Engineers who visited the site of the Surfside town condo collapse or reviewed photos of debris have determined a possible reason behind the wreckage, The New York Times reported on Saturday.
According to specialists, critical sections near the base of the building appear to not have been steel reinforced in the amount required by the project’s original design drawings.
“The bars might not be arranged like the original drawings call for,” Allyn E. Kilsheimer, a forensic engineering expert, told The NYT.
Kilsheimer confirmed that there are "signs that the amount of steel used to connect concrete slabs below a parking deck to the building’s vertical columns might be less than what the project’s initial plans specified".
The engineer noted, however, that additional examination is required to confirm whether the slab-to-column connections indeed contained less steel.
U.S. Coast Guard and Miami-Dade Police patrol as U.S. President Joe Biden visits the area while rescue efforts are halted at the site of a partially collapsed residential building in Surfside, near Miami Beach, Florida, U.S. July 1, 2021
© REUTERS / JOE SKIPPER
R. Shankar Nair, a member of the National Academy of Engineering, noted "inconsistencies" between the initial design and sections of steel remaining visible in the columns.
“There does not appear to be enough steel connecting the slab to the columns,” Nair said. “What we see out there seems inconsistent with what the drawings show.”
Other engineers quoted by the outlet argue that a lack of steel could be one factor that impacted the collapse, and not the main reason. The investigation of the tragedy and its causes is ongoing, and findings and interpretations can change, the report noted.
The Surfside collapse took place in late June, claiming at least 24 lives, with 124 people still missing. The tragedy has left "whole nation mourning", as US President Joe Biden said, visiting the disaster site, offering condolences and pledging federal aid for survivors and family members of those affected.