FEDERAL BOMBSHELL: Champlain Towers Collapse Began Weeks Before Deadly Disaster
A newly released federal investigation has concluded that the collapse of Florida’s Champlain Towers South was not a sudden event, but rather the culmination of a structural breakdown that had been unfolding for weeks before the building came crashing down and killed 98 people.
The findings, published Monday by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), determined that the 12-story beachfront condominium in Surfside suffered from critical structural weaknesses dating back to its original construction.
According to investigators, the chain of failures appears to have started in early June 2021 when two vital connections between columns in the underground parking garage and the concrete slab supporting the pool deck failed. Because the building’s original design did not comply with accepted engineering standards and decades of alterations further compromised the structure, the remaining sections of the deck were unable to withstand the redistribution of weight.
“When building structures are designed and built to required codes and standards, they have margins against failure, meaning they should be able to support much more load than they are expected to bear,” explained Judith Mitrani-Reiser, an investigation co-lead, in an accompanying video release. “In the case of Champlain Towers South, these margins against failure were too narrow from the start.”
The federal report adds significant detail to the growing body of evidence that emerged after the tragedy, pointing to longstanding design deficiencies and progressive structural deterioration. The building ultimately collapsed at approximately 1:22 a.m. on June 24, 2021, while most residents were asleep inside the oceanfront complex just north of Miami.
Among the 98 victims were members of the local Orthodox Jewish community, as well as relatives of Paraguay’s first lady, including her sister, family members, and their nanny.
The legal aftermath of the disaster resulted in a settlement exceeding $1 billion after a Miami judge approved a class-action agreement resolving numerous wrongful death and personal injury claims.
Mitrani-Reiser said investigators determined that the building failed to meet applicable structural requirements even under the standards in place when it was built in the late 1970s. In addition, portions of the completed structure differed from the original architectural plans. Among the unapproved changes were large decorative planters installed throughout the pool deck area.
Subsequent renovations added substantial weight to the structure. Sand and paving stones installed around the pool increased the load on what Mitrani-Reiser described as an “already structurally inadequate” platform. Investigators also confirmed extensive corrosion in reinforcing steel embedded within the pool deck and parking garage slabs.
Photographs taken in the weeks before the collapse provided further warning signs. Investigators identified a major crack running through a planter wall on the pool deck, along with additional fractures where the planter connected to a structural enclosure. The planter itself detached from the deck less than a day before the building failed.
The report also documented worsening water infiltration in the underground garage. Roughly a week before the collapse, investigators traced a growing leak from the garage ceiling. Witnesses later told officials that the flow had intensified to the point where it resembled a “water faucet” in the hours leading up to the disaster.
As the collapse began, residents reported seeing portions of the pool deck fail before the building itself came down. Mitrani-Reiser said witnesses described the deck collapse as occurring “one bay at a time as if dominoes were falling in a sequential chain reaction.” Others recalled a powerful blast of air moving through the lobby, accompanied by a deafening sound that survivors compared to a “jet engine.”
The tragedy led to major changes in Florida condominium law. In 2022, state lawmakers enacted requirements forcing condominium associations to maintain reserve funds for critical structural repairs and maintenance. After many property owners were hit with steep special assessments to address years of deferred upkeep, legislators later approved additional measures designed to provide associations and homeowners with greater flexibility in meeting the new financial obligations.
{Matzav.com}