Showing posts with label Building Collapse. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Building Collapse. Show all posts

Friday, February 12, 2016

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: 2 Buildings Collapse In Istanbul, Turkey - People May Be Trapped Inside!


February 12, 2016 - ISTANBUL, TURKEY - Two buildings have collapsed in central Istanbul. The structures were reportedly empty, but there were operational shops on the ground floor, prompting fears that people are trapped inside.

The collapsed buildings, one of them five story, are on the Zambak Street, near Istiklal Avenue, a busy shopping area.

Firefighters and medics were dispatched to the scene, with crew beginning the search for people, who might be trapped under the debris.


No casualties and nobody trapped in building collapse
Twitter: Mark Lowen

The cause of the collapse is yet to be established.Istanbul Governor Vasip Sahin confirmed that two buildings “unfortunately” collapsed in the city on Friday.

It’s believed that no one was killed or injured in the incident, the governor stressed.


WATCH: 5-story building collapse in Istanbul.




“A building was used as a hotel. It had two customers. According to our information, neither of them were in the building at that time of the collapse,” he said, as cited by Dogan news agency. - RT.


Friday, January 15, 2016

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: Suspected Gas Leak In Italy Completely Destroys Apartment - 5 People Killed!

Firefighters work on the rubbles of a collapsed building after an explosion blamed on a gas leak has killed
five people in the apartment building in Arnasco, Italy, Saturday, Jan. 16, 2016.

© Luca Zennaro/ANSA via AP

January 15, 2016 - ITALY
- An explosion blamed on a gas leak has killed five people in the apartment building where they lived in northwest Italy.

Firefighters say they removed the bodies of four men and a woman from the collapsed building in Arnasco, near Savona, after the pre-dawn blast Saturday.

A woman who survived was severely burned.

Arnasco Mayor Alfredo Gallizia says the four-story building, where three families lived, was "saturated with gas and everything came down."

The cause of the gas leak is being investigated. - CP24.




Monday, December 14, 2015

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: Explosion Destroys Building Facade In Belgium - Cause Unclear?!

Twitter: Theate Cedric

December 14, 2015 - BELGIUM - There seem to have been a number of bizarre explosions around the world lately. Frequently blamed on gas or electrical transformers malfunctioning, could they be related to other bizarre electrical and seismic phenomena we've been experiencing around the world?

A powerful explosion has rocked a building in the Belgian town of Verviers, almost completely destroying its facade, local media report. It is not yet clear what caused the blast and if there have been any casualties.


© Google maps

Witnesses have posted numerous photos on Twitter, which showed three floors of the building had been damaged. Some users suggested there might have been a gas explosion. At least five people have been injured in the incident, the RTL TV channel reported, adding that firefighters are currently working at the scene. "The neighboring houses were affected. Firefighters must first secure the area and will search the rubble," Muriel Targnion, the town's mayor, said.



Residents of nearby building have been evacuated, RTL added. Verviers, a town of about 55,000 people, has recently appeared in the headlines in connection with the mastermind of the Paris terror attacks in November.

Abdelhamid Abaaoud was one of the leaders of a terrorist cell in the town. During a raid on the cell in January 2015, two of its members were killed.


WATCH: Blast destroys building in Belgium.




Abaaoud himself was killed during anti-terrorist raids in the Paris suburb of Saint-Denis in November. - RT.



Tuesday, May 19, 2015

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: High-Rise Building Combusts In Seconds In Azerbaijan - 17 People Killed; Over 60 Injured!

A strong fire occurred at a sixteen-storey building in Baku’s Binagadi district on May 19.

May 19, 2015 - AZERBAIJAN
- Seventeen people are dead and more than 60 injured, after an apartment block in Azebaijan’s capital Baku went up in flames in just seconds. Officials blame cheap plastic paneling for the rapid escalation of the fire.

“We received an emergency call about the fire 10:57 am. It was difficult for the fire vehicles to get right up to the building, as it was blocked and the fire spread to the top floors,”
said deputy emergencies minister Etibar Mirzoev.





As the fire consumed the 16-story Soviet-era high-rise, which had been renovated in recent years, a traffic jam formed as on-lookers gathered on the surrounding streets. Gas canisters kept by the building’s inhabitants began to explode. Eventually more than forty fire vehicles and ambulances were called to the scene.

Two helicopters circled the top floor, though officials say they were “ineffective.” Footage showed panicking residents begging the emergency staff to let them back inside the building, where their relatives remained trapped.


WATCH: Smoke rises from a multi-storey residential building on fire in Baku, Azerbaijan, May 19, 2015.



It took four hours to put out the fire by which time most of the victims, including three children, were long dead.

Zakir Garalov, the Prosecutor General in the Muslim Caucasian republic, blamed the polyurethane paneling that was applied to the housing block for the spectacular speed of the blaze. The head of the company in charge of tiling the building, Global Construction, was arrested later on Tuesday afternoon.



An emergency worker carries a girl evacuated from a multi-storey residential building on fire to an ambulance in Baku, Azerbaijan,
in this still image taken from video shot on May 19, 2015. (Reuters/Reuters TV)

A burnt multi-storey residential building is seen in Baku, Azerbaijan, May 19, 2015. (Reuters/Ehtiram Jabi)

A woman tries to get the attention of emergency workers inside a multi-storey residential building on fire in Baku, Azerbaijan,
in this still image taken from video shot on May 19, 2015. (Reuters/Reuters TV)

More than 800 mostly pre-independence buildings in Baku have been clad in similar gaudy panels, despite previously voiced concerns from the media.

The city’s mass redecoration has been spurred by an oil and gas boom in recent years. State television showed footage of workers removing the paneling from several apartment blocks just hours after the fire was extinguished.

Ilham Aliyev, the president of Azerbaijan, which is due to host its biggest-ever public event, the European Games, next month, said he was taking personal control of the investigation.

"Individuals and institutions who have committed violations, will be severely punished,"
asserted his aide Ali Hasanov. He also reported that the former residents of the charred building had been re-housed, and promised they would be compensated by the state. - RT.



 

Thursday, March 26, 2015

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: Massive Explosion As Building Collapses In Manhattan's East Village - As Many As 30 People Feared Trapped Inside; FDNY Considers It A "Major Emergency"!

Photo by @jmeyers44

March 26, 2015 - NEW YORK, UNITED STATES
- As many as 30 people were injured after an explosion and partial building collapse in Manhattan's East Village.

Flames are shooting high into the sky from two buildings as the New York Fire Department attempts to prevent the fire from spreading to other structures.

So far, up to 30 people have been confirmed injured in the collapse, law enforcement officials told the New York Post. At least one person has been critically injured, according to AP.Two firefighters were also reported wounded, according to the Daily News.

The raging blaze has been upgraded to a four-alarm call at the mixed-occupancy building that the fire department called “a major building collapse” in a tweet. There are 25 units in the building, according to The New York Times, and 100 firefighters were immediately dispatched to the scene.


FDNY responding to East Village building collapse.

Manhattan: East 7th St & 2nd Ave. Building collapse and on Fire with multiple patients trapped. K-9 requested.

At least one person was removed from the area on a stretcher, WABC reported, noting that the building appeared to be a total loss.

“The entire first and second floor facades were destroyed,”
a witness told WCBS, which reported that the explosion originated at a sushi bar in the apartment building.

The New York Police Department initially listed a gas leak as the cause of the explosion.Firefighters had to pull back from their battle with the flames due to the blaze's intensity, WABC reported.

There are counter-terror officials at the scene, which is standard procedure for a large explosion, WCBS reported.


WATCH: Building collapse in Manhattan.






The “smoke is overwhelming” at the scene, Allie Yang tweeted. In a follow-up tweet, she said that the fire department is closing off the area around 7th St and 2nd Avenue.

“This is being considered a major emergency,”
an FDNY spokeswoman told New York Daily News.

The explosion occurred around 3:15 p.m. ET, and the fire quickly got out of hand, with the FDNY upgrading it from a two-alarm to a seven-alarm call within half an hour. - RT.



Sunday, November 16, 2014

INFRASTRUCTURE COLLAPSE: Major Alert - Massive Building Collapse In French Quarter, New Orleans Frays Nerves; And DuPont Chemical Leak Kills 4, Alerts Residents In Texas!

In this Wednesday, Oct. 22, 2014 photo, pedestrians watch down the street from where a three-story, brick-and-cypress building collapsed in the historic
French Quarter section of New Orleans. The collapse of the 210-year-old building is raising warning flags about decay and a lack of rigorous
inspections in one of America’s oldest and most fragile neighborhoods. (AP Photo/Gerald Herbert)

November 16, 2014 - UNITED STATES
- The collapse of a 210-year-old building in the heart of the French Quarter is raising warning flags about decay and a lack of rigorous inspections in one of America's oldest and most fragile neighborhoods.

No one was injured when the three-story, brick-and-cypress building collapsed in late October, but the episode has thrown into focus an array of problems throughout the nearly 300-year-old Quarter. Among them: structural decay, voracious termites at work on aged wood beams, Louisiana's humid climate, absentee landlords and the stresses of modern life as heavy trucks rattle streets and balconied buildings standing shoulder to shoulder.

Perhaps the biggest problem, though, is that no one is charged with making sure the Quarter's 3,000 old buildings are stable. And the city has no in-depth inspection policy tailored to the distinct qualities of its first neighborhood.

The single inspector at the Vieux Carre Commission, the city's zoning arm for the Quarter, only has authority to inspect a building's exterior. Citations are routine for gaudy signs and Plexiglas - violations of historical standards - or letting a facade decay. Owners can't be cited for letting a floor sag or allowing mortar to deteriorate to dust on the interiors of their buildings. There are city building and fire inspectors, but they do not do random inspections of old structures.

The commission's check-ups amount to "a visual inspection that occurs from the streets, corners, and any aerial views that we are readily afforded," said commission chairman Nicholas Musso. "We do not have the ability to enter a piece of property, or a courtyard, or a rear of a building. It could have been crucial in this particular instance."

Even based on superficial assessments, he's concerned about the condition of some structures: "We do have a series of buildings that are highly suspect, should we say."

Though many residents and preservationists deem the collapse a wake-up call, longtime Quarter real estate agent Michael Wilkinson thinks the steady rise of wealthier owners ensures most properties are being looked after. Property values have increased by as much as 30 percent in recent years.

"There's a lot of incentive - financial and otherwise - to maintain these properties," Wilkinson said. "It's a very wealthy area."

For now, Musso said, the commission hopes property owners will take the initiative and ask inspectors to come in and take a look around.

It's not as though there are no interior inspections. Fire department and city inspectors routinely examine commercial properties - the myriad of crowded bars and restaurants that make the Quarter so appealing to the 9.2 million tourists who visited New Orleans last year. Building inspectors weigh in whenever major renovations are done to commercial or residential property. And banks require a building to be inspected before backing a purchase.

When it comes to inspections and enforcing good maintenance, New Orleans' rules don't differ much from most historic cities and towns, said John Hildreth, a regional vice president for the National Trust for Historic Preservation. Regulations in Boston and New York, for instance, largely match those in New Orleans.

Ultimately, that means most of the older structures aren't undergoing regular reviews.

The collapse near the heart of the Quarter came at lunchtime on a Tuesday on a block of Royal Street lined with high-end art galleries, boutiques, jewelry stores and restaurants. Renters in the fallen building, one of the earliest three-story structures in the Quarter, were not at home when it caved in.

"Incredibly, no one got killed," said Peter Trapolin, an architect who regularly works in the Quarter and who believes the neighborhood needs a stronger inspection protocol.

The owners of the building were cited in 2011 for allowing the facade to decay, but the Vieux Carre Commission has said no single problem caused the collapse. In the past year alone, 302 warnings were issued to owners whose structures were considered, at least on the exterior, to be in dangerously bad condition, according to figures provided by the city.

The elderly lady who owned the building operated a small shop where she cut keys and made second-line umbrellas, the decorative parasols common in jazz processions, until about two years ago, said Doc Hawley, an amateur neighborhood historian and a well-known figure around the Quarter for his decades as the captain of the Natchez steamboat.

"I watched them pull out the old timbers," he said, standing somberly in front of a pile of bricks where the facade once stood. "They were badly damaged by termites."

Behind the stuccoed walls of the Quarter's old buildings, bricks made hundreds of years ago from Mississippi River mud are crumbling. Add to the stress load hurricanes, heavy tourist traffic, and a constant rumbling of multi-ton trucks carrying beer, food, garbage and heavy equipment.

"These buildings were built for horse and buggies," Hawley said. "I lie in bed and I feel my house (in the Quarter) go up and down. The pictures on my walls bounce up and down when the big trucks go by outside." - AP.

DuPont chemical leak kills 4, alerts residents in Texas

Image from dupont.com

Four DuPont employees were killed and another injured when a toxic chemical was spilled at its plant in La Porte, Texas, on Saturday morning. Residents of the city complained of a persistent “funny smell” after the incident.

The company would not immediately identify the victims of the spill. The emergency started at around 4 a.m. local time. It took repair crews two hours to replace a ruptured valve in the crop protection unit and contain the chemical. The confirmation of fatalities was released 12 hours after the incident.

The chemical spilled was methyl mercaptan, or methanethiol,which is used to make feed stock for insecticides and fungicides. It is more commonly known for being added to naturally odorless propane and natural gas to give them a distinctive rotten egg smell, making leaks detectable. In high concentration it can cause headaches, dizziness, nausea, vomiting, coma, and death.

“Our thoughts and prayers are with the families of the employees,”
plant manager Randall Clements said in a statement. “There are no words to fully express the loss we feel or the concern and sympathy we extend to the families of the employees and their co-workers.”

“We will continue to cooperate with all the local authorities, and make sure that we investigate this fully and we will find the cause of this, at this point, we don’t know why this happened,”
he added.

The workers were exposed to the chemical as they responded to the leak. DuPont insists that at no time were people living in the vicinity of the plant in danger.

Local residents, however, complained of a foul odor on Saturday morning.

“We are used to funny smells around here, especially when the wind is out of the north,”
La Porte resident Dudley Crittendon told Click2Houston.com. “We thought something had died in the house. We started burning candles but it didn't go away.”

La Porte is located in Harris County, about 20 miles east of Houston. DuPont’s chemical plant employs 320 people. Four other companies are also tenants at the same complex, according to AP. - RT.




Friday, March 14, 2014

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Another Building Collapse In Mumbai, India - 7 People Killed, 4 Injured!

March 14, 2014 - MUMBAI, INDIA - Seven people were killed and four injured after a Santa Cruz (East) building that was declared as dilapidated in 2008 collapsed on Friday.




Two families had refused to vacate the ground-plus-seven building, Shankar Lok, which fell on the adjoining Catherine Chawl, crushing more than 10-12 of its 21 homes.

"First, a photo frame fell in my home and then I felt the tremors. I immediately picked up my baby and rushed out. Within minutes, the entire building fell on our house, flattening it," said Sayli Khandare, a resident of the chawl. Joseph Fernandes, another chawl resident, too, escaped as he had left for his in-law's place in the vicinity minutes before the mishap.

The building was constructed in 1982 and declared dilapidated in 2008—in just 26 years—following a structural audit report from SP Engineering College that deemed it as dangerous and that it needed to be vacated and reconstructed. The BMC issued an eviction notice under Section 354 of the MMC Act.

Of the original 27 families that lived in the building, 25 vacated after the notice. The beams and columns had begun to corrode.

One of the two families that refused to vacate included that of high court lawyer Sindha Sridharan. She went to court challenging the BMC's eviction notice. High court stayed the demolition and eviction, and said the families could continue to occupy the building at their own risk and that the BMC was not to be held responsible for any accident.

Sindha lost her sister Sudha in Friday's collapse and her brother Satyam was injured. The six others to have died are residents of the chawl.









"The BMC had tried everything, from prosecution to propping the building, to issuing repeated notices to residents to vacate. In fact, we had also given residents of the chawl a notice to leave, citing that if the building collapsed, it would endanger their lives, too," said deputy municipal commissioner Ramesh Pawar.

The residents' opposition was so stiff that when a civic officials' team visited the premises in October 2013 for inspection, Sindha registered a criminal case against them at the Vakola police station.

The deceased have been identified as Chandraben Patel (45), Sudha Shridharan (32), Louis Monks (60), Sundarabai Pardhi (66), Rajeshri Pardhi (35), Aditya Pardhi (10) and Ayush Pardhi (7). Four injured are Akshay Kesarkar (18), Sita Kesarkar (60), Rohini Jagtap (47) and Satyam Shridharan (39). The injured have been admitted to V N Desai hospital.

Among the deceased were four members of Pardhi family--Sundarabai Pardhi (66), her daughter-in-law Rajeshri, her grandsons Aditya and Ayush.

Anil Pardhi, who was away at work during the collapse fell unconscious on hearing the news and did not revive for hours.

Another deceased, Chandan Patel, had resided in the chawl for 40 years. She is survived by her husband and three children.

The four injured did not suffer fatal injuries. "They have sustained abrasions, bruises and minor trauma injuries," said Dr K G Pimple, medical superintendent, V N Desai Hospital. Among the injured was 70-year-old Sitabai Kesarkar, who is likely to have suffered fracture on one or both legs. Pimple said they were awaiting the X-ray reports for further treatment.

Akshay Kesarkar (21) and Rohini Jagtap escaped with minor injuries and are currently undergoing treatment. Satyam Sridharan has suffered injuries to his legs. - Times of India.



Wednesday, March 12, 2014

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Most Massive Explosion In East Harlem, New York - FDNY Confirm Buildings Collapse; 2 People Dead; 18 Others Injured; Others Missing; Firefighters Searching Through Rubble For Survivors! [PHOTOS+VIDEO]

March 12, 2014 - NEW YORK, UNITED STATES - At least two people were killed after a massive explosion and raging fire Wednesday morning in Manhattan's East Harlem, authorities said.

Two buildings collapsed in the blast, which may have resulted from a gas leak. Firefighters were still frantically picking through rubble in search of survivors hours later, fire officials said.


Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.
New York police and fire officials were responding to reports of a massive explosion in Manhattan's East Harlem, authorities said Wednesday.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.
Metro North commuter rail service, which runs along the site of the blast on Park Avenue, was suspended, officials said.

At least 18 people were injured. Five of the injured were taken to Harlem Hospital, including a child in critical condition, a hospital spokeswoman said.

A number of people were missing.

The identifies of the two women who died were not available.

Mount Sinai Hospital was treating at least 14 patients, including one with a brain injury, and two children. Three were in serious condition, a spokeswoman said.

More fatalities appeared likely. Fire officials reported that two survivors suffered life-threatening injuries.

Near 116th Street and Park Avenue, once the heart of New York's large Puerto Rican community, about a dozen firefighters tore at mounds of bricks in a search for survivors from the two buildings -- a piano store and an evangelical church.

As gas and electric utility workers tore up pavement in an effort to shut gas lines, people gathered in the streets, many crying.


WATCH: Raw video - explosion in Harlem.

 

One woman tried in vain to find her husband, Jordy Salas, who may have been on the second floor of one of the collapsed buildings. She fainted and was taken to a hospital.

"We're expending every effort to locate each and every loved one," Mayor Bill de Blasio told reporters at the scene. "Hopefully we'll find that some of them are in other parts of the city and have just not been located yet."

The cause was unclear, but Con Ed spokesman Bob McGee said the utility received a call about a gas leak at 9:13 a.m. The call came from a resident at one of the newer buildings on Park Avenue. The utility dispatched a truck two minutes later but it arrived after the explosion, the spokesman said.

"This is a tragedy of the worst kind, because there was no indication in time to save people," de Blasio said.

A building department official said one of the two Park Avenue buildings that collapsed received a city permit last year for the installation of 120 feet of gas piping. The work was completed last June. In 2008, owners of the adjacent building, which also collapsed, were fined for failing to maintain vertical cracks in the rear of the building. The condition was not reported as corrected to the buildings department.

There were a total of 15 units in the two buildings, officials said.

The mayor told reporters that the report of the gas leak, which he said came about 15 minutes before the explosion, was "the only indication of danger."

Fire Commissioner Salvatore Cassano said responding firefighters barely missed the blast.

"If we were here five minutes earlier we may have had some fatalities among firefighters," he said. "Not being here may have saved some lives."

Clouds of dark smoke rose over the largely residential area of redbrick tenements and small businesses after the explosion, which some residents said sounded like a bomb.

Hundreds of firefighters responded, many spraying water on the roaring blaze from ladders.

Metro North commuter rail service was suspended as debris from the explosion landed on the elevated tracks across the street, authorities said.

"I heard a big explosion," said a resident who identified herself as Angelica. "I didn't know what was going on. ... My neighbors came banging on my door, telling me to get out. I guess they were evacuating the building. And I couldn't get out. My door was jammed. Everything on my windowsill fell. I guess the impact of the explosion jammed the door as well."

Photos and videos have been coming in from Twitter and Instagram users:


Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.

Massive Explosion In Harlem, New York.


She added, "It was extremely loud. I couldn't even explain it to you, if I could. It was just so loud. It woke me out of my sleep. That's how loud it was."

Molley Mills, who lives nearby, said at the time of the explosion her building rumbled as if the subway was passing beneath it.

"I went outside my terrace and there was smoke pouring out," she said.

The New York police bomb squad responded to the scene, according to a law enforcement source.

Once a predominantly Italian neighborhood, the stretch of East Harlem saw a large influx of Puerto Ricans in the 1950s. It went on to be called Spanish Harlem. In the 1990s, many Mexican immigrants began to move into the area, which has been gentrified in recent years, with many mom-and-pop shops replaced by restaurants and bars.


- CNN.



Tuesday, February 18, 2014

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Heavy Snow Cause Massive Building Collapse In South Korea - At Least 10 Killed; Hundreds Injured! [PHOTOS + VIDEO]

February 18, 2014 - SOUTH KOREA - A roof collapsed at a resort retreat for college freshmen in South Korea Monday, killing 10 people and injuring more than 100, South Korea's National Emergency Management Association said.


Rescue workers search for survivors after a building collapsed in Gyeongju, South Korea, on Monday, February 17.

Two of those hurt suffered heavy injuries but their lives are not in danger, officials said.

For hours, South Korea's Yonhap news agency reported that people were trapped as rescuers rushed to the resort building in the southern city of Gyeongju.

Emergency officials said Tuesday that they believed everyone had been accounted for, but wouldn't know for sure until the building is dismantled.

Fire officials told Yonhap they had struggled to reach the mountainous area where the resort is located because it was snowing Monday night.


A woman trapped in the rubble waits to be rescued. More than 560 first-year college students were in the building for a welcoming party, reported South Korea's semiofficial Yonhap news agency.

Though the cause of the collapse wasn't immediately determined,
authorities said heavy snow was on the building's roof.

Rescue workers carry a victim from the collapsed building.

Rescue efforts are under way to find dozens of people who are still trapped.


More than 560 first-year college students were in the building for a freshmen welcoming party when the collapse happened at 9:11 p.m. Monday, Yonhap reported.

South Korean President Park Geun-hye expressed "deep condolences" to the victims families.

"My heart is aching and it is very sad," she said in a statement, calling for "a thorough investigation" into the cause of a the collapse


WATCH: Deaths, dozens trapped in ceiling collapse in South Korea.




Authorities said heavy snow was on the building's roof, but the cause of the collapse wasn't immediately determined, according to Yonhap.

The students attend Busan University of Foreign Affairs, about 80 kilometers south of where the party took place, Yonhap reported.

Gyeongju is about 300 kilometers south of the country's capital, Seoul. - CNN.



Wednesday, January 1, 2014

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Multiple Victims Hospitalized After Powerful Explosion Rips Through Minnesota Building - 1 Dead, 14 Injured!

January 01, 2014 - UNITED STATES - At least one person may have been killed when an explosion ignited a blaze that destroyed an apartment building in Minneapolis, officials said Thursday.


At least one person appears to have died in the explosion and fire that gutted a Minneapolis apartment complex
on New Year's Day. (Glen Stubbe / Minneapolis Star Tribune / January 2, 2014)


Minneapolis Fire Department officials said they found a body in the rubble on Thursday afternoon and turned the remains over to the Hennepin County Medical Examiner's Office for examination.

Fourteen people were injured, at least four of them seriously, in the blast and ensuing fire Wednesday morning, which forced some residents to leap out of their windows into the subzero cold to escape the blaze. Some flames reached at least 20 feet in height out of the building's second and third floors.

"The cause of the fire is still under investigation," the fire department said in a statement Thursday afternoon. "While a gas leak could be one potential cause, it could be weeks until a cause is determined and may ultimately be undetermined."


 At least 14 people were hurt in an explosion and fire at an apartment building in Minneapolis.
(McKenna Ewen / Minneapolis Star-Tribune / January 1, 2014)

Fire Chief John Fruetel said Thursday that some residents had smelled some kind of gas before the explosion, according to the Minneapolis Star-Tribune.

However, a spokeswoman for CenterPoint Energy, a natural gas utility, said the company had "no natural gas in the area," the newspaper reported.

Fruetel said the explosion was likely not due to a bomb. - LA Times.



Friday, December 20, 2013

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Partial Ceiling Collapse At The Historic Apollo Theatre In London - Dozens Suffer Serious Wounds; Police Say "No Criminal Act"?!

December 20, 2013 - ENGLAND - The ceiling collapse that injured dozens of people at a London theater involved "no criminal act," police said Friday in an initial assessment.


Emergency workers park outside the theater.


Police said the investigation into Thursday evening's collapse of the ceiling of London's historic Apollo Theatre, in the heart of the capital's buzzing theater district, will be continued by the Westminster City Council.

Investigators combing through the wreckage want to know what caused part of the century-old structure's ornate plaster ceiling to tumble onto the crowd who packed the nearly sold-out show.

Nine people were seriously hurt in the collapse, but there were no fatalities, the London Ambulance Service said Friday.

"It could have been a lot worse -- there were about 720 people in the auditorium at the time, and a large area of the ceiling came down," said London Fire Brigade's Kingsland Station Manager Nick Harding.

Three injured people were trapped under debris and had to be rescued by firefighters, he said. Some of the "walking wounded" were treated in neighboring theaters, he added.

London Ambulance Service said it helped 79 people, 56 of whom were taken to local hospitals. Some had head and back injuries, while others had breathing problems or cuts and scrapes.

Images from inside the Apollo, which opened in 1901, showed planks, plaster and other debris strewn across the dusty, red plush seats.


 A hydraulic lift is used to investigate the cause of the collapse. "We heard a creak, somebody screamed,
somebody from over there said, 'Look out!' and then the ceiling kind of creased in the middle and then
just collapsed," one theatergoer said.

The drama unfolded shortly after 8 p.m. Thursday, about 40 minutes into the play, "The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time."

"One of the actors said, 'Watch out!' " said one woman. "We thought it was part of the play."

It wasn't. Instead, it was part of the plaster ceiling collapsing and dropping down five stories onto the theatergoers below.

'Somebody screamed'

"We heard a creak, somebody screamed, somebody from over there said, 'Look out!' and then the ceiling kind of creased in the middle and then just collapsed," said Hannah, who with her husband had snagged one of the last pairs of tickets to the performance in the 775-seat theater.

Though she said she felt "slight panic," she credited those around her for keeping calm. "It wasn't every man for himself," she said, noting that several of her fellow theatergoers checked on those around them. "Everyone was looking out for each other, and in a couple of minutes, everyone was out."

Martin Bostock, who was with his wife and two children, said he thought the cave-in was part of the show until something very hard hit him on the head and chaos and panic erupted.

"You couldn't see across the room because of the dust, which we were all breathing in," he told CNN. "It was absolutely horrific and very terrifying. I was with my wife and two kids. Thank God, we got out."

Another theatergoer, Simon Usborne, said: "My view of the stage was immediately obscured by this dust and debris -- some other people have said it was like an avalanche, and that's probably a better description."

No alarm sounded, but it was clear that something serious had happened, he said.

"Everybody knew that something was wrong and the fear was then that more might come down, so everybody immediately dashed for an exit -- people were screaming -- I was fortunately close to an exit," he said.

Harding, who said the theater had been evacuated in a swift and orderly way, told reporters Friday it was too soon to speculate on the cause of the collapse.


Paramedics attend to an injured person at the scene of the collapse.

Some observers have speculated that heavy rain over London earlier Thursday evening might have played a part.

The Apollo is on Shaftesbury Avenue near Piccadilly Circus, in London's Soho district, which is usually packed with tourists, shoppers and diners at theater time. The area around it was cordoned off after the collapse as bloodied and dust-covered theatergoers stumbled onto the street.

The local London authority, Westminster City Council, said Friday morning that the Apollo Theatre's roof is now "secure," but what led it to give way was not known. Historic theaters are required to undergo rigorous roof safety checks every three years, the council said.

'A freak, unusual accident'

Many people with tickets for shows over the busy holiday period will want to know that they are not at risk of falling victim to a similar offstage drama.

There are nearly 50 major theaters in the West End of London, of which 26 are at least 90 years old.

The Society of London Theatre, which represents the theater industry in the capital, sought Friday to reassure those alarmed by the events.

"Our theatres entertain over 32,000 people in central London every night and all theatres take the safety of their audience, performers and staff very seriously," it said in a prepared statement.

"Every theatre undergoes rigorous safety checks and inspections by independent experts, and incidents like last night are extremely rare."

The society's president, Mark Rubinstein, told CNN on Friday there had been no warning of any problem with the Apollo's ceiling.

"It was a freak, unusual accident -- we have no idea what caused it," he said. "Obviously our sympathies are with anyone who was injured or affected by it."

Rubinstein said he did not anticipate the incident would affect London's "booming" theater business.

"I don't expect it's going to change anything," he said. "All of the other theaters are open tonight. We are expecting business as usual. It's the holiday season, it's a very busy time of year and we expect our theaters to be full."

London Mayor Boris Johnson had a similar message.

"Whilst this was a serious incident, London's world renowned theatreland is open for business, and thousands of theatregoers will rightly be out and about tonight and over the weekend," he said in a prepared statement.

"The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time," which was adapted for the stage from the 2003 mystery novel by British writer Mark Haddon, is about a 15-year-old boy's investigation into the death of a neighborhood dog.

Haddon tweeted Thursday night of his relief that the situation was no worse. "It's been horrifying sitting here watching what has been happening at the apollo this evening. I'm hugely relieved that no-one has died," he said.

Performances of the play were canceled through Saturday, the Society of London Theatre said. It was not clear what would happen for future shows.

Nimax Theatres, which owns the Apollo, is "working closely with the relevant authorities to establish exactly what happened," the society said. - CNN.



Thursday, November 21, 2013

INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Six Dead, Dozens Feared Trapped After Latvia Mall Collapse - Cause Currently Unknown?! [PHOTOS + VIDEO]

November 21, 2013 - LATVIA - Six people have been killed and at least 30 others injured after the roof of a large store collapsed in the Latvian capital. Rescuers continue searching for several dozen people who may still be trapped in the rubble.


Maxima shopping mall in Riga, Latvia (RIA Novosti / Oksana Dzhadan)

Some 500 square meters of roof caved in at the ‘Maxima XX’ building in the capital, Riga.

The initial collapse was followed by a second cave-in just as the first responders at the scene were helping the victims. Two rescuers were killed by the second collapse.

“We have lost a colleague who died saving the victims from the rubble,” fire department spokeswoman Inga Vetere told reporters.

According to the latest reports, so far rescuers have managed to save 30 people from the rubble. At least one child has suffered a moderate head injury and has been hospitalized along with dozens of victims, Ria reports.


RIA Novosti / Oksana Dzhadan

RIA Novosti / Oksana Dzhadan

RIA Novosti / Oksana Dzhadan

"At least 70 people may still be trapped in the rubble, according to the latest data," Riga's mayor Nils Ušakovs said as quoted by RIA Novosti news agency.

Upon hearing about the accident the mayor has cut short his holiday.“Interrupted vacation. Looking now for faster options to return to Riga," UÅ¡akovs wrote on his Facebook page.

While the cause is currently unknown, Riga Vice Mayor Andry Ameriks refuted earlier eyewitness reports of an explosion and attributed the incident to a likely construction fault.


WATCH: Scenes from the mall collapse in Latvia.




“Probably, mistakes were made by construction workers, which led to the collapse of the building,” Ameriks  said. “The building collapsed completely. Now, all the rescue services are working at the scene. The most important thing now are the lives of the people.”

Rescue operations are still underway with the military personnel assisting, and workers are continuing to look for victims.

A number of rescue crews are working at the scene including local and state police, some local home guards and at least 17 units of medics as well as 13 fire brigades. Soldiers of the National Armed Force are also helping look for the victims with dog units. Another 40 soldiers were sent from the army garrison, local media reports. - RT.


INFRASTRUCTURE & SOCIETAL COLLAPSE: Rescuers Call Off Search For Survivors At Collapsed Shopping Mall Site In Tongaat, South Africa - One Killed, Dozens Injured; Cause Remains Unclear?! [PHOTOS + VIDEO]

November 21, 2013 - SOUTH AFRICA - Rescue workers called off the search for survivors at a collapsed South African building site today, believing there are no more trapped construction workers beneath the half-built shopping mall.

One person was killed and dozens injured in yesterday's collapse of the three-storey building in Tongaat, 30km north of Durban.


A view of a building that collapsed is seen in the South African town of Tongaat, north of Durban.

"The entire operation has been stopped and handed over to the Department of Labour," police spokeswoman Mandy Govender said.

Initial reports suggested as many as 50 workers might have been trapped under the rubble but rescue officials, working through the night with sniffer dogs, recovered only one body and discovered no survivors.

The cause of the collapse remains unclear. District mayor James Nxumalo said local authorities had obtained a series of court injunctions, the latest on November 14, to halt construction.


Policeman walk past a three-storey building that collapsed in the
South African town of Tongaat, north of Durban.

Paramedics comb through the debris in a bid to find survivors trapped under the
rubble of a collapsed mall in in Tongaat, South Africa

The owner of the site has been identified as a South African businessman who is well-known in Durban, the second-largest city in South Africa and home to a large ethnic Indian population.

If safety regulations are found to have been flouted, the accident could damage the ruling African National Congress (ANC) as it moves toward an election next year because of widespread perceptions of incompetence and corruption in local government.

Durban and the surrounding province of KwaZulu-Natal are also the home of President Jacob Zuma and the region has enjoyed a construction boom in the last few years, based in part on government investment.


WATCH: Police probe deaths in South Africa mall collapse.




Of the 29 injured, two are in a critical condition in hospital, health officials said.

The ANC is expected to win an election in April or May next year but its share of the vote is likely to drop as young post-apartheid South Africans with no knowledge of white-minority rule come of age. - Independent.