The Daily - The Collapse of Champlain Towers
Episode Date: June 29, 2021A few years ago, engineers sounded alarm bells about Champlain Towers, a residential building in Surfside, Fla. Last week, disaster struck and the towers collapsed. At least 11 residents have been con...firmed dead and 150 more are still unaccounted for.What caused the building to fail, and why are so many people still missing?Guest: Patricia Mazzei, the Miami bureau chief for The New York Times. Sign up here to get The Daily in your inbox each morning. And for an exclusive look at how the biggest stories on our show come together, subscribe to our newsletter. Background reading: The collapse of Champlain Towers may be one of the deadliest accidental collapses in American history. Here are the key facts.Some engineers looking at the building’s failure said that the collapse appeared to have begun somewhere near the bottom of the structure.For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily.Transcripts of each episode will be made available by the next workday.
Transcript
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From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro. This is The Daily.
Today, the collapse of a residential tower in Surfside, Florida, which killed at least 11 residents, has raised two urgent questions.
raised two urgent questions.
What caused it?
And why is it that so many days later,
150 people are still missing?
I spoke with my colleague,
Miami Bureau Chief Patty Mazzei.
It's Tuesday, June 29th.
Hey, Patti.
Hey.
Are you in your car?
Yes, I am, and it's actually raining pretty hard right now.
And where exactly are you right now in your car? I am a few blocks south of the Champlain Towers building that collapsed.
There's a lot of road closures.
They've sort of expanded them as the days have gone by.
So every day we've been able to get less close to the building.
And can you describe, I don't know if you can see it from your car, but can you describe the state of the towers right now, what they look like?
Imagine a 13-story building with more than 130 units that has had about half of it sheared off and just crumbled into the ground.
It's a jumble by the beach side of concrete and metal and furniture. And you can
see straight into these exposed apartments, frozen in time, people's homes, their beds,
their office chairs, their linens, just sticking out and waving in the wind with the whole recovery
operation around them and the big cranes and the rescue workers everywhere.
Well, that's what we really want to talk to you about
because it has now been four full days since the collapse.
We're talking to you on Monday afternoon.
And it feels like a central question
in this unfolding tragedy
is why the pace of finding people has been so slow. So can you
help us understand why recovering the missing has been taking so long? You know, at the beginning,
it wasn't so slow. They were able to rescue some people. This building partly collapsed at around
1.30 in the morning on Thursday.
And one of the first things that we know happened was that people who were still out in the street at that time nearby rushed over to see.
And they heard a boy screaming.
And they saw his hand sticking out from the rubble, his fingers wriggling in the air.
And they tried to climb the rubble in flip-flops in the middle of
the night themselves to try to help him. Eventually, they were able to flag down a police officer and
a firefighter to actually get the kid out, and he was saved. We also know that rescue crews later
were able to help two other people, a mother and a daughter, who had been in the ninth floor when the collapse
happened and somehow tumbled down to the fifth floor. And the mother suffered various fractures
and was somehow able to find her daughter despite being seriously injured. And they found those two
women and sent them to the hospital. After that, though, things did get a lot slower.
You're right.
And why?
There's basically two issues.
One is just the nature of this rescue and of this collapse.
And the other is the conditions that the workers are living through on the ground in the depths of the Miami summer.
workers are living through on the ground in the depths of the Miami summer. So first of all,
part of this building stayed up, but more than half of these more than 130 units pancake down on each other, leaving an unstable pile of concrete and rebar and metal and furniture and debris.
Mm-hmm. And then there's the weather. In June in Miami, it's incredibly hot
and humid, but also there have been rolling thunderstorms in the days of rescue. The
lightning sometimes means a delay in the rescue for the safety of the workers. The rain just makes the conditions harder for them to work in.
And they have been facing fires within the structure that they have to try to put out
for their own safety and sometimes delay putting out for their own safety because if they put
these high pressure water hoses on the fire, they add a lot of weight and pressure to the structure that is unstable.
So given those two factors you just described,
how exactly are they going about trying to find these dozens of missing people?
After they did an initial sweep floor by floor of what was left of the building
to make sure there weren't people there,
they figured out that the
likeliest place for people to have maybe survived in what they call voids, which are empty spaces
that form sometimes when buildings fall down, was towards the bottom of the wreckage. So they tried
to tunnel in through what was left of the parking garage and they drilled and shored up the concrete
so that workers could go in there. Those conditions were also difficult because there was flooding.
And so they were wading through thigh-deep water, in some cases in the dark, trying to listen with specialized equipment for signs of life.
In a particularly horrible scene, we know that on Thursdayursday they briefly heard the sounds of what
they thought was a woman's voice but they they you know stopped hearing it shortly after and they
didn't rescue anybody and how does that work how are they actually able to try to hear these
potential survivors we know that at these sites one of the things they do is call for quiet for
silence when they are
sort of pushing through and then trying to listen. They're not just looking for voices. They're
looking for other signs of life, which can include someone tapping or scratching or twisting metal
or trying to move around to try to get the attention of rescuers. So they have listening
devices and sonar devices and video cameras that they probe through holes to try to get the attention of rescuers. So they have listening devices and sonar devices and video cameras
that they probe through holes to try to see their way through.
After they tried that approach and they did not rescue anybody,
then they started moving towards the top of the pile.
They had brought in the heavy machinery by then.
They don't clear big pieces of debris until they have cleared
a section at a time to make sure that there are no remains there. So you can imagine the sort of
painstaking process this is. Eventually, they were able to dig a sort of trench, cutting through,
demarcating the wreckage so that they could keep track of where they had been and
where they had not been. And that's where you see this cross section of what were once floors of
the building. And it's really striking because there is so little space between the slabs that
were once the floor and the ceiling and the floor and the ceiling. And we're now talking of maybe a couple of feet, maybe less
between each one. So what used to be regular sized apartments are now separated by a foot or two.
Yes. And the idea is that possibly people are stuck between those.
Unfortunately, as horrifying as that is, yes. And Patty, have you been able to speak with any of the rescue workers?
I have to a couple of them.
They've brought in specialized groups
that are really the experts at urban search and rescue.
And families were frustrated at first
because they wanted to make sure that absolutely everything
was being done to find their loved ones,
and they weren't sure that was the case.
And so on Sunday, they actually gave the families who wanted it a chance to rotate in and out near the site
to see it for themselves in private, without politicians, without reporters,
to have a moment to witness the search and rescue,
and also in some cases to grieve to
pray to just reflect so that they could see sort of this labyrinth that the workers are going
through and the hundreds of people that are working through this base camp and on the site to try to
find you know survivors or their remains and now what the rescue workers say they're doing
is trying to collect some of the keepsakes
and personal items that they come across.
They are finding artwork, jewelry, stuffed animals,
and especially personal photos, family photos.
And they're collecting them and bagging them
so that the families can get them
and at least have something that, at the end of the day, might really be the only keepsakes that some of
these families get from their missing loved ones. Speaking of the families, I'm curious if in your
reporting you've heard stories about those who are missing that really stand out to you. Well,
among the people who have been confirmed dead
are the parents of a girl I went to high school with. Just to give you an idea of how this touches
the community to a very personal level where most of us or many of us have sort of connections
in some way, shape, or form. I mean, I remember picking my friend up in that building one summer,
and going in through the back towards the the beach. So I'm very sorry. Thank you. You know,
it's people you sort of know indirectly, but it certainly keeps you up at night knowing how
they're suffering. There is, you know, there's a family where we know the mother and the young
daughter slept in the same bed and their
grandparents also lived with them and their aunt was visiting them from Argentina and all of them
are missing. Just horrible story after horrible story. It's hard, you know, to tell them all.
We know that there was a young one from Paraguay who was on her first trip outside of
Paraguay to help her family make money, and she was working as a nanny, and she's missing.
It's a reminder that Miami and the Miami area is such an international place.
Yeah, this is really a slice of South Florida that living here, you forget how unusual it is. But this is a building that had
retirees and also young families. And there was a lot of South American families because they have
long been present in this part of the country and had maybe had those apartments for decades and
slowly, you know, use them from vacation homes to now actually living in them. There is a strong
Orthodox Jewish community here,
and they had a lot of members from their congregations in this building.
And I think that has just shown you what sort of, like,
diverse community lived there and has come together
to help them and start to mourn them, too.
This is a delicate question, but at this point, is there any expectation that people could have survived this many days in this condition of rubble that you just described?
They are still officially in search and rescue mode, which means they have not lost hope of finding somebody.
But as the days and hours tick by, it's become increasingly clear, I think,
that even if you get one miracle, you're not going to get 150 of them.
So what we're talking about at this point is a form of a mass grave in a way.
What the first responder told me was that bringing families to the site was important
because this was the closest some of them were ever going to be to their loved ones again.
We'll be right back.
Patty, let's now turn to the other big question of this tragedy, which is exactly how it happened and what role negligence may have played in this. You and our colleagues at The Times
have been reporting on a warning that was issued by a building expert and what did or did
not happen as a result of that warning. Can you walk us through that? Sure. So Miami-Dade County
has a rule that buildings have to be recertified as structurally sound when they turn 40 years old.
when they turned 40 years old. This building was built in 1981, so its review was coming due this year. But three years before the deadline in 2018, the building hired a consultant to
take a look at some of the problems in the building and just get them set up for this
inspection that was coming up. And this engineer wrote up a report
that found evidence of major structural damage, especially to some of the concrete in the slab
holding up the pool deck. And there was cracking and crumbling of columns and beams and walls of
the parking garage under the 13-story building.
The report did not warn that there was going to be some sort of catastrophic collapse of the
building, but it did find that there was millions of dollars worth of repairs that needed to be done
soon. And so someone from the condo board, which is the group of residents elected to run the building, sent it to the building official in the town of Surfside, according to emails released by the town, saying, we have this report.
Would you meet with us to talk about it?
And the records show that the building official did go in late 2018 to meet with the condo association to discuss the
report. Was that an obligation or was this someone kind of blowing the whistle? It's unclear, but what
he reported back to town officials and what the condo association wrote down in the minutes of
this meeting was that basically the building was in good shape. He did tell the town manager that even though the recertification of the building was not
due until 2021, he was really happy that it was getting underway early and that he actually
wished more buildings would do that too.
Huh.
It feels from everything you're describing that this is a group of well-intentioned leaders
in this building and local building official who are all trying to
do things the right way. Well, the issue is that after this report comes out and this meeting
takes place, nothing immediately happens to get these repairs underway. There seems to be a period
of time where they have to figure out how they're going to pay for this.
We're talking about more than $9 million in repairs, according to the report.
And we know that the building took out a $12 million line of credit to pay for it and had to issue a special assessment to unit owners to pay for this.
And we're talking, you know, $80,000 to $200,000 per unit.
Wow.
And there was pushback from some of the owners about having to pay this huge amount of money
for this. And so all of these things happened after they knew that there were issues. They just
apparently did not know how bad those issues were. And it is only now in the
summer of 2021 that we know that roof repairs were beginning and starting to take place right before
the building collapsed. So three years after this report was written, warning of significant
problems and repairs that were needed within the building,
the major work had not yet begun
when this building collapses.
As far as we can tell, yes.
And Patty, based on your reporting,
does it seem that the way the building collapsed,
the manner in which it fell,
does that in any way point back
to some of the factors and the deficiencies
that this consultant pointed out three years ago?
What structural engineers have told us, based on video of the collapse and on this report from 2018, is that it is possible that something towards the bottom of the building is what led to this collapse. And that could be the concrete slab
under the pool deck somehow caving in. We know that there was a woman on the phone who told her
husband before the line went dead right at the time of the collapse that there was a sort of
sinkhole happening on the pool deck by the garage. And the video shows sort of that part coming down
first and then bringing down the other part of the building that fell. And if there were structural
problems towards the bottom of the building that were exposing metal to salty air and to water, we know from experts that corrosion in metal in buildings
is like a cancer because it starts crumbling the concrete.
And did the consultant mention both of those things?
Metal being exposed because the concrete had deteriorated and that concrete slab near the
pool having problems?
One of the problems that the consultant found in 2018 was that the concrete slab where the pool was
was not waterproofed correctly
in the original design of the building.
And so that didn't allow the water to run off
and instead it would leak into the garage,
which could cause long-term
damage to the metal that holds up the concrete. This slab was above the parking garage that's
sort of in the middle of the building with the, you know, 13 stories of apartments overlooking it
and connected to it all. And so if, you know, as one of these theories of what
might have happened goes, there was in fact a sort of caving in at that point. From the video,
you can see that sort of pulls down the center part of the building, and then the sort of northern
side of the building that faces the beach comes down right after.
Got it. Is anything else potentially at play here that you have found in your reporting?
We have been told by residents of the building that they were very concerned when another
building was built nearby a few years ago, and they could almost feel shaking when that construction was taking place.
So that was one concern.
We know by a study from a Florida International University professor that that particular area of Surfside where that specific building was had been sinking a little bit that he could detect in the study that he did.
a little bit that he could detect in the study that he did.
He cautioned that you don't know that that means a building is going to collapse because buildings sort of sink in different parts of the world all the time.
It doesn't mean the building's going to fall in on itself.
But there are certainly these other factors
as they try to figure out, like, what went wrong here.
Mm-hmm.
It feels there's a lot that we don't quite know yet,
but it feels like one thing that we
did quickly learn from the story of this building's collapse is that a lot of the responsibility
for evaluating the structural integrity of this building and dealing with it is really in the
hands of its own residents right it's a story of self-policing. And I'm going to go out on a
limb and say that the people who ran that condo board were probably not structural engineers,
and they were not all architects. And so when they discover something's wrong,
they're taking educated guesses about how quickly they need to act. And what looks in retrospect
like a slow timetable might have seemed very reasonable to them.
And I wonder if that's something you're finding in your reporting that people are questioning just how much of this ended up being a decision made by the people who live in this building.
I think that's an important point because what the residents have told us in our reporting is they think the question should go further back.
Why wasn't the building better maintained before you got to the point in 2018 where you had a
report telling you that you had major problems that were going to take millions of dollars to
repair? There is a sister building a block away built around the same time by the same builder
with the same design that has not had the same problems.
And the residents of that building attribute that to just better upkeep over time.
Hmm.
So Patty, what happens now with this building, with this rescue process,
with potentially litigation and investigations?
Lawsuits are already being filed by residents against the
condo board. And I imagine we will see more of that activity in the courts as the days go on.
We have homicide detectives on the scene of the rescue. Why homicide? To collect evidence
that might lead to eventual, you know, if there is action in the criminal courts about these deaths.
The Federal Emergency Management Agency is here to help the survivors relocate and find new places to live.
So various things are going on at once, but the focus, according to all of the authorities, has to remain, for now, in finding the missing.
And while they do that, they're going to put everything sort of on a secondary plane.
near the site, inside a ballroom,
to try to give information to these families who are sort of gathered in silence
as an official stands behind a microphone
with an easel in the back
and tries to tell them what progress has been made.
And it's never a lot.
And that's what's been happening since Thursday and probably what's going to continue to happen
for the days and maybe weeks to come
because this process is so painful and so slow
as they move from search and rescue
to search and recovery of the missing.
Patty, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
Thank you, Michael. We'll be right back.
Here's what else you need to know today.
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that Facebook actually has
a monopoly over social networking.
The lawsuit, filed in December, sought to break up Facebook for anti-competitive practices,
such as buying up rivals like WhatsApp and Instagram.
The judge in the case called the lawsuit, quote, vague and speculative.
Regulators can refile a new version of the lawsuit, but the ruling is a major blow to the
effort to rein in Facebook, which is now valued at more than $1 trillion. And...
So we stand on the doorstep of a long-duration, record-breaking
heat wave that's going to impact the entire Pacific Northwest. Dangerously high temperatures
blanketed the Pacific Northwest for a third day, reaching more than 100 degrees Fahrenheit in
Seattle and more than 110 degrees in Portland, Oregon.
Meteorologists attribute the extreme heat to a slow-moving high-pressure weather system
known as a heat dome
that is exacerbated by the effects of climate change.
I'll leave you with this.
This is an unprecedented event.
Those of us at the National Weather Service in Seattle
have never seen forecast data like this before. Today's episode was produced by Rachel Quester, Nina Patuk,
and Rochelle Banja. It was edited by Dave Shaw, contains original music by Dan Powell,
and engineered by Corey Streppel.
That's it for The Daily.
I'm Michael Barbaro.
See you tomorrow.