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Video shows standing water underneath Surfside building, long-standing concern of residents before collapse
Absolutely unreal to me that all of those firefighters are in the parking garage under a collapsed building with no guarantee that it doesn’t just collapse on them. First responders are heroes.
Thank you @Knitty for explaining. Is suing the HOA, the only legal recourse for unit owners? Thinking in terms of accountability.The building is owned by the unit owners. One of the jobs of the HOA is to address maintenance of the building. HOAs are commonly administered by a company set up to do just that. My HOA (of not a condo but a regular neighborhood) recently underwent a change in the company administering our community because the previous one was not doing a good job with communication to the residents. If we have a complaint, we don't have to track down the president or other board members; we can contact the administrator and they are supposed to take problems to the appropriate board member. There were multiple companies to choose from, and they don't only administer one HOA.
I've lived in North Florida most of my life. Not a building expert, but I believe that the 40-year inspection/recertification requirement is not statewide, but unique to Miami-Dade and Broward Counties.I'm not a Florida native but we do have property in Florida on the Gulf side in St. Pete. Our building was built in 1973 so I am presuming its already had its 40 year inspection.
Thank you @Knitty for explaining. Is suing the HOA, the only legal recourse for unit owners? Thinking in terms of accountability.
I've lived in North Florida most of my life. Not a building expert, but I believe that the 40-year inspection/recertification requirement is not statewide, but unique to Miami-Dade and Broward Counties.
Some info on it (Broward County): Understanding the Recertification Process - 40-Year Inspections
A very informative article on the history of the area's reinspection requirement is here: After A DEA Building Collapsed In 1974, Engineer Created Recertification Program To Prevent Future Disasters
The article interviews the county engineer who first developed the requirement after a 1974 office building collapse in downtown Miami:
"In 1974, when the federal Drug Enforcement Agency building in downtown Miami collapsed, John Pistorino was early in his engineering career working for the county as a consulting engineer.
The collapse killed seven federal employees and injured 16 people.
Six tons of rubble left behind led Pistorino to conclude that concrete buildings in South Florida can face particular risks. The aggregate rock used in concrete can contain salt which, combined with the humidity and salty ocean air, can corrode reinforcing steel.
“When the reinforcing steel corrodes, it expands and cracks the concrete. It loses all of its structural capacity,” he said.
While collapsing buildings, then and now, are extremely rare, Pistorino came up with Miami-Dade's recertification program used in many cities — including Surfside — and in Broward County. It requires buildings to be inspected at 40 years old — about the age of the DEA building when it fell.
“That's where the 40 came from" said Pistorino, who has been president of Pistorino and Alam Consulting Engineers since 1986."
Expert says 'concrete cancer' might have caused Champlain Tower partial collapse
A professional engineer and concrete repair specialist said he believes "concrete cancer," a process that happens when steel rods in building structures rust and expand, might have caused the deadly partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South Condo in Florida on Thursday.
Maybe not a huge contributing factor but hurricanes do bring in the surge. That influx of salt from the sea gets in and doesn’t come back out. The wind will blow so strong that sand will blow in at the edges of windows and doors. It all builds up over time and eats away at the structure. The ground is limestone which seawater seeps thru into the foundation. I don’t know that there is any building solution that can overcome that.SBM. I think one of the clues is in the middle section collapsing first. Was foundation weakened in that part due to water leakage in the basement garage? I'm not sure if hurricane damage would be a big factor.