https://sputnikglobe.com/20210701/as-joe-biden-visits-surfside-disaster-scene-the-blame-game-begins-but-what-could-have-gone-wrong-1083283971.html
As Joe Biden Visits Surfside Disaster Scene, the Blame Game Begins But What Could Have Gone Wrong?
As Joe Biden Visits Surfside Disaster Scene, the Blame Game Begins But What Could Have Gone Wrong?
Sputnik International
US President Joe Biden is visiting Surfside in Florida, a week after Champlain Towers South, a 12-storey condominium building collapsed, killing more than 150... 01.07.2021, Sputnik International
2021-07-01T13:17+0000
2021-07-01T13:17+0000
2021-07-01T13:28+0000
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The official death toll from last week’s Surfside disaster stands at 18 but 140 people remain missing and are believed to be buried beneath a huge pile of rubble.On Wednesday, 30 June, Miami-Dade police identified Anaely Rodriguez, 42, and her children Lucia Guara, 10, and four-year-old Emma Guara. The body of their father, Marcus Guara, 52, was identified at the weekend.The collapse of the building seems to be linked to an engineering report in 2018 which found the concrete foundations at the foot of the building had suffered “major structural damage” and needed extensive repairs.The report also listed “abundant cracking” of concrete columns, beams and walls in the parking garage.Water from the swimming pool, and possibly from the sea, had been leaking into the concrete foundations of the building, weakening it.In April this year the president of the building’s board wrote to residents to say the problems reported in 2018 had “gotten significantly worse'' and the bill for repairing it was estimated at US$15.5 million.Why the building had not been declared unsafe and the residents not been evacuated remains unclear and may only be explained during the litigation hearings which will inevitably take place in the next few years. Champlain Towers South, at 8777 Collins Avenue, was completed in 1981 and was one of the first buildings to have been constructed since a moratorium, imposed by Miami-Dade County as a result of water and sewerage infrastructure issues, was lifted.Some reports suggest the building was constructed in an area of reclaimed wetland and it had been slowly sinking since the 1990s.Of the building’s 136 apartments, 55 collapsed at around 1.30am on 24 June and CCTV footage suggests the middle section failed first and then the outer edge, although the entire collapse took less than 12 seconds.The residents of the remaining apartments have now moved out while they are assessed by structural engineers.When President Biden visits Surfside he will not concern himself with the details of the collapse but there is no doubt the cause will be ascertained during litigation and the blame game has already begun.So what could have gone wrong?The Constructor magazine lists five major causes of failure in concrete buildings - mistakes by architects in the design process, wrong choice of materials, chemical attacks on concrete, external mechanical factors or poor construction techniques.One factor which will need to be examined is the quality of the “pour.”When concrete buildings are constructed a metal frame will be erected first and then liquid concrete is poured in, drying into a rock-hard material.But if the materials are incorrectly mixed or the temperature is wrong it can mean the final product is weaker than it needs to be.If water then seeps in through the cracks the whole edifice becomes vulnerable.If the ambient temperature is too hot it can lead to cracks due to shrinkage.That is why in places like Dubai, Riyadh and many other extremely hot locations concrete is poured at night, when temperatures are lower.Whether that was the case with Champlain Towers South is unclear.Ordinary concrete mixtures come in 14 different strength grades - from C15 to C80 - but high-rise buildings require ultra-high strength concrete, usually between C80 and C120 depending on the number of storeys.Building control inspectors are expected to check the correct grade of concrete is being used.There has already been speculation on social media that the architect’s design was at fault, namely because a large pile cap - one of the concrete columns in the foundations - was deleted from the plan and a penthouse level was added, which would have added to the weight of the building.But it is not clear whether these plans, apparently submitted in 1979, are accurate.
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As Joe Biden Visits Surfside Disaster Scene, the Blame Game Begins But What Could Have Gone Wrong?
13:17 GMT 01.07.2021 (Updated: 13:28 GMT 01.07.2021) US President Joe Biden is visiting Surfside in Florida, a week after Champlain Towers South, a 12-storey condominium building collapsed, killing more than 150 people. But why did the building fail and how common are such faults?
The official death toll from last week’s
Surfside disaster stands at 18 but 140 people remain missing and are believed to be buried beneath a huge pile of rubble.
On Wednesday, 30 June, Miami-Dade police identified Anaely Rodriguez, 42, and her
children Lucia Guara, 10, and four-year-old Emma Guara. The body of their father, Marcus Guara, 52, was identified at the weekend.
The collapse of the building seems to be linked to an
engineering report in 2018 which found the concrete foundations at the foot of the building had suffered “major structural damage” and needed extensive repairs.
The report also listed “abundant cracking” of concrete columns, beams and walls in the parking garage.
Water from the swimming pool, and possibly from the sea, had been leaking into the concrete foundations of the building, weakening it.
In
April this year the president of the building’s board wrote to residents to say the problems reported in 2018 had “gotten significantly worse'' and the bill for repairing it was estimated at US$15.5 million.
Why the building had not been declared unsafe and the residents not been evacuated remains unclear and may only be explained during the litigation hearings which will inevitably take place in the next few years.
Champlain Towers South, at 8777 Collins Avenue, was completed in 1981 and was one of the first buildings to have been constructed since a moratorium, imposed by Miami-Dade County as a result of water and sewerage infrastructure issues, was lifted.
Some
reports suggest the building was constructed in an area of reclaimed wetland and it had been slowly sinking since the 1990s.
Of the building’s 136 apartments, 55 collapsed at around 1.30am on 24 June and CCTV footage suggests the middle section failed first and then the outer edge, although the entire collapse took less than 12 seconds.
The residents of the remaining apartments have now moved out while they are assessed by structural engineers.
When President Biden visits Surfside he will not concern himself with the details of the collapse but there is no doubt the cause will be ascertained during litigation and the blame game has already begun.
So what could have gone wrong?
The Constructor magazine lists five major causes of failure in concrete buildings - mistakes by architects in the design process, wrong choice of materials, chemical attacks on concrete, external mechanical factors or poor construction techniques.
One factor which will need to be examined is the quality of the “pour.”
When concrete buildings are constructed a metal frame will be erected first and then liquid concrete is poured in, drying into a rock-hard material.
But if the materials are incorrectly mixed or the temperature is wrong it can mean the final product is weaker than it needs to be.
If water then seeps in through the cracks the whole edifice becomes vulnerable.
If the ambient temperature is too hot it can lead to cracks due to shrinkage.
That is why in places like
Dubai, Riyadh and many other extremely hot locations concrete is poured at night, when temperatures are lower.
Whether that was the case with Champlain Towers South is unclear.
Ordinary concrete mixtures come in 14 different strength grades - from C15 to C80 - but high-rise buildings require ultra-high strength concrete, usually between C80 and C120 depending on the number of storeys.
Building control inspectors are expected to check the correct grade of concrete is being used.
There has already been speculation on social media that the architect’s design was at fault, namely because a large pile cap - one of the concrete columns in the foundations - was deleted from the plan and a penthouse level was added, which would have added to the weight of the building.
But it is not clear whether these plans, apparently submitted in 1979, are accurate.