear… right?
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Skyscrapers are designed from the top down. If they are adding 6-10 stories to the building, I’m questioning if the contractor reinforced the existing skeleton to withstand the extra weight added to the top. Looking at the pic of the bent columns, doesn’t look like it.
If that is the reason for the failure, there is a ton of common sense missing from that job site.
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Posts: 5925 | Location: Colorado | Registered: April 20, 2009
Originally posted by ugeesta: Skyscrapers are designed from the top down. If they are adding 6-10 stories to the building, I’m questioning if the contractor reinforced the existing skeleton to withstand the extra weight added to the top. Looking at the pic of the bent columns, doesn’t look like it.
If that is the reason for the failure, there is a ton of common sense missing from that job site.
One of the interviewees in Corsair's video said they were adding 16 stories. NYT said 11 stories are being added.
I think part of the confusion is they're adding 21 stores to the adjacent 10 story 219 East 42nd.
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Posts: 25577 | Location: Northern Suburbs of Houston | Registered: November 14, 2005
It goes residential because they don’t want to spend any money on it. In my home town about half of a 5-6 story late 19 century building collapsed midway through a conversion to residential. Just months away from being occupied.
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Posts: 607 | Location: Kentucky | Registered: June 06, 2021
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Posts: 7454 | Location: South East, Pa | Registered: July 04, 2002
The WSJ story sounds way too simple and some incredibly poor basic engineering failures involved. Who would guess that adding several floors during a remodel would add weight?
So Pfizer wore off and the building is going to lay over?
That goes hard!
Posts: 10369 | Location: Somewhere looking for ammo that nobody has at a place I haven't been to for a pistol I couldn't live without... | Registered: December 02, 2014
There was a lot of that around Miami Beach. Very few buildings had the proper reserves and the boards would defer maintenance/not want to levy assessments to pay for repairs and proper inspections etc.
(I know of one building in Miami Beach where I could be comfortable investing long term. That’s getting better as they work through backlogs of buildings which have refused to pay for inspections/been paying fines instead of paying for remedies etc.)
Posts: 6870 | Location: Republic of Ice Cream, Low Country, SC. | Registered: May 24, 2007
I’m sure that building in NYC will be “saved” and my gut says it will constantly have issues and should probably come down.
I realize others know far more than I/aren’t working off memories of a statics class 30 years ago - but I think by the time girders are failing, lots/all of the others have been stressed quite a bit.
Posts: 6870 | Location: Republic of Ice Cream, Low Country, SC. | Registered: May 24, 2007