Miami Building Collapse

printer

Well-Known Member
Damage to Surfside building's concrete was accelerating in April
The president of the association that represents the collapsed Florida condominium building said the damage to the building's basement garage had “gotten significantly worse” and the concrete damage was “accelerating," according to a letter written last April, USA Today reports.

In the letter obtained by USA Today, Champlain Towers South Condominium Association president Jean Wodnicki acknowledged that the tens of millions of dollars of needed repairs had become a source of frustration for the building's residents.

“We have discussed, debated, and argued for years now, and will continue to do so for years to come as different items come into play,” Wodnicki, who survived the collapse last week, wrote in a letter dated April 9.

Wodnicki noted in her letter that conditions had worsened from when the association had hired an engineering firm to inspect the building in 2018. The engineers had found a “major error” in the building's design including crumbling concrete columns in the garage area. The firm predicted that failure to address these errors would “cause the extent of the concrete deterioration to expand exponentially.”

Wodnicki stated that much of the ground level would need to be pulled up due to how many of the repairs would need to be done underground.

"When performing any concrete restoration work, it is impossible to know the extent of the damage to the underlying rebar until the concrete is opened up," she wrote. "Oftentimes the damage is more extensive than can be determined by inspection of the surface."

“Your Board of Directors is working very hard to bring this project to fruition,” she added. “We have covered so much ground already to get the project rolling. … We have discussed, debated, and argued for years now, and will continue to do so for years to come as different items come into play."

Like on a car, "It is only a little rust."
 

medicaloutlaw

Well-Known Member
Such terrible stories. To be trapped in a small air pocket and trying to reach out for help.

SURFSIDE, Fla. -- As hundreds of loved ones wait to hear answers about the dozens missing at the Surfside, Florida, condo collapse site, mysterious phone calls from a landline inside the building are complicating the mystery for one family.

Hours after the collapse, around 9:40 p.m. Thursday, Samuelson said his mother's house line received a mysterious phone call from the Notkin's landline.

Static and cracking noises could be heard from the landline, with no discernable human voices. "We were all sitting there in the living room, my whole family ... We were just shocked, and we kind of thought nothing of it because we answered and it was static," Samuelson said. The family received a total of 16 calls from the Notkin's landline before the calls stopped.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
I can't think of two more useless people to have at a disaster rescue site, what could these two grifters possibly do to help, she's more manly than him, their personal assistants would probably be more useful.


 

schuylaar

Well-Known Member
I can't think of two more useless people to have at a disaster rescue site, what could these two grifters possibly do to help, she's more manly than him, their personal assistants would probably be more useful.


it's..politcal in 3, 2, and..
 

printer

Well-Known Member
Most of Surfside condo board quit in 2019 amid sluggish response to repair plans: WaPo
Five people resigned in 2019 from the condo board of the Florida building that collapsed early Thursday, The Washington Post reported.

Board president Anette Goldstein was among those that resigned from the seven-member board, partly due to the slow response to major structural concerns that had been detailed in an engineer consultant’s report in 2018, the Post reported.

The Post obtained previously unpublished correspondences, board minutes from the condo, and other records from the homeowner’s association. The news outlet noted that several roadblocks that impeded the building's ability to quickly address the structural issues included a high turnover on the condo board and debate among board members about the scope and costs of the work needed to be done.

“We work for months to go in one direction and at the very last minute objections are raised that should have been discussed and resolved right in the beginning,” Goldstein said in her resignation letter in September 2019, according to The Post.

“This pattern has repeated itself over and over, ego battles, undermining the roles of fellow board members, circulation of gossip and mistruths. I am not presenting a very pretty picture of the functioning of our board and many before us, but it describes a board that works very hard but cannot for the reasons above accomplish the goals we set out to accomplish,” she continued.

Four other members on the condo board resigned in 2018. The Post could not determine from the documents why the other four members had resigned. Several members, including Goldstein, later rejoined the board, according to The Post.
 

carlsbarn

Well-Known Member
Where's the Sasquatch spewing some nonsense about freedoms and overbearing regulations with a flippant remark about how in his daydream consensual transaction world nobody would now do business with THAT condo developer because, y'know, death and all.
 

captainmorgan

Well-Known Member
The first hurricane of the season is headed toward south Florida, will it bring down the rest of the unstable building?
 
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