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Lower level parking: http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1624902206.jpg Edit: I believe we are seeing the upper level parking and pool deck dropped onto the lower level. |
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When the foundation gives way, all bets are off. |
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No idea what the foundation did in the area where the building collapsed. |
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The conversation was whether the slabs were in fact post tensioned or conventional slabs. I commented that in my experience, post tensioned slabs were a solution when large uninterrupted floors are a goal. A residential building has interior partitions that allow for concealment of columns. I never said the partitions would be load bearing. Not sure why you felt the need to go from 0-******* so quickly but have a nice day. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Found some pics pre collapse of the patio/upper parking. Using Dad911's "champlain towers south" blueprint title leads to some pics of the place in better times. Interiors were pretty snazzy.
https://www.miamicondoinvestments.com/champlain-towers-south-condos Random crack pic- related? I dunno. just throwing it in. https://www.reddit.com/r/pics/comments/o7jj9f/a_crack_in_champlain_towers_south_exactly_where/ http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1624903501.jpg |
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The roof replacement permit was for 5800 sq. ft., which is a little less than a quarter of the total roof area. I don't know what section was being redone but they did a moisture survey and the worst areas of that were in the area where the collapse seems to have started. Although, an inspector was up there 14 hours before the collapse and didn't see enough equipment and supplies to warrant any concern. The lady that was on the phone and actually in the building during the collapse stated that the first thing she saw was the collapse of the upper parking slab between the building and the pool. That seems to have failed at the column-to-slab connections. I wonder if that collapse could have damaged some columns enough to trigger their failure? I wouldn't think so but there may have been some differential settlement over the last 40 years and that may have changed to loads on individual columns. An engineer was quoted as having measured settlement of 2mm/year there, in the 1990's. |
^^^ You would have thought they would have taken the website down by now. :rolleyes:
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I've been really impressed with city of Surfside's transparency with documents related to this. It appears all documents they have have been put online.
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They put them online because they are probably overwhelmed with requests. |
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I took a look through the drawings (which were a total mess) and the building was built on piles. No real details on the piles or the geotech info. There was a change to the pile design or type in Jan 1980, although I have no idea what the change was, or if it was before or during construction.
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what do we know about the substrate it was built on, and any changes to it over 40 years?
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https://www.miamiherald.com/news/local/community/miami-dade/miami-beach/article252421658.html
Two days before condo collapse, a pool contractor photographed this damage in garage |
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Wow, it just gets worse. Was really hoping for some sort of unanticipated issue like sinkhole. All of these missed red flags makes it that much more heartbreaking for those who’ve lost loved ones. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk |
Rusting rebar. Poor quality concrete... It would have helped to at least have galvanised rebar.
http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1624919781.jpg |
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