This video is already crazy long and I couldn't fit in everything I researched. What didn't I cover that you're curious about? I will take your ideas and try to put together a future video covering some of your questions.
How did the pool deck collapse pull down the building? How different is the North tower from the South tower with respect to the structural design changes you speak of in this video?
The knowledge it takes to do forensic engineering is tremendous! On top of that you make it understandable for the average person. Thank you very much.
Exactly. A very logical examination that determines the cause of failure. As with most structural failures, this most likely was a monetary cause and effect whereby the engineer was pressured by the developer and/or contractor to produce a design plan that reduced construction costs to increase profit...and in the process, the structure ended up being compromised. Always about the money!
I have a rudimentary understanding of engineering, as a result I really appreciate your explanation that not only enhances my understanding of engineering, but my knowledge of the collapse from a forensic standpoint as well.
Subject novelty does wonders on the brain. I too find myself getting sucked down technical rabbit holes of domains I never received any formal training into. It's just fascinating
For that happened at 28. :) But still: In my early twenties I probably wouldn't have seen that coming. But there's something really fascinating in seeing physics work in real life and understanding so much more about the world around us.
For me there's something about studying the way our built environment is shaped that is fascinating to study regardless of what discipline you work in. We live with architecture and engineering almost constantly our whole lives, and it's always on our mind at some point, so opportunities to learn about it are always relatable and rarely fail to strike that flame of curiosity.
Yes, that's one thing that's great about UA-cam! I love Karl Jobst's channel, for example. It's all about speedrunning video games. I don't play any video games, haven't for decades, and certainly don't do speedrunning. But his videos are quite fascinating and entertaining to me!
Watching this video, I felt a kinship with the people of times of old when "common" folks would pack halls to hear experts explain various scientific topics. You make this so much easier to understand. Thanks for your work!
@@chuckgilly It's not really schooling now is it? A Society for Home-Schooled Engineers should probably be on every terrorist watch list on the planet. Schooling would teach us how to make a building stand. This excellent series taught us a single way in which a building can fall. (and lots of tips how to spot concrete going bad)
@@bramharms72 - I disagree, with all due respect. Teaching how to make buildings stand requires knowing the way that they fail, and this knowledge makes for better engineers and architects. How can one build into a structure a reasonable safety margin without knowing where that "line" needs to be? Failure analysis is one of the best ways of learning from others what not to do, in my opinion. Allow me to put it another way: Would you live in a building that was built by people who didn't do failure analysis on the structure, remembering that modern buildings are built down to the last penny and right to the edge of code? I sure wouldn't, and this video reinforces my opinion significantly.
I've been a carpenter for Twenty years, admittedly only on homes, but we've had terrible times with architects changing things to what "looks good (only in their opinion, in my opinion)" and messing up the engineers plans, we tell them to sod off, we aren't changing the engineers plans and to take it to the engineers to work with them not us. Thanks for your hard work on this topic.
cant blame them, they get paid to make stuff that looks good. Granted, 99.5% of population is basically braindead when it comes to ethics in engineering, including architects.
@@kudukilla Uh... not sure you should be glad considering the OP's comment. The contractor was a check against the architect who wanted to compromise the engineering.
My blood boils everytime I have to deal with architects. For them it's always form before function. Who cares if a mechanical system or structure is compromised so long as the building looks good amirite?
As a concrete inspector and civil engineer I found the video very interesting. I find it unbelievable that the City could of approved of new planters at the pool deck without a structural analysis. Either it was installed without inspection or there were a lot of very negligent people involved in the remodel.
Yes do the load analysis but the couple tons of planter are a trivial addition for this beam system, given well made structure. The problem here is long term contact with water. Unprotected steel reinforced old mix concrete will corrode and fail in long term continuous contact. That roof deck didn’t drain. An earlier inspection on the building. now widely available pointed out water.
@@Nill757 well, no. many factors contributed together. long term contact with water is a problem, but shouldn't have lead to a catastrophic collapse of the whole tower. that's why inspectors noticed the problem but didn't condemn the building. if the structure was originally built with proper safety factors, proper rebar, and the extra load was not added, then the corroded rebar would be a problem but not an emergency. the fact that nobody noticed the bad original design OR the exacerbation of the bad design while adding additional load, are what lead to the catastrophic collapse of the whole tower. prematurely aging rebar would just mean work should be done to correct it, or the worst-case scenario where the pool/garage partially collapses but does not bring down the whole tower.
@@somedude-lc5dy Building Sinking due to being built on landfill over former water inlet certainly did not help. First day Engineer giving analysis I should have wrote down who where saying this going to be a large number of different failures certainly seams right.
Josh at 5:00 you said you could not find the planters in the 1979 drawings, I have the answer for you. I had mentioned in a few of my videos in July that the HOA had a contractor come in back in 1996 and added the extra planters, as well as the palm trees. I had put up a few videos showing this, as well as what stressors and latent cracks might have happened if they drove any heavy machinery on the pool deck to install these palm trees, and later they removed them in 2018. On the Surfiside records web site, you'll see the file 8777 COLLINS AVENUE - LANDSCAPING P#96-0403.PDF, that has a drawing that shows their proposed added planters, as well as the palm trees. This is also when all that extra sand and heavy pavers were added, which I feel slowed down drainage of rain off pool deck, and often left pooling that I showed in many real estate agent MLS photos of the pool...
I’ve learned so much about structural design from your channel. I live in a high rise in Boston with serious structural maintenance issues similar to the ones which you have reviewed. I only rent so I’m moving but I did notify the local building inspector and I think I was able to take good informational photos due to some of the wisdom that you have imparted. Thank you sir!
@@cherylhoskins1679 Yes and remember a Military and good restaurant rule, it does not mater that something you see wrong is unimportant for safety you assume if they let you see something wrong the things that are important for safety are wrong too.
@@RedRocket4000 yeah maybe if you see some unexpected planters added around a building you can assume the building itself is unsound. Or if my car was originally blue and I repaint it red, now the car is unsound. After all it's suspicious, right? But that's why we have engineers, to get beyond such random suspicions and actually understand whether it's sound or not. That's what I did not see in this or any other of their videos.
Just wanted to add that the woman's garage walk through video has been an invaluable record for verifying the construction and determining where the failures took place.
Perhaps people should start doing video walkthroughs of all such sub-grade parking areas -- who knows when the next one might collapse and such evidence will be invaluable. These days anyone with a mobile phone can record a video quickly, cheaply and easily at minimal/no cost. Perhaps this is a new hobby people could do as a community service?
Which is kind of why security guards tend to take photos of much anything unusual or a potential problem. Part of the job description to take note of anything unusual or a potential hazard or problem. I think often many repairmen may also take before and after photos, documenting their work. Perhaps the photos will never be useful for much. But if "something happens" the photos could turn into valuable documentation or evidence.
@Yosef MacGruber I’m a Plumber/HVAC tech and I learned years ago to document EVERYTHING I do with photos. The first thing I do is take photos of everything from every angle, take snapshots whenever necessary throughout, and then take photos of everything from every angle again. I found you never know when all of a sudden you’re asked to recall details from a repair you did last month, 6 months, a year, two years ago.. I never delete photos and have 100,000+ saved on iCloud. It’s been invaluable to me, being able to pull up detailed photo documentation of all my past jobs, and especially when you have a vindictive customer trying to make false claims.
As a professional engineer, I appreciate the enormous amount of work you put into this thoughtful and thorough analysis. Combine that effort with the excellent editing and you end up with an outstanding summary of the current knowledge available on CTS. Thank you for all the work. This will help avoid future tragedies like this.
I'm so glad that I keep hearing about Millenial's feelings. I thought this was about a building that fell but you clowns helped me realize; "No, this is about turning the subject around and making it all about you".
Yet another fascinating presentation. Your presentation of your forensics gives me the sense that I understand what your are talking about! Wow - a natural and gifted explainer!!
I don’t know anything about reading design documents, blueprints, etc but I have been watching your videos from the beginning and have learned so much. Your presentation and explanations of what is a complex subject are informative, educational and understandable. Thank you for all you are doing. I think anyone watching your videos has started to familiarize themselves a little more with their surroundings and has certainly become aware that a crack that we see might have a lot more going on that we don’t see.
As an engineer I greatly appreciate the fairness and neutrality of your presentations on this, and the clarity with which you explain the issues (I'm electrical, not structural, so there''s a good deal that is not my field). This has been a really interesting series of videos and I look forward to seeing how close the final reports come to your analysis.
I found an interview with a family member who lost his mother and grandmother in this tragedy and he said something interesting that I have not heard anywhere else. He said that the night before the collapse his mother got woken up at 3am by some very strange and loud noises and she was not able to go back to sleep after that. He said that it’s stuck in his mind because never would he think that the building was going to collapse .
Yes it was like 45 minutes from the big noise to collapse. Or something like that. If you asleep you might think it was a sleeping phase noise and not real. I wonder if anyone saw sources that pets were uneasy. I couldnt find any but saw comments saying that pets were uneasy and they were taken out saving the owner. But it might be a mith.
Everyone wants to blame it on structural defects yet this building had no steel beams or posts in it. It was all concrete with rebar. How many holes needed to be drilled and small explosives put in to make a few posts fail to cause a failure? How many holes were drilled and explosives used to fell the rest of the building? Now we have the Saudi's putting up a bid to buy it. The Saudi's owned four floors of the Las Vegas Hotel where 50 people dies at the concert and I heard it was an assassination attempt on the Prince's life as he was in the Tropicana in disguise.
@@timsteinkamp2245 98 innocent people lost their lives. Spreading misinformation is a slap in the face to them and the families. Have some decency and respect.
I worked with architects and engineers for 35 years. In general, the structural engineers were the least flexible and most conservative with designs, because they provided the parts of the building that made it stand up. I find it bizarre that the structural engineer made the changes you've shown without some kind of structural load compensation in the design.
Read up on the people involved, possible mob involvement and the Wild West nature of things at the time I'm a tad surprised there was a qualifies structural engineer involved at all but certainly in that environment only structural engineer's that were willing to break the rules in building things need apply.
@@RedRocket4000 really? That's fascinating. I do remember hearing that there was some mob activity in the area at that time.. I'm gonna check this out now.
@@RedRocket4000 You are entirely correct. At that time ( The Miami Vice era ), the Mafia needed a means of laundering large amounts from the booming Cocaine business. The Mafia turned to the construction business, hiring shady contractors and builders. They "cut corners" and constructed large, Glitzy, cheaply built ( under code ) buildings. ( Inspectors were paid off )… Later, to make these Condos more sellable, heavy marble flooring, tiling, granite countertops and heavier bathroom fixtures/ appliances.. Walls were removed to give a "more modern, open concept look ".. All of this created an added weight load (approximately that of 3 automobiles per condo ), to an already compromised building. The building codes were oddly "reduced" in 1972 and the early eighties ( Mafia and political intervention )...
@@RedRocket4000 I really don't care to "read up" on alleged Florida miscreants. I can only relate 35 years working for two of the world's largest engineering firms and knowing the conservative engineering approaches used for the projects I worked on. You couldn't buy your way into a design change that would cause potential liability and especially loss of reputation. This includes six projects done in Florida starting in 1992.
@@buckhorncortez, so you don't care about the politico-social potential root cause of problematic building design and construction in Miami-Dade in the era the building in question was designed and built? Cool beans. Thanks for letting us know.
Thank you. As a country, we need more people like you who use facts, science, math, engineering and peer-reviewed data and publications to determine solutions to difficult problems. The world today is full to the brim with misinformation, rumors, conspiracies, pseudo-science, hear-say, bigotry, and other clap-trap that gets in the way of intelligent analysis and decision. Yes, this is UA-cam and UA-cam itself is overrun with crap, but your channel is one that the viewers can trust to get the facts.
As a lay person with no background in engineering, I am thankful for this channel. As a Florida resident 20+ yrs mostly beach living, this collapse affected me on a personal level. You deserve an award for helping us understand.
"They tend to design to the minimum code..." As a draftsman, I've noticed this very often when I submit drawings and plans. Often times I, don't necessarily push for maximums, but typically avoid minimums because I like stronger stuff under my name, and my submitted drawings get changed to minimums all the time.
@@petero2693 Buildings that are over-engineered and built to very high standards are uncommon, but they do exist. Those are the ones which might survive for hundreds of years (if nobody decides to knock them down), and then people will look at how old those buildings are hundreds of years from now, and say "they don't build them like they used to"
That's why code enforcement should enforce proper regulations so that's a structural design of the building is not compromised. But all too often payoffs are made. To turn a blind eye.
Appreciate how you've kept these videos clear and concise, free from all the usual UA-camr talking head distractions, so that even us "normies" who've never taken a single engineering course can follow along. Your videos, along with Mike Bell's animations, have really helped clear the fog of understanding the seemingly inexplicable event of a modern residential building suddenly collapsing.
My professional experience is in engineering and building sets for stage shows, but my family experience is in commercial design and construction. And I found your analysis to be quite interesting and informative. And it raised an issue I have encountered many times in my professional career: revisions. I've had many arguments with theater companies, asking for a revision only to have them balk when I tell them the consequences and time involved in examining how their proposed changes affect the structure where the changes were to be made. I point to my experience with the family business to my attentiveness on set construction that no set I have built has ever collapsed or allowed an actor to fall through it and injure themselves. Thank you for your work and effort on examining, and reporting on, this collapse.
is never having a stage collapse or break through really the only thing that matters? anyone can build something absolutely fail safe and indestructible.. its building something that meets the needs and any foreseeable changes or forces without grossly over building it need a stage? pour solid concrete down to bedrock, there job done. the estimate is 7million dollars and itll be done in 6 years..
@@AndrewBrowner , you don’t understand the comment upon which you are commenting. The original poster, @Bert van Aalsburg, doesn’t build stages; he builds stage *sets,* which are by their nature temporary and only have a life that spans the length of a show’s production, which is usually several weeks but in some cases can last months or, in the rare case of a long-running Broadway hit, several years. There are also touring sets designed to be repeatedly set-up, taken down, transported and set back up again. It’s a rather niche design domain.
@@inkyguy i understand what he build, truly sorry i called them stages and not stage sets... my point isnt about stages or how he designs them at all, my point is that saying youve never had something break/collapse/fail doesnt make you a good engineer/designer in an of itself.. anyone can make something that will never fail, good engineers make something as good as it has to be in order to never fail but no more expensive than it needs to be, theres a safety factor built into this.. but theres certainly a point where youre going too far and just wasting money, time and effort "to be sure" rather than running the calculations and determining if the changes need to be made to accommodate the new use.. really you should have a pretty good idea where weight can be added and where it cant be without even looking at plans or picking up a calculator
@@AndrewBrowner It's not the only thing that matters, but it is a primary thing that matters. Weight stresses on a stage set are not as extreme as stresses on a four-story residential tower. And the accepted code authority is generally given to the judgement of IATSE, the technical stage hands' union. And, since stage sets are meant to be disassembled at the end of a show's run, or to be packed into a truck for other performances in other locations, it cannot be built to the same degree of commercial buildings that are meant to remain in place for many years afterwards. Whether you are being dismissive or snarky, in your response, do please be respectful. We may not all be building the same structures, but we are all building to insure the safety of those who are to occupy the structure. And that any revisions to the original plan must be vetted to ensure the changes do not compromise the original plan. Whether the plan is the set for "Spiderman: Turn off the Dark" or a 20-story office building.
@@AndrewBrowner I get you now. Yes, building it butch is not useful and is often wasteful. Often it's a matter of helping the client understand the why and how revisions need accessing to determine the best way to meld the changes into the plan.
Last minute construction changes are sometimes done without the full design team evaluating the change and the significance of a "simple" change isn't recognized. We all studied the Hyatt Regency collapse and you may be telling us about yet another story about a "simple change" with huge consequences. I'd be interested to know more about that 1980 change to this design. Was the original structural engineer the one who signed the 1980 print? As you point out, the design change may have also accelerated structural degradation as salt water, etc. weakened the structural elements. This was one of those "swiss cheese" type failures, when the elements lined up, people died. Your work is so important and your videos are lucid and have lessons for all of us who build and maintain the built environment. Thanks for your work.
My background is in software, but it's the same issue with changes. One of the problems with software is that the reason why something was done the way it was done gets lost. I highly doubt the person who did the original drawings was the person who signed them. It's the new guy straight out of college who does the grunt work in software. My bet is that the first person (probably more senior) who did the work with the stepdown had the beams in place for both the stepdown and the garage, but someone newer made the change to remove the stepdown and didn't understand that the beams served two purposes. If they didn't list removing the beams on the plans, the PE who signed the plans may not have noticed the beams were gone. The new guy might have had to work over Christmas holidays to get the new plans submitted in early January, when there was no one left in the office to ask questions.
@@OOpSjm The judgement of the structural engineer is still vital. In the Hyatt case, an engineer applied the wrong assumption. Yes, with digital models the ability to analyze changes is easier. We've interacted with a mathematical model of a seismically unsafe high rise to improve the constructability of an upgrade design however that exercise was guided by an experienced team of structural engineers and checked by peer review. BTW: They ultimately imploded the building and replaced it.... :-)
@@bbamboo3 I’m not familiar with “the Hyatt case”, would love more detail and if that is another building collapse, maybe Josh would tackle that situation in detail as well?
"Underground parking garage" only 400 feet from the beach makes me wince whenever I think about it too hard. You don't see basements in seaside buildings for a large number of extremely valid reasons.
@@micaheiber1419 Built Against Costal Mountains the key here way better bedrock than the basically non existent bedrock here in Florida. You actually have ingenious and metamorphic rock there. Although due to Earthquakes The basements and parking garages are build with massive reinforcement. I've seen Japanese under building parking that looks like each car slot was actually a bunker for a military plane (thick concrete walls three side and roof) inside a larger bunker like the Germans had for their Subs in WWII. No columns wide concrete walls holding up thick concrete cross members. Other cases columns bu three times wider going into thick concrete cross sections not punching though them. In this case the building build on filled in inlet there was water were this building was before. Main part of Florida basically floats on limestone and water mix. Main part of State been under water totally several times and is made up of former sea floor, coral reef and ancient beaches. I expect another time under water in the next century or so. And these are barrier islands for the most part shifting sand bars basically that should never be build on in the first place over all but are subsidized by the suckers who live inland. Thus the above comment on never build basements on seaside building.
@@Darkkfated I never gave it much thought but in Florida where I am this normal. If you go downtown areas many buildings have basement garage. But hey NY city and London do it too so I don't think it is a problem.
In aviation, when we are handed the performance specs and limits for an aircraft, we are reminded that these are for a brand new aircraft, with new engines, flown by a manufacturer's test pilot, under ideal conditions. In other words, the best it will ever do and don't ever expect to get those numbers in the real world.
WOW, this analysis was absolutely perfect, everything explained in detail, no nonsense like many others "it fall because it was old", thank you for your work, much appreciated
Blame it on the approving engineer, or the construction company / contractors, architect, etc. There's many points of contact from the initial blueprint to finished project. Judging by the irregularities between the 4 building docs where half of them are undated and the engineering company stamp is missing, there seems to be at least 1 party that acted in bad faith or criminally negligent
Checkout the the collapse of the Hyatt Regency Skywalk collapse in Kansas City in 1981, killing over 100 people and you will find it was due to Engineering negligence. Failure to Recheck the numbers on a simple change that proved catastrophic.
@@killjoy1887 Australia has it's example also. In Melbourne, Victoria the West Gate Bridge was being built. The unjoined segment of road deck was being held by concrete blocks to correct a camber error. Finally an order came through to loosen some bolts, at which point the bridge snapped back and collapsed, with 35 killed, 18 injured. Six twisted fragments of the bridge can be found in the grounds of a local university who was asked to participate in the investigation the collapse. Its said to remind engineers of the consequences of their errors.
@@gavin9088 This type of thing is common in construction. Bad plans, incompetent or criminal contractors, corrupt Building Officials. The miracle is that this doesn't happen daily.
I would love to see if that sister building they build a few doors down has any of the same issues with the deck leaking and if it also had support beams that were not included under their planters.
@@ricky4673 , that's not a rational take. if your choices are: A) become homeless and bankrupt or B) rely on engineering firms to determine if there is risk of the same thing happening, rely on the engineers. there is no chance you can sell this condo now, so you either live there or you declare bankruptcy, which may put some people out on the street. it's a hard choice. eventually, you would hope that lawsuits or city programs will come through to take the burden off of you, but those things typically take a long time.
@@ricky4673 Why would the people living in the other building deserve what's coming to them? Some new resident deserves to die because they rented an apartment without doing a structural inspection first? Have you ever hired a company to do a structural inspection of an apartment you moved into? I don't understand that statement at all.
I had just looked at your channel two hours before you posted this hoping for another installment. Thanks for all the careful review and very clear explanation of your findings. Your channel is a treasure!
Josh. Excellent presentation. As a retired building contractor here in California I am amazed at the lack of rebar in these plans. Every subterranean parking we had ever done had much heavier steel, especially over the columns, and most all columns had drop-head column caps. This was probably for seismic purposes I'm guessing. Keep up the good work.
Typical lackluster zoning in florida in 70s. No review when big changes were done later. At least feds and state learn from these to adjust international code for future
I have seen drop head column caps in Ohio and Pennsylvania in multi-floor parking garages. One had pleasing rounded "horn" shape column tops. Others seem more like a thicker slab surrounding the columns, considering how wide they were.
Thank you, Josh. As always, you have articulated a plausible theory that even a jury would be able to understand. If I was still in the business of hiring experts and consultants, you’d be at the top of my list.
So here is the question: is the North tower built the same way? We've established that it doesn't have the same water problems, but did it use toothpick columns and exclude beams beneath planter boxes?
yeah probably being that it is newer is why it is still standing for now probably how long it stays standing is anyones guess it may fall down soon to as well
Good questions... just as with the collapsed CT South, the drawings from CT North are public record, and available from Town of Surfside... if you want to go through their bureaucratic procedures to get them. There may be per-page copying costs.
@@MajorCaliber Engineer said it safe But they need to assume that safe for now not the future. Get more opinions and have two different expert teams rework all the plans. North was not built on former water and did not sink into the earth for a decade also like South so North might have another ten years but I would not trust it past a year.
@@RedRocket4000 CT North is only 1 year newer than the collapsed sister CT South, not 10 years. The CT East *is* 10-12 years newer, but very different design and construction.
this is why we need people like you making these videos. None of this would be understandable to the general public if someone like you didnt post this. Thank you!
Brilliant. Simply brilliant. I hope the authorities investigating are watching this. And I hope other building plans are being similarly reviewed to prevent future disasters.
This has been known for weeks. If you listen to radio around Florida engineers have been interviewed and said from the beginning that there is A LOT of material missing. Plus the rumors have been consistent that this building was not built to code. I know some of you who been drinking Josh's cool aid will get mad, but he's he's been spinning wild theories to make more content to promote his UA-cam Channel. Sorry.
you know, a bunch of other youtubers post analysis on this topic. i ignore all of them and wait for your videos. i appreciate your deep analysis and through yet easy to understand explanations
Worked the urban planning side. The amount of shenanigans people do to get around bylaws (and the amount of bylaws waved as easements to developers) is ludicrous.
It's all "Government Red Tape we want to rip up" until no one will buy your buildings because they worry they will collapse. Here in Australia, they privatised building inspectors and made the industry heavily self regulating. Unfortunately, the only way they can self regulate is if they build 10 buildings, then one of them almost (or does) fall over and they go bankrupt. They are removed from the market, but the last 10 buildings are garbage.
To be fair, in the US, a lot of bylaws aren't on the books to protect people per se, but as legal ballast to get concessions from developers. Once this is the case, respect for all bylaws, not just the offending ones, go out the window.
@@hailexiao2770 There's a fine line between the right amount of regulation, and over-regulation for special interests. California is an example of the latter.
@@Dee-nonamnamrson8718 Exactly, and homeowners are the #1 special interest group screwing up California. If Republicans want any change of winning statewide office, this issue is their chance. But since the cult of homeownership is as strong, if not stronger, on the right as well as the left, the chances of them doing so are slim.
It is outstanding that you won't jump to conclusions but rather do some dilligent work. Other channels "found" the "cause" weeks ago. It is honorable that you won't let yourself be rushed by others that pump out the videos in a rather fast manner.
Thank you. I also stopped watching other youtuber's videos on the collapse over a month ago, because I didn't find them particularly helpful and knew they couldn't have found the "cause" this early in the process. I do try and keep up on industry journal articles and video interviews with other engineering firms to see if their is anything I'm missing or if they are correlating my findings independently. This video was about 3 weeks in the making... most of that time spent doing due diligence research on the drawings and comparing them side-by-side (when I wasn't doing my day-to-day job). The reality is that a true initiating "cause" may never be known. Was it JUST corrosion and poor design? Was it a car that hit a column and kicked off the dominoes? We may never know for sure the trigger. When we reach a theory, it will be strongly supported by the physical evidence but I'm not aware of any scientific theory that is 100% certain. As I'm sure you know from your channel name, that's not how science works.
@@BuildingIntegrity maybe if Champlain security videos are recovered we will know more. I would hate to see Draconian measures imposed on all the buildings and residents in Florida just because 40 years ago an engineer removed beam a support structure in the parking garage. It may be more prudent to look for design deficiencies than have every one pulling 12 million dollar remediation. I bet not one remediation contract told the tower "you sure could use a beam underneath this 1st floor parking area and planters". I think that would be the low hanging fruit to prevent further loss
Me too Merry! I don't understand everything but love how Josh breaks it down so my non-engineering brain can somewhat comprehend it! Keep analyzing, Josh, & share with us please!!
I'm so happy that you guys are gaining subs so quickly. You're top shelf when it comes to teaching. Thank you Josh for all of your research and work on the Champlain towers. This was soooo revealing.
As an Eng in a different field, I really appreciate that you Did take the time to explain and build up to your findings. Very insightful and have a much better understanding what may have led to the collapse. Thank you!
as a retired architect who specialised in construction, i am not surprised that USA also has 'building' problems, the aim of developers is to make money with less 'bother' (as they call it) and alas Local Authorities often do not have properly educated/experienced staff to scrupulously check everything....see our UK Cladding Scandal....should never have happened.....was my experience that the fellows on site were smarter than the suits on desks...
comforting that we're finally getting some genuine engineering analysis. An ancient dictum is that success may benefit our egos but knowledge comes from genuine understanding of our failures. The level of engineering analysis in this video - acknowledging that differing opinions will emerge - has to contribute to that end. Thank you
20:10 Regarding the pool deck being at 100% capacity, another source raised the issue of the palm trees. That is, driving a cherry picker across the pool deck to cut them down. I wonder if that could have greatly damaged the deck. Also, if a planter is, say 3x4x12, saturated soil would weigh around 8,000 pounds (water alone is just over 8,900 pounds).
My be misremembering, but notice the square planters that had the palm trees are not on the 79 or 80 design, and were just that much more added weight when built on top of those relatively tiny columns that were already overworked and built ot age prematurely.
Thank you for your succinct analysis of this building structure. As someone who has no knowledge of structural engineering even I understood the apparent error of omitting the transfer beams. All we can do is learn from our errors and pray for the souls and families of the dead, may they Rest In Peace, their struggles are over…
I’ve been glued to your videos since I discovered your channel. I grew up in North Miami Beach. I temped at two Miami Beach condo conversions while at college in 1980, and enjoyed working with all the contractors. I wish someone encouraged me to become an engineer back then! It’s fascinating and important work. Your explanations are so well constructed to explain the basics, while not dumbing down the material (as far as I can tell).
@Jim Flanders Oh yes, I remember the Alexander. I worked at Belle Plaza on Belle Isle, and also the South Bay Club, originally called Plaza West. If I could go back right now to Miami, I’d be tempted to personally inspect those locations. 🙂
Practical Engineering did a shot out to you👍all of you engineers have prospective outlooks that combined will help make buildings safer in the future. My heart goes out to the people that passed in the building. 🙏❤
I watched every one of this series on the Seaside building collapse. I am a retired librarian and found it fascinating! Thank you for your research and time to share with the interested public.
Once again, a top notch presentation....Thank you for putting so much effort into these videos which help us understand how this building was designed.
I live in a similarish building in Chicago (12 stories, 130 units, parking garage attached in part of the first three floors). When I look at the massive concrete columns and giant beams holding things up, it just completely blows my mind that someone could build something comparable with such puny columns and no beams.
Can you bring it all together in your next video and explain how and initiation of collapse here would propagate through the rest of the structure and how it meshes with the video evidence of the initial partial collapse in the garage? You have made a lot of good points throughout the series, but it would really help us less technically minded folks to see it all put together into one timeline. Thanks for the great work you are doing!
Yes I seen is explained before and that things can be done to insure the failure in that area effected nothing else. Basic a Patio failure should never have been able to make anything else fail and vise versa.
Been waiting for unsurprising ending, and I’m sure this is as close to saying “design flaw” as you will get (at least for now). I hope people are looking into other buildings designed by this firm and these specific engineers. Thanks for another excellent video, I know there is a lot of analysis invested in this and much work producing the video.
You explain everything so well, in simple terms we can understand, while still telling us about technical terms and rules. It's a damn shame someone didn't look at this revision closer and/or put a stop to that penthouse that was added on. So many ticking time bombs in this fated building that I agree it's surprising it took that long to fall. 😞
@@johna5874 Because they down-think on/of you. If you see a fault, they will never admit it. And brush you off... pfff. Peasant. It would slow the building time down.
These videos have been incredibly insightful and well researched. I'm imaging most people here right now aren't engineers by training or by trade, and it's clear you've taken that into consideration in how it is you're explaining out all of these otherwise highly complex and technical concepts in laymen terms. It's recognized and greatly appreciated, and I wanted to make sure to call this out specifically because you've done an exceptional job in putting all of these together. So thank you for that.
Right! I find myself wondering what kind of mindset those folks have right now since, I'm guessing, they're twins, right? I would prob be considering another living arrangement, regardless
@@carvalone3076 they would probably move, though I shudder to think that the best they will get away wjtb is a serious loss of capital as their apartment will simply not sell anymore.
@@hoihoi12250 It was rated ok for now but I'd get two more opinions including three different firms to go over the plans again. Probably find that even if it safe now it built close to failure and if safe now will not stay safe for long.
My god. Columns and slabs being loaded to 100% on dead load alone is insane. It seems like their ability to carry live load for 40 years before collapsing was probably just down to the materials being stronger than specified and nothing more. This seems like gross malpractice.
I expect there is a lot of safety margin in the 100% load factor to allow for variances in construction, variations in concrete within even a single load, and to allow for some degradation over time. But, a building which is over 100% loaded is gross malpractice. Allowing a landscaping permit to put materials on a building at 100% load already is another surprise. The live load of people on a concrete structure is negligible. Cars which rapidly start and stop 6000 lb loads is another matter when considering live loads. There is a reason for speed limits in parking garages beyond preventing collisions, and it's to limit live load impact on the building.
@@johnhaller5851 Oh, that makes me remember why I HATE parking garages. Again. They mark it 10 or 5mph, and then put it on a ridiculous slope to accommodate the lack of footprint...
@@johnhaller5851 If you need people to follow a speed limit in a parking lot were you can't legally ticket people, the building is unsafe. And as others stated you can't have support column they can run into thus way less parking as one Japanese Building I saw every side parking space in effect a bunker for the Car with support walls on every side not columns. I was thinking what this a former fighter plane bunker each spot protected by blast walls from another. (It was certainly not any plane bunkers from the war on the surface)
Once again - amazing analysis! LOVE this series. Thank you for spending the time to make sense of this tragedy and present it in a way that is easy to understand for non engineers. A++
All Josh does is talk engineering and numbers but I am still convinced that he's the most wholesome man on UA-cam. It's not like I have anything to go off of since he doesn't talk about anything deep or personal but I can just tell.
Everyone is saying the collapse was caused by multiple issues so every new theory is very important. Thanks for making these videos somewhat easy and interesting for us novices to try to follow along.
Yes, there is rarely a single explanation for a building collapse. New insights are not new theories, they are new factors in the overall analysis. Interestingly, there are many details in the column/slab designs which would not have satisfied UK codes 40 years ago but the underlying issue seems to me to be that any building loaded to 100% of capacity by its "as built" dead weight leaves no room at all for construction defects, alterations, change of use, deterioration or subsidence.
Absolutely love your videos on this tragedy. Very interesting and informative and in plain English that doesn't require a engineering degree to understand. I can't imagine the amount of time that you put into creating these videos and that it's all available for free for anyone interested to watch. Thank you very much. I have learned a lot about this from your videos. I mentioned this in one of your past videos that if you aren't already, you should really consider being an engineering teacher. I could actually sit through one of your classes every day without falling asleep.
Wow. Your analysis is really interesting. I can completely see how this design would have initiated the collapse. I don't think I will ever go into a tall building with the same care free attitude that I have in the past.
I think that this video, in combination with your punching shear video, is the most complete, plausible, and well-elucidated explanation on UA-cam of why this building fell.
I have seen many youtubers go over these plans, but you are one of few who goes through them with a professional eye, using your knowledge and actual calculations/analysis, instead of "what I think". You actually know what you are talking about and what to pay attention to:)
Excellent research and presentation. I am an electrical engineer with considerable large project management experience. This is a good example how change orders cause problems when initiated in later phases of the project. They do not have to cause problems but there is a a tendency to treat them lightly in order to keep project schedule and to control engineering costs. I hope this tragedy helps project owners and the public understand this.
Many years ago, I remember a magazine article that suggested that engineering changes was one of the biggest hazards in design. This was based on observations going all the way back to the Romans. It looks like that same principle may have struck again.
I'm thinking last minute changes require going through all the calculations again, and that didn't happen. You would have to check everything else works with the last minute change. I have no mathematical ability whatsoever, but I sure wouldn't want to go without rechecking the original plans match the revision - that they still work. It sounds ridiculous that they wouldn't recheck. Should have delayed everything for that purpose. It's not like it's the paint color being changed.
@@isveryrill1234567 Yes, it’s a failure to see the whole thing as a SYSTEM rather than discrete parts. That’s what he was saying about the secondary function of the beams I think - they may have been put in for the step down but they also played a role in the entire *system* of the building by directing forces along specific paths. Even ‘just’ adding an extra planter is changing the system because you’re putting a bunch of extra weight in one bit, which needs to be accounted for - if the part of the structure you put the planter on is already stressed due to the role it is playing in the system then it may not handle the extra stress even though the same sort of construction standing independently (I.e. unable to be stressed by other parts of a larger building) might be fine. So changes need to be assessed systemically, not just locally.
@@davidvoinier6008 LOL Same. Solid fuel and humans should not normally mix. But launching below the known temperature the units were rated to work it criminally bad as well. Damm things had a do not use below temperature rating and they launched substantially lower than that.
Thanks for taking the time to make this, and other, videos. I mainly design steel structures and take for granted the 'what you see is what you get' aspect of it. It's been years since my basic reinforced concrete class, so this was a nice refresher on those topics as well. Thanks, again.
These videos are like doing a crash course on engineering and I never thought I'd be interested but I'm goddamn addicted by now. Thank you so much for these detailed classes!
Josh, you are very thorough and professional, and I think you found the perverbial "smoking gun" that ultimately caused this collapse. Being at 100% of dead load capacity when it was built made it a ticking time bomb, and I agree that it's amazing the thing lasted for 40 years. What's also amazing is that those columns were only 16" x 12", and they removed all of those beams that would have carried the loads to the columns. To me, it really looks as if they skimped on lots of things when they designed this death trap. It's very sad that so many innocents died because of some truly piss-poor building engineering back in 1979/80.
Also remember that it was all done by hand. No computer aided design system to flag that these beams had dual purposes. Architects are human and unfortunately their was a failure. It’s so easy to sit back and place blame and yes it seems justified. If only everyone could be perfect but as you can see our society is plummeting into a sick hell all because humans cut corners or made a calculation error. It amazes be how hateful we humans are these days. Pointing fingers and yet none of the owners of these places is also being made to realize they played a role too. Ignorance is bliss. Humans adding granite and tile and all kinds of heavy materials as decorations which also contributed to its failure which the architect would have never known about or expected. Tragedy absolute tragedy and loss of lives all boiled down to explanation to punish human error. It is all just sickening.
Empire State Building & others were built very well. There was several causes in this structure failure unfortunately. I wouldnt be surprised if pay offs & kick backs played a part causing people to overlook obvious problems.
@@jwmiles In reality, the tenants may have played a role too. They may have voted against a lot of maintenance and pressured it to be deferred until the 40-year recertification. We don't know. In their defense though, engineers often use technical jargon that doesn't properly communicate urgency. Saying "if these issues are not addressed, a risk of continued structural deterioration is significant" is not the same as, "if these issues are not addressed with urgency, the building could be in danger of collapse." Lay people think a "loss of structural integrity" means repairs to some cracks - not a building collapse.
An excellent and well presented analysis in an understandable fashion for us non-engineers. While a lot of us can look at something and think, "that doesn't look right (or substantial)" in a construction, you are very talented in showing the reasons behind something that doesn't look quite right. I have learned a lot from each of your video presentations.
The columns not being in line been noticed way back as a "that looks funny" as in it might not be a problem but it needs a serious look at. Or Holland American Cruse line that takes maintenance seriously and clearly follows the Military and good restaurant rule that if something visible is messed up or untidy who cares if it not important for safety it an indicator that the things that are important are also not maintained time to turn every thing upside down In a inspection. I had noticed the constant drills and no missing detail on Holland America till one year during life boat drill I noticed the screws holding a bottom rail on the life boat were clearly not of the same metal and a good deal rusted away which can happen very fast when salt water and different metals mix as the electrical connector involved rusts one fast, still fast in fresh but not as fast). Turned out that was the worst looking life boats but all showed it when I looked. But within 6 days every single screw on the life boats were replaced they had noticed too reassuring me they on the job. Probably the life boats had been reworked recently and because that form of rusting can be super fast they noticed it and ordered new screws out as fast as possible out to what ever non US port they got them at probably not cheap shipping and then the crew slammed in the new screws in a few days. I don't think the bottom rails directly effect the ability of the boats to float the rails just protect the bottom of the boats when launched and recovered. And Holland America they have to recover life boats as they regularly launch a few probably in rotation along with a life raft or two for the crews assigned to them to practice using them at a lot of ports when visiting. On board in visiting ports places it can be a tad annoying all the emergency drills they running with alerts almost every day. But I don't mind much as drill, drill, drill, drill is how you make a good crew who acts in emergencies without even thinking of what they have to do. I do like that Carnival runs each Cruse line it owns as a independent business. You would never be able to guess on Holland America it was not still a Dutch ran company. Ship Officers almost all trained in Holland, easy noticed by the constant good looking blond twenty something junior officers male and female best spotted in lifeboat drills. Clearly following the military system Officers right out of Holland's Marine Academy start commanding from day one no matter how many years a non officer been onboard. (although just like 2nd Lt in Army/Air force or Ensigns in Navy they all told to listen to experienced crew with higher crew rank) No signs anywhere on web site or materials that Carnival owns them and there are NO combined promotions. This totally separate devisions system I learned in the 80's the only constant thing in that system normally is accounting systems so head office can be sure of financial data otherwise head office only gets involved to replace a head CEO of subsidiary if performance is bad but they try to avoid telling the CEO of any subsidiary what to do.
I completely agree. Clearly explained and captivating. I'm an EE and had the usual year of ME courses (Statics, Dynamics and Mech of Materials) required for all engineering disciplines/students. Those courses that I had years ago weren't necessary because Josh did such a good job explaining, but it helped in captivating me because I had enough background to follow each point with my head nodding through the entire video. Two thumbs up Josh!
I think you nailed the root cause of failure here sir. 12" X 16" concrete columns supporting cars with 1000's of pounds of planters on them to boot? 39:25. Great analysis. Very thorough.
I think you could be right Glenn Davis. I would like to know if there is a reason why an incipient, creeping failure in this area could have caused popping noises or deformation in the part of the building that had the unit 11's....including that unit on the ground floor.
Cars... yes that's another issue. My sense is that in 1979, when this building was being designed, the cars that people drove weren't the monstrous SUVs that people often drive to day. Are current building codes and 40-year inspections of older buildings taking that into account?
@@Inkling777 cars and SUV are actually much lighter now than they were back then! Believe it or not. Everything now is made out of plastic and tin. Back then everything was solid steel, body on frame designs. Much heavier!
@@All-Miles-Matter You're mistaken. Let's use a 1978 oldsmobile cutlass supreme since that was one of the most popular cars being sold. Curb weight is around 3300lb. This is also in the middle of the range of the 2018 Toyota Camry. Larger cars? How about a 1982 Ford Crown Vic; 3600lb. Modern counterpart? 2019 Ford Taurus weighs around 4100lb, give or take 200lb for options. 2019 Ford Explorer, popular choice? 4400-4900lb. How about that swanky guy with the purple dodge challenger from 2018? That car weighs 3900-4400lb. A modern challenger weighs the same as a 1978 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham. Old cars were larger and made of steel, yes. They also had a LOT more dead space... air. Modern cars cram structure, equipment, options, and all manner of things into every possible nook and cranny not intended for passenger space. Ever see someone work on an old car and stand between the core support and the engine? That space weighs nothing. If that challenger didn't have all the aluminum suspension components and lightweight materials it does, it would probably outweigh a Lincoln Mark IV. Even a frickin' Ford Focus from the last couple years is 3200lb... the 1979 Mustang came out at 2550lb, just a couple golf bags heavier than a brand new Miata.
@@bitey-facepuppyguy2038 From Engineering forum the Pool Deck should have been designed so that anything that happened to it did not effect the rest of the building at all. In layman terms I thing that means breakaways and things like the pool deck slab not connected to any slab under the building as part of that. A rubber gasket or something filling the crack between them to help junk and people losing stuff in the crack.
I think you have found the 'smoking gun'! Your professional analysis and knowledge of structural engineering has resulted in videos (on this topic) that outclass others by a wide margin.
I remember about 25 years ago, when I was doing some of my first project work on commercial construction sites. What I was doing was the kind of video systems you find in a sports bar. Specifically, these were mostly BW3's. Most of them were in either end/corner units at higher end strip malls, or some kind of stand-alone, so other than just a few locations, like Chicago, we weren't dealing with multi-floor structures. So I would get there after the shell was closed in, and I would do the wiring, make sure blocking & reinforcement went into the walls where TV's were going to get mounted, and build the ceiling mounts for the projectors. Without exception, I would run into problems with multiple objects specified to be in the same location. Typically HVAC ducting, Sprinkler system piping (and sometimes a sprinkler head), and my projectors. With ONE exception, which if I recall correctly was at Kings Island near Cincinnati, Ohio; I couldn't get a straight answer from any of the trades about what was happening that day or that week. Not because they were being difficult either, it was because they didn't know. And I did a LOT of these system installations. The one exception was a site super who ran the tightest operation I've ever seen. HE could tell you EXACTLY what was happening, off the top of his head. This period in my career was when I learned how to read prints, because I had to. By the time I came in to do my work, we were about a week away from the soft open and there was NO buffer time left. So the problems that I saw way back then, which is still going on today: 1. Too much stuff wasn't on the print. AT ALL. It was just taken for granted that it was part of the finish work, not the "real" construction, and it didn't matter. 2. People read the prints in two dimensions while building in three. 3. Nobody talked to anyone else outside of their individual crew. Nobody knew what anyone else was doing, when they were doing it or how they were planning to get it done. This was a total lack of a communications plan so that everyone knew what the big picture was, and every trade was siloed. My opinion...? This was down to a lack of a site superintendent, who was actually ON SITE. Having a G.C. does you no good if there isn't a conductor on site to lead the orchestra. I was looking at those planters at about the 40 minute mark and I did a visual guesstimation of how much volume the encompassed, concrete and dirt included. Based on my SWAG (scientific wild-assed guess), I'd say I'm looking at 36,000 pounds of concentrated static load right next to probably 30,000 pounds of static load just based on the cars I can see. A load which would have been dynamic on a regular basis. I'm not saying that the planters caused the collapse, I'm asking with what is admittedly hindsight; was there any communication between the architect/engineer and the builders? Any Change Management system at all? A guy I used to know liked to say; "Any idiot can build a bridge that will last 1,000 years. It takes real skill and engineering to build one that will last 50 years." He would probably agree that if you build something with no excess capacity, somebody fucked up.
Very professional presentation! For laymen it was completely descriptive as to the Surfside Condo fails in construction. (Due the removal of load bearing essential beams eliminated between 79 and 80 revisions.) Add the planters, accident waiting to happen! The heat and cooling of materials was interesting to learn about. Then add the salty, sandy site influencing stability.
Good video. The 6" overlap on the bottom bars actually meets the code requirement for temperature/shrinkage steel. The reason is that you have top steel in the same location that is in excess of the minimum splice length. This is a common detail. However, I would ordinarily just note the bottom mat to lap at column lines and not dimension the lap at the column. It is well worthwhile to mention that the design load for the cars is only 40psf and 100psf for the patio assembly load. Nowadays, in most codes the parking load is 50psf so it is a little bit different but not that significantly. The 100psf just isn't for people load, it is for maintenance equipment on the ground floor deck. People are generally heavier than cars on a per square foot basis. It is not intuitive but a heavy pick up is about 35psf (this is strictly over the area of the vehicle but it is even less when you consider the additional space around the vehicle) and a crowd is about 45psf. It there is music, with the impact load, you can get up to 100psf or even more. A braking or accelerating car does not add vertical load but it does re distribute the vertical load to the front and back tires respectively. The added topping/pavers applies more total load to the columns than the cars. It is worth noting that the corroded steel substantially reduced the punching shear capacity. There appears to be missing steel at the pour joint as well. It is important to note that integrity steel is now required at columns in flat slabs and was not required in the 1970s and early 80s. This is additional bottom steel at the column. The intent is to still have catenary resistance if the top steel fails or you have a punching shear failure. It is a second line of defense. Although the top steel is sized for bending, it is critical to the punching shear resistance of the slab. Without top steel, the punching resistance is essentially eliminated.
All correct and as pointed out on Engineering Forum I'm reading the Patio Deck should not have been connected to the building with some way if it failed it did not effect the rest of the building. These separations of areas is often critical and when ever possible a failure in one thing should not cascade into other things.
@@RedRocket4000 Designers should try to design the structure so that you won't get a cascading failure but that is a lot easier said than done. I don't think it is possible to completely alleviate a progressive collapse. An expansion joint is actually not a great idea. They are notorious for leaking which can cause a failure of columns, a bending or shear failure of the joint which could also cause a cascading failure of the building. Having the ground floor run through is a very common approach. Sometimes when you try to solve one problem, you create another. Don't forget that there were multiple issues with the pool deck slab. If there was just one thing wrong with one joint, you won't likely get a cascading collapse.
@@ffxbellini They were legally qualified. You have to be to sign, seal and submit drawings for permit. You need to a professional engineer or architect to seal the drawings. However, there have been cases where a mechanical engineer will seal structural drawings. They may think they know more than do. This is legal but they may have a misconstrued impression of their own knowledge and abilities. So legally qualified doesn't mean practically qualified or able. An architect can also seal structural draws but may know little about structural issues. Some jurisdiction are now requiring an S.E. or Struct. Eng. (depending on where you live) to seal structural drawings but this is a more recent development and is still not a common requirement.
@@yodaiam1000 You are absolutely right about the six-inch lap over the columns. That was standard in the late 70s and early 80s. It’s also true that the top steel over the columns, likely of greater cross-sectional area than the bottom steel, would have satisfied the temperature steel requirement, and, moreover, would have been in the correct plane for limiting the crack width of any temperature, or shrinkage, cracking, in combination with the tendency for cracks to develop due to flexural tension. Today those splices would be for full development in the interest of preventing a full collapse if a single column were lost due to, say, impact due to a collision, or an explosion.
FANTASTIC!!! I have followed you all the way through your analysis. While I completely understand and agree I could never explain the “deep details” of the pool area. I said I wonder how it made it forty years and factor in the building was settling 2.9 inches each year. Then you mentioned the forty years and that let me know I was understanding your analysis. YOU ARE A WONDERFUL TEACHER. I’m 77 years old and I was able to comprehend everything. The person that wanted the beams removed messed the whole thing up. The architect should have put the brakes on it right there. Forty years is amazing. Thank you very much.
Good analysis again. In regard to temperatures steel, I think the engineer meant to extend each bottom #4 bar over the columns as a minimum, not as a lap. However, as you pointed, this does not work for temperature steel. Catching the removed beams bit is huge. I can hardly believe the engineer would do that. Good stuff thank you for taking the time to do this!
I’ve got so much out of this series of videos. I’ve learned so much. You have taken the stress of a tragedy with no answers and given us understanding and rational explanation for many things. Understanding helps us cope with stress. So not only are you a fantastic teacher, you helped to stop me fixating on the unknown and stressing over it. Why did the third part of the collapse, the last bit to fall, appear to twist a bit and then right itself before it started to go down?
@Ben Dover There is no need of AI. Modern CAD programs already do these calculations and warn you about problems. At the end of the day, you don't need intelligence, just a lot of math, and computers are great at it.
@@DrBernon A good session with a finite element analysis suite would have given the designers a hell of a shock... nice pretty graphics with lots of red, purple, black.....
@@DrBernon CAD all you want, but it has absolutely NOTHING to do with anything being PHYSICALLY BUILT correctly. Site-Engineer who actually knows what they are really looking at are the key.
@@flipnotrab But usually the problems are in the design the workers follow, like in this case. Someone drew the design without the beams, and sent that design to the construction workers. With modern tools, the program would have warned the architects they made a mistake. Also, a site-engineer will make sure the design the architect sent is followed, nothing more. Unless the mistake is glaringly obvious, it is far too easy to trust the designer did their job correctly.
@@flipnotrab Also... the design the architect forward to the construction company has absolutely everything to do with the things that will be physically built. With a construction as big as this, everything has to be well-designed. You can't make something half assed and then improvise during construction. So construction workers must follow the design that should have gone through a bunch of revisions and analysis.
This video is already crazy long and I couldn't fit in everything I researched. What didn't I cover that you're curious about? I will take your ideas and try to put together a future video covering some of your questions.
How did the pool deck collapse pull down the building? How different is the North tower from the South tower with respect to the structural design changes you speak of in this video?
Is it possible you could talk about the crane collapse during the construction of the condos? Could that have played a part?
I know other places are evacuating now due to unsafe living. Do you think the engineers will be stricter moving forward when putting up the towers? 😬
The videos are so interesting that its a pleasure to watch them... Don't worry about being too long.
@Randy Carriere excellent question, we know a lever can be very powerful...
The knowledge it takes to do forensic engineering is tremendous! On top of that you make it understandable for the average person. Thank you very much.
Wow, thank you!
Exactly. A very logical examination that determines the cause of failure. As with most structural failures, this most likely was a monetary cause and effect whereby the engineer was pressured by the developer and/or contractor to produce a design plan that reduced construction costs to increase profit...and in the process, the structure ended up being compromised. Always about the money!
@@BuildingIntegrity - you really do provide great presentations. I am addicted.
@@jameschristie4596 money and overpromised deadlines
I have a rudimentary understanding of engineering, as a result I really appreciate your explanation that not only enhances my understanding of engineering, but my knowledge of the collapse from a forensic standpoint as well.
I never thought I’d be interested in engineering, but at age 64, I’m finding channels like this fascinating.
Subject novelty does wonders on the brain. I too find myself getting sucked down technical rabbit holes of domains I never received any formal training into. It's just fascinating
Engineering is a fascinating subject, and something we take for granted most of the time.
For that happened at 28. :) But still: In my early twenties I probably wouldn't have seen that coming. But there's something really fascinating in seeing physics work in real life and understanding so much more about the world around us.
For me there's something about studying the way our built environment is shaped that is fascinating to study regardless of what discipline you work in. We live with architecture and engineering almost constantly our whole lives, and it's always on our mind at some point, so opportunities to learn about it are always relatable and rarely fail to strike that flame of curiosity.
Yes, that's one thing that's great about UA-cam! I love Karl Jobst's channel, for example. It's all about speedrunning video games. I don't play any video games, haven't for decades, and certainly don't do speedrunning. But his videos are quite fascinating and entertaining to me!
Watching this video, I felt a kinship with the people of times of old when "common" folks would pack halls to hear experts explain various scientific topics.
You make this so much easier to understand. Thanks for your work!
Wow! Thank you!
Yes, you are very good at explaining engineering and building terms so that a common person understands them very well. Thank you!
Now, this is what I call homeschooling.
@@chuckgilly It's not really schooling now is it? A Society for Home-Schooled Engineers should probably be on every terrorist watch list on the planet.
Schooling would teach us how to make a building stand. This excellent series taught us a single way in which a building can fall. (and lots of tips how to spot concrete going bad)
@@bramharms72 - I disagree, with all due respect. Teaching how to make buildings stand requires knowing the way that they fail, and this knowledge makes for better engineers and architects. How can one build into a structure a reasonable safety margin without knowing where that "line" needs to be? Failure analysis is one of the best ways of learning from others what not to do, in my opinion.
Allow me to put it another way: Would you live in a building that was built by people who didn't do failure analysis on the structure, remembering that modern buildings are built down to the last penny and right to the edge of code? I sure wouldn't, and this video reinforces my opinion significantly.
I've been a carpenter for Twenty years, admittedly only on homes, but we've had terrible times with architects changing things to what "looks good (only in their opinion, in my opinion)" and messing up the engineers plans, we tell them to sod off, we aren't changing the engineers plans and to take it to the engineers to work with them not us. Thanks for your hard work on this topic.
cant blame them, they get paid to make stuff that looks good.
Granted, 99.5% of population is basically braindead when it comes to ethics in engineering, including architects.
Having a house built soon. Glad that out contractor and architect are the same person.
@@kudukilla Uh... not sure you should be glad considering the OP's comment. The contractor was a check against the architect who wanted to compromise the engineering.
@@carbonsx3 in the story the problem was because the architect wasn’t on site, like our builder will be.
My blood boils everytime I have to deal with architects. For them it's always form before function. Who cares if a mechanical system or structure is compromised so long as the building looks good amirite?
As a concrete inspector and civil engineer I found the video very interesting. I find it unbelievable that the City could of approved of new planters at the pool deck without a structural analysis. Either it was installed without inspection or there were a lot of very negligent people involved in the remodel.
Yes do the load analysis but the couple tons of planter are a trivial addition for this beam system, given well made structure. The problem here is long term contact with water. Unprotected steel reinforced old mix concrete will corrode and fail in long term continuous contact. That roof deck didn’t drain. An earlier inspection on the building. now widely available pointed out water.
A bit of $$ in the right place and knowing certain people trumps engineering sense!
@@Nill757 well, no. many factors contributed together. long term contact with water is a problem, but shouldn't have lead to a catastrophic collapse of the whole tower. that's why inspectors noticed the problem but didn't condemn the building. if the structure was originally built with proper safety factors, proper rebar, and the extra load was not added, then the corroded rebar would be a problem but not an emergency. the fact that nobody noticed the bad original design OR the exacerbation of the bad design while adding additional load, are what lead to the catastrophic collapse of the whole tower. prematurely aging rebar would just mean work should be done to correct it, or the worst-case scenario where the pool/garage partially collapses but does not bring down the whole tower.
@@somedude-lc5dy Building Sinking due to being built on landfill over former water inlet certainly did not help. First day Engineer giving analysis I should have wrote down who where saying this going to be a large number of different failures certainly seams right.
they were only planters, what could go wrong?
Josh at 5:00 you said you could not find the planters in the 1979 drawings, I have the answer for you. I had mentioned in a few of my videos in July that the HOA had a contractor come in back in 1996 and added the extra planters, as well as the palm trees. I had put up a few videos showing this, as well as what stressors and latent cracks might have happened if they drove any heavy machinery on the pool deck to install these palm trees, and later they removed them in 2018. On the Surfiside records web site, you'll see the file 8777 COLLINS AVENUE - LANDSCAPING P#96-0403.PDF, that has a drawing that shows their proposed added planters, as well as the palm trees. This is also when all that extra sand and heavy pavers were added, which I feel slowed down drainage of rain off pool deck, and often left pooling that I showed in many real estate agent MLS photos of the pool...
Love your vids and giveaways sir. Keep up the great work!
It looks like they added insult to injury over the years!
I'll look into that. If the planters were added in '96 I'm curious to know if an engineer was hired to evaluate the deck for that weight.
Thanks, Jeff -- you and Josh make great videos and i watch you both.
When an HOA gets involved, nothing good comes out of it.
I’ve learned so much about structural design from your channel. I live in a high rise in Boston with serious structural maintenance issues similar to the ones which you have reviewed. I only rent so I’m moving but I did notify the local building inspector and I think I was able to take good informational photos due to some of the wisdom that you have imparted. Thank you sir!
Glad you are moving!
@@cherylhoskins1679 Yes and remember a Military and good restaurant rule, it does not mater that something you see wrong is unimportant for safety you assume if they let you see something wrong the things that are important for safety are wrong too.
The owner of the building is probably also glad you're moving.
@@RedRocket4000 yeah maybe if you see some unexpected planters added around a building you can assume the building itself is unsound. Or if my car was originally blue and I repaint it red, now the car is unsound. After all it's suspicious, right? But that's why we have engineers, to get beyond such random suspicions and actually understand whether it's sound or not. That's what I did not see in this or any other of their videos.
@@davidquinn9676 hahaha
Just wanted to add that the woman's garage walk through video has been an invaluable record for verifying the construction and determining where the failures took place.
I know, what a blessing
It has and I have spent many hours on the phone with her as well
Perhaps people should start doing video walkthroughs of all such sub-grade parking areas -- who knows when the next one might collapse and such evidence will be invaluable. These days anyone with a mobile phone can record a video quickly, cheaply and easily at minimal/no cost. Perhaps this is a new hobby people could do as a community service?
Which is kind of why security guards tend to take photos of much anything unusual or a potential problem. Part of the job description to take note of anything unusual or a potential hazard or problem.
I think often many repairmen may also take before and after photos, documenting their work.
Perhaps the photos will never be useful for much. But if "something happens" the photos could turn into valuable documentation or evidence.
@Yosef MacGruber I’m a Plumber/HVAC tech and I learned years ago to document EVERYTHING I do with photos. The first thing I do is take photos of everything from every angle, take snapshots whenever necessary throughout, and then take photos of everything from every angle again. I found you never know when all of a sudden you’re asked to recall details from a repair you did last month, 6 months, a year, two years ago.. I never delete photos and have 100,000+ saved on iCloud. It’s been invaluable to me, being able to pull up detailed photo documentation of all my past jobs, and especially when you have a vindictive customer trying to make false claims.
As a professional engineer, I appreciate the enormous amount of work you put into this thoughtful and thorough analysis. Combine that effort with the excellent editing and you end up with an outstanding summary of the current knowledge available on CTS. Thank you for all the work. This will help avoid future tragedies like this.
Me starting this video: "No way in hell am I watching 41 minutes of this"
Me finishing this video: "Wait I need more"
Me too.
Me too, as well 😎
I'm so glad that I keep hearing about Millenial's feelings. I thought this was about a building that fell but you clowns helped me realize; "No, this is about turning the subject around and making it all about you".
This was a good video
Too true 😛😛
Yet another fascinating presentation. Your presentation of your forensics gives me the sense that I understand what your are talking about! Wow - a natural and gifted explainer!!
oh why dont you marry it then?
@@666goats this is a 2nd grade comeback
@@ko9446 i think you're being too generous.
@@charlesstockford5913 I’m only in 3rd grade, it’s lol I got 😂
Truly enjoy listening to you.
Honestly, this video could have been double the length and I still would have watched it all.
I enjoy your explanations please keep it up.
I don’t know anything about reading design documents, blueprints, etc but I have been watching your videos from the beginning and have learned so much. Your presentation and explanations of what is a complex subject are informative, educational and understandable. Thank you for all you are doing. I think anyone watching your videos has started to familiarize themselves a little more with their surroundings and has certainly become aware that a crack that we see might have a lot more going on that we don’t see.
As an engineer I greatly appreciate the fairness and neutrality of your presentations on this, and the clarity with which you explain the issues (I'm electrical, not structural, so there''s a good deal that is not my field). This has been a really interesting series of videos and I look forward to seeing how close the final reports come to your analysis.
I found an interview with a family member who lost his mother and grandmother in this tragedy and he said something interesting that I have not heard anywhere else. He said that the night before the collapse his mother got woken up at 3am by some very strange and loud noises and she was not able to go back to sleep after that. He said that it’s stuck in his mind because never would he think that the building was going to collapse .
There certainly were lots of warning signs just no one thought collapse was a possible result.
Yes it was like 45 minutes from the big noise to collapse. Or something like that. If you asleep you might think it was a sleeping phase noise and not real. I wonder if anyone saw sources that pets were uneasy. I couldnt find any but saw comments saying that pets were uneasy and they were taken out saving the owner. But it might be a mith.
Everyone wants to blame it on structural defects yet this building had no steel beams or posts in it. It was all concrete with rebar. How many holes needed to be drilled and small explosives put in to make a few posts fail to cause a failure? How many holes were drilled and explosives used to fell the rest of the building? Now we have the Saudi's putting up a bid to buy it. The Saudi's owned four floors of the Las Vegas Hotel where 50 people dies at the concert and I heard it was an assassination attempt on the Prince's life as he was in the Tropicana in disguise.
@@timsteinkamp2245 98 innocent people lost their lives. Spreading misinformation is a slap in the face to them and the families. Have some decency and respect.
I worked with architects and engineers for 35 years. In general, the structural engineers were the least flexible and most conservative with designs, because they provided the parts of the building that made it stand up. I find it bizarre that the structural engineer made the changes you've shown without some kind of structural load compensation in the design.
Read up on the people involved, possible mob involvement and the Wild West nature of things at the time I'm a tad surprised there was a qualifies structural engineer involved at all but certainly in that environment only structural engineer's that were willing to break the rules in building things need apply.
@@RedRocket4000 really? That's fascinating. I do remember hearing that there was some mob activity in the area at that time.. I'm gonna check this out now.
@@RedRocket4000 You are entirely correct. At that time ( The Miami Vice era ), the Mafia needed a means of laundering large amounts from the booming Cocaine business. The Mafia turned to the construction business, hiring shady contractors and builders. They "cut corners" and constructed large, Glitzy, cheaply built ( under code ) buildings. ( Inspectors were paid off )… Later, to make these Condos more sellable, heavy marble flooring, tiling, granite countertops and heavier bathroom fixtures/ appliances.. Walls were removed to give a "more modern, open concept look ".. All of this created an added weight load (approximately that of 3 automobiles per condo ), to an already compromised building. The building codes were oddly "reduced" in 1972 and the early eighties ( Mafia and political intervention )...
@@RedRocket4000 I really don't care to "read up" on alleged Florida miscreants. I can only relate 35 years working for two of the world's largest engineering firms and knowing the conservative engineering approaches used for the projects I worked on. You couldn't buy your way into a design change that would cause potential liability and especially loss of reputation. This includes six projects done in Florida starting in 1992.
@@buckhorncortez, so you don't care about the politico-social potential root cause of problematic building design and construction in Miami-Dade in the era the building in question was designed and built? Cool beans. Thanks for letting us know.
Thank you. As a country, we need more people like you who use facts, science, math, engineering and peer-reviewed data and publications to determine solutions to difficult problems. The world today is full to the brim with misinformation, rumors, conspiracies, pseudo-science, hear-say, bigotry, and other clap-trap that gets in the way of intelligent analysis and decision. Yes, this is UA-cam and UA-cam itself is overrun with crap, but your channel is one that the viewers can trust to get the facts.
But da maths is now rayciss.
Isn't that the truth! I love facts! We need more truth tellers
Yes yes Ruthless!
@@chumpchange1846 Wrong, Buckwheat.
empty buzzwords by those backing an Orwellian system.
You’re a brilliant teacher to be able to explain that in a way that i can actually understand. Thank you.
Thank you. Means a lot.
@@BuildingIntegrity You explain things very well without talking down to people. Thank you
As a lay person with no background in engineering, I am thankful for this channel. As a Florida resident 20+ yrs mostly beach living, this collapse affected me on a personal level. You deserve an award for helping us understand.
"They tend to design to the minimum code..." As a draftsman, I've noticed this very often when I submit drawings and plans. Often times I, don't necessarily push for maximums, but typically avoid minimums because I like stronger stuff under my name, and my submitted drawings get changed to minimums all the time.
No one builds to high standards..no one would pay... would you?? But to stop building maintenance they got exactly what they deserved... done..
@@petero2693 Buildings that are over-engineered and built to very high standards are uncommon, but they do exist. Those are the ones which might survive for hundreds of years (if nobody decides to knock them down), and then people will look at how old those buildings are hundreds of years from now, and say "they don't build them like they used to"
The rule of thumb for engineers is to go around 25-50% above minimum. Forming steel rods ain't cheap... For a 3rd world Country. ;)
Thank you
That's why code enforcement should enforce proper regulations so that's a structural design of the building is not compromised. But all too often payoffs are made. To turn a blind eye.
Appreciate how you've kept these videos clear and concise, free from all the usual UA-camr talking head distractions, so that even us "normies" who've never taken a single engineering course can follow along. Your videos, along with Mike Bell's animations, have really helped clear the fog of understanding the seemingly inexplicable event of a modern residential building suddenly collapsing.
My professional experience is in engineering and building sets for stage shows, but my family experience is in commercial design and construction. And I found your analysis to be quite interesting and informative.
And it raised an issue I have encountered many times in my professional career: revisions. I've had many arguments with theater companies, asking for a revision only to have them balk when I tell them the consequences and time involved in examining how their proposed changes affect the structure where the changes were to be made. I point to my experience with the family business to my attentiveness on set construction that no set I have built has ever collapsed or allowed an actor to fall through it and injure themselves.
Thank you for your work and effort on examining, and reporting on, this collapse.
is never having a stage collapse or break through really the only thing that matters? anyone can build something absolutely fail safe and indestructible.. its building something that meets the needs and any foreseeable changes or forces without grossly over building it
need a stage? pour solid concrete down to bedrock, there job done. the estimate is 7million dollars and itll be done in 6 years..
@@AndrewBrowner , you don’t understand the comment upon which you are commenting.
The original poster, @Bert van Aalsburg, doesn’t build stages; he builds stage *sets,* which are by their nature temporary and only have a life that spans the length of a show’s production, which is usually several weeks but in some cases can last months or, in the rare case of a long-running Broadway hit, several years. There are also touring sets designed to be repeatedly set-up, taken down, transported and set back up again. It’s a rather niche design domain.
@@inkyguy i understand what he build, truly sorry i called them stages and not stage sets... my point isnt about stages or how he designs them at all, my point is that saying youve never had something break/collapse/fail doesnt make you a good engineer/designer in an of itself.. anyone can make something that will never fail, good engineers make something as good as it has to be in order to never fail but no more expensive than it needs to be, theres a safety factor built into this.. but theres certainly a point where youre going too far and just wasting money, time and effort "to be sure" rather than running the calculations and determining if the changes need to be made to accommodate the new use.. really you should have a pretty good idea where weight can be added and where it cant be without even looking at plans or picking up a calculator
@@AndrewBrowner It's not the only thing that matters, but it is a primary thing that matters. Weight stresses on a stage set are not as extreme as stresses on a four-story residential tower. And the accepted code authority is generally given to the judgement of IATSE, the technical stage hands' union.
And, since stage sets are meant to be disassembled at the end of a show's run, or to be packed into a truck for other performances in other locations, it cannot be built to the same degree of commercial buildings that are meant to remain in place for many years afterwards.
Whether you are being dismissive or snarky, in your response, do please be respectful. We may not all be building the same structures, but we are all building to insure the safety of those who are to occupy the structure. And that any revisions to the original plan must be vetted to ensure the changes do not compromise the original plan. Whether the plan is the set for "Spiderman: Turn off the Dark" or a 20-story office building.
@@AndrewBrowner I get you now. Yes, building it butch is not useful and is often wasteful. Often it's a matter of helping the client understand the why and how revisions need accessing to determine the best way to meld the changes into the plan.
Last minute construction changes are sometimes done without the full design team evaluating the change and the significance of a "simple" change isn't recognized. We all studied the Hyatt Regency collapse and you may be telling us about yet another story about a "simple change" with huge consequences. I'd be interested to know more about that 1980 change to this design. Was the original structural engineer the one who signed the 1980 print? As you point out, the design change may have also accelerated structural degradation as salt water, etc. weakened the structural elements. This was one of those "swiss cheese" type failures, when the elements lined up, people died. Your work is so important and your videos are lucid and have lessons for all of us who build and maintain the built environment. Thanks for your work.
In the digital world these changes can be quickly evaluated.
The sign off looked identical
My background is in software, but it's the same issue with changes. One of the problems with software is that the reason why something was done the way it was done gets lost. I highly doubt the person who did the original drawings was the person who signed them. It's the new guy straight out of college who does the grunt work in software. My bet is that the first person (probably more senior) who did the work with the stepdown had the beams in place for both the stepdown and the garage, but someone newer made the change to remove the stepdown and didn't understand that the beams served two purposes. If they didn't list removing the beams on the plans, the PE who signed the plans may not have noticed the beams were gone. The new guy might have had to work over Christmas holidays to get the new plans submitted in early January, when there was no one left in the office to ask questions.
@@OOpSjm The judgement of the structural engineer is still vital. In the Hyatt case, an engineer applied the wrong assumption. Yes, with digital models the ability to analyze changes is easier. We've interacted with a mathematical model of a seismically unsafe high rise to improve the constructability of an upgrade design however that exercise was guided by an experienced team of structural engineers and checked by peer review. BTW: They ultimately imploded the building and replaced it.... :-)
@@bbamboo3 I’m not familiar with “the Hyatt case”, would love more detail and if that is another building collapse, maybe Josh would tackle that situation in detail as well?
Hearing all of those "it was at 100% load" makes me wince so much. Especially when you're right by the ocean...
"Underground parking garage" only 400 feet from the beach makes me wince whenever I think about it too hard. You don't see basements in seaside buildings for a large number of extremely valid reasons.
and then you remove additional supports from these sections that dont have much wiggle room to begin with...
@@micaheiber1419 Built Against Costal Mountains the key here way better bedrock than the basically non existent bedrock here in Florida. You actually have ingenious and metamorphic rock there. Although due to Earthquakes The basements and parking garages are build with massive reinforcement. I've seen Japanese under building parking that looks like each car slot was actually a bunker for a military plane (thick concrete walls three side and roof) inside a larger bunker like the Germans had for their Subs in WWII. No columns wide concrete walls holding up thick concrete cross members. Other cases columns bu three times wider going into thick concrete cross sections not punching though them.
In this case the building build on filled in inlet there was water were this building was before. Main part of Florida basically floats on limestone and water mix. Main part of State been under water totally several times and is made up of former sea floor, coral reef and ancient beaches. I expect another time under water in the next century or so.
And these are barrier islands for the most part shifting sand bars basically that should never be build on in the first place over all but are subsidized by the suckers who live inland. Thus the above comment on never build basements on seaside building.
@@Darkkfated I never gave it much thought but in Florida where I am this normal. If you go downtown areas many buildings have basement garage. But hey NY city and London do it too so I don't think it is a problem.
In aviation, when we are handed the performance specs and limits for an aircraft, we are reminded that these are for a brand new aircraft, with new engines, flown by a manufacturer's test pilot, under ideal conditions. In other words, the best it will ever do and don't ever expect to get those numbers in the real world.
WOW, this analysis was absolutely perfect, everything explained in detail, no nonsense like many others "it fall because it was old", thank you for your work, much appreciated
Excellent analysis: this is precisely the StrucE critique of the As-Built that I was hoping for.
Thank you for investing your time to do this.
I'm not an engineer, but this was a top-notch presentation that was clear and easy to follow and understand.
I can’t believe how informative this video is. You absolutely need to be on the team that figures this out. Thank you for all of this information.
oh why dont you marry it then?
I am awarding my prize, the Gramma Linda Award to the most fascinating, best teaching channel on UA-cam!
How could an engineering firm remove massive beams and not re-do the calculations? It boggles the mind.
Blame it on the approving engineer, or the construction company / contractors, architect, etc. There's many points of contact from the initial blueprint to finished project. Judging by the irregularities between the 4 building docs where half of them are undated and the engineering company stamp is missing, there seems to be at least 1 party that acted in bad faith or criminally negligent
Checkout the the collapse of the Hyatt Regency Skywalk collapse in Kansas City in 1981, killing over 100 people and you will find it was due to Engineering negligence. Failure to Recheck the numbers on a simple change that proved catastrophic.
@@stevelopez372 Yeah that is one of the go to examples for ethics in engineering to this day.
@@killjoy1887 Australia has it's example also. In Melbourne, Victoria the West Gate Bridge was being built. The unjoined segment of road deck was being held by concrete blocks to correct a camber error. Finally an order came through to loosen some bolts, at which point the bridge snapped back and collapsed, with 35 killed, 18 injured. Six twisted fragments of the bridge can be found in the grounds of a local university who was asked to participate in the investigation the collapse. Its said to remind engineers of the consequences of their errors.
@@gavin9088 This type of thing is common in construction. Bad plans, incompetent or criminal contractors, corrupt Building Officials. The miracle is that this doesn't happen daily.
I would love to see if that sister building they build a few doors down has any of the same issues with the deck leaking and if it also had support beams that were not included under their planters.
_cough_ Shoring! RETRO-fit! _cough-cough_ Nothing to see here... moooove along.
Whomever is living in that sister building deserves what's coming to them... Common sense would be to move IMEDIATELY! I would even break a lease lol.
@@ricky4673 what if you own it with a mortgage?
@@ricky4673 , that's not a rational take. if your choices are: A) become homeless and bankrupt or B) rely on engineering firms to determine if there is risk of the same thing happening, rely on the engineers. there is no chance you can sell this condo now, so you either live there or you declare bankruptcy, which may put some people out on the street. it's a hard choice. eventually, you would hope that lawsuits or city programs will come through to take the burden off of you, but those things typically take a long time.
@@ricky4673 Why would the people living in the other building deserve what's coming to them? Some new resident deserves to die because they rented an apartment without doing a structural inspection first? Have you ever hired a company to do a structural inspection of an apartment you moved into? I don't understand that statement at all.
I had just looked at your channel two hours before you posted this hoping for another installment. Thanks for all the careful review and very clear explanation of your findings. Your channel is a treasure!
Thanks!
Josh. Excellent presentation. As a retired building contractor here in California I am amazed at the lack of rebar in these plans. Every subterranean parking we had ever done had much heavier steel, especially over the columns, and most all columns had drop-head column caps. This was probably for seismic purposes I'm guessing. Keep up the good work.
Typical lackluster zoning in florida in 70s. No review when big changes were done later. At least feds and state learn from these to adjust international code for future
I have seen drop head column caps in Ohio and Pennsylvania in multi-floor parking garages. One had pleasing rounded "horn" shape column tops. Others seem more like a thicker slab surrounding the columns, considering how wide they were.
@@WindTurbineSyndrome , building code, not zoning.
I see plenty of drop caps in Houston, Texas for much lower buildings. It’s shocking to not see this on this building.
Thank you, Josh. As always, you have articulated a plausible theory that even a jury would be able to understand. If I was still in the business of hiring experts and consultants, you’d be at the top of my list.
So here is the question: is the North tower built the same way? We've established that it doesn't have the same water problems, but did it use toothpick columns and exclude beams beneath planter boxes?
yeah probably being that it is newer is why it is still standing for now probably how long it stays standing is anyones guess it may fall down soon to as well
I'm betting the property value of the North tower has plummeted. Who would want to buy into that now?
Good questions... just as with the collapsed CT South, the drawings from CT North are public record, and available from Town of Surfside... if you want to go through their bureaucratic procedures to get them. There may be per-page copying costs.
@@MajorCaliber Engineer said it safe But they need to assume that safe for now not the future. Get more opinions and have two different expert teams rework all the plans.
North was not built on former water and did not sink into the earth for a decade also like South so North might have another ten years but I would not trust it past a year.
@@RedRocket4000 CT North is only 1 year newer than the collapsed sister CT South, not 10 years. The CT East *is* 10-12 years newer, but very different design and construction.
this is why we need people like you making these videos. None of this would be understandable to the general public if someone like you didnt post this. Thank you!
Brilliant. Simply brilliant. I hope the authorities investigating are watching this. And I hope other building plans are being similarly reviewed to prevent future disasters.
This has been known for weeks. If you listen to radio around Florida engineers have been interviewed and said from the beginning that there is A LOT of material missing. Plus the rumors have been consistent that this building was not built to code. I know some of you who been drinking Josh's cool aid will get mad, but he's he's been spinning wild theories to make more content to promote his UA-cam Channel. Sorry.
I feel like I should get CE credits for watching your videos
Seriously can we get this guy to do some PDH hours for us engineers
Seriously. I am a therapist by trade, but now I want to be an engineer. 😉
you know, a bunch of other youtubers post analysis on this topic. i ignore all of them and wait for your videos. i appreciate your deep analysis and through yet easy to understand explanations
Worked the urban planning side. The amount of shenanigans people do to get around bylaws (and the amount of bylaws waved as easements to developers) is ludicrous.
It's all "Government Red Tape we want to rip up" until no one will buy your buildings because they worry they will collapse.
Here in Australia, they privatised building inspectors and made the industry heavily self regulating. Unfortunately, the only way they can self regulate is if they build 10 buildings, then one of them almost (or does) fall over and they go bankrupt. They are removed from the market, but the last 10 buildings are garbage.
@@letsburn00
yep.. blame lies with neoliberal ideology and economy worship (the love of money above all).
To be fair, in the US, a lot of bylaws aren't on the books to protect people per se, but as legal ballast to get concessions from developers. Once this is the case, respect for all bylaws, not just the offending ones, go out the window.
@@hailexiao2770 There's a fine line between the right amount of regulation, and over-regulation for special interests. California is an example of the latter.
@@Dee-nonamnamrson8718 Exactly, and homeowners are the #1 special interest group screwing up California. If Republicans want any change of winning statewide office, this issue is their chance. But since the cult of homeownership is as strong, if not stronger, on the right as well as the left, the chances of them doing so are slim.
I'm not an engineer, but you make a really convincing argument in the analysis. Thanks for putting this together.
It is outstanding that you won't jump to conclusions but rather do some dilligent work. Other channels "found" the "cause" weeks ago. It is honorable that you won't let yourself be rushed by others that pump out the videos in a rather fast manner.
💯
Thank you. I also stopped watching other youtuber's videos on the collapse over a month ago, because I didn't find them particularly helpful and knew they couldn't have found the "cause" this early in the process. I do try and keep up on industry journal articles and video interviews with other engineering firms to see if their is anything I'm missing or if they are correlating my findings independently. This video was about 3 weeks in the making... most of that time spent doing due diligence research on the drawings and comparing them side-by-side (when I wasn't doing my day-to-day job). The reality is that a true initiating "cause" may never be known. Was it JUST corrosion and poor design? Was it a car that hit a column and kicked off the dominoes? We may never know for sure the trigger. When we reach a theory, it will be strongly supported by the physical evidence but I'm not aware of any scientific theory that is 100% certain. As I'm sure you know from your channel name, that's not how science works.
@@BuildingIntegrity maybe if Champlain security videos are recovered we will know more. I would hate to see Draconian measures imposed on all the buildings and residents in Florida just because 40 years ago an engineer removed beam a support structure in the parking garage. It may be more prudent to look for design deficiencies than have every one pulling 12 million dollar remediation. I bet not one remediation contract told the tower "you sure could use a beam underneath this 1st floor parking area and planters". I think that would be the low hanging fruit to prevent further loss
I love your programs! I stop what I am doing, sit down, and watch the whole show!
Me too Merry! I don't understand everything but love how Josh breaks it down so my non-engineering brain can somewhat comprehend it! Keep analyzing, Josh, & share with us please!!
Me too!!
I agree, and I like your first name 😉
@@merrywalsh2809 hey! I like yours too!
Thanks for all the excellent work you do.
Thanks for watching!
@@BuildingIntegrity You literally deserve a medal for all your hard work, for helping us understand in lay terms, and for your integrity. 🙏
I'm so happy that you guys are gaining subs so quickly. You're top shelf when it comes to teaching. Thank you Josh for all of your research and work on the Champlain towers. This was soooo revealing.
You're the best! Thanks for the kind words!
As an Eng in a different field, I really appreciate that you Did take the time to explain and build up to your findings. Very insightful and have a much better understanding what may have led to the collapse. Thank you!
Amazing analysis. You’ve clearly put enormous effort into this. An a non-engineer, I understood your explanation. Well done.
He knows how you feel. He's not an engineer either.
as a retired architect who specialised in construction, i am not surprised that USA also has 'building' problems, the aim of developers is to make money with less 'bother' (as they call it) and alas Local Authorities often do not have properly educated/experienced staff to scrupulously check everything....see our UK Cladding Scandal....should never have happened.....was my experience that the fellows on site were smarter than the suits on desks...
Finally, the waiting is over. Love this channel 👍😃
Thank you thank you!
Every time I get a notification on this channel, I clear the decks and watch. You are excellent! Thank you.
Thanks Merrill! Means a lot.
I just keep look and hoping there will be a new video. Thank you.
comforting that we're finally getting some genuine engineering analysis. An ancient dictum is that success may benefit our egos but knowledge comes from genuine understanding of our failures. The level of engineering analysis in this video - acknowledging that differing opinions will emerge - has to contribute to that end. Thank you
20:10 Regarding the pool deck being at 100% capacity, another source raised the issue of the palm trees. That is, driving a cherry picker across the pool deck to cut them down. I wonder if that could have greatly damaged the deck. Also, if a planter is, say 3x4x12, saturated soil would weigh around 8,000 pounds (water alone is just over 8,900 pounds).
There's also the core sample which I believe was 3' x 3' directly next to the pillar which is believed to have punched through first.
One cubic foot of water weighs 62.3 pounds. If it saturates the planter soil it will add a lot of weight!
My be misremembering, but notice the square planters that had the palm trees are not on the 79 or 80 design, and were just that much more added weight when built on top of those relatively tiny columns that were already overworked and built ot age prematurely.
Thank you for your succinct analysis of this building structure. As someone who has no knowledge of structural engineering even I understood the apparent error of omitting the transfer beams. All we can do is learn from our errors and pray for the souls and families of the dead, may they Rest In Peace, their struggles are over…
I'm hooked on your channel now. I've watched other past videos. You clearly explain to the layperson. Thanks Josh
I’ve been glued to your videos since I discovered your channel. I grew up in North Miami Beach. I temped at two Miami Beach condo conversions while at college in 1980, and enjoyed working with all the contractors. I wish someone encouraged me to become an engineer back then! It’s fascinating and important work. Your explanations are so well constructed to explain the basics, while not dumbing down the material (as far as I can tell).
@Jim Flanders Oh yes, I remember the Alexander. I worked at Belle Plaza on Belle Isle, and also the South Bay Club, originally called Plaza West. If I could go back right now to Miami, I’d be tempted to personally inspect those locations. 🙂
Practical Engineering did a shot out to you👍all of you engineers have prospective outlooks that combined will help make buildings safer in the future. My heart goes out to the people that passed in the building. 🙏❤
Just watched Practical Engineering video and missed the shot out
I watched every one of this series on the Seaside building collapse. I am a retired librarian and found it fascinating! Thank you for your research and time to share with the interested public.
Most chilling conclusion: 40:40 "I'm actually kind of surprised that it took forty years for this thing to collapse."
and then collapsed all at once. Amazing. In fact, impossible!
@@davidquinn9676fake news. at best what you mean is unlikely. You're mistaken.
@@davidquinn9676 lol imagine thinking your take is worth sharing, and it's this.
@@davidquinn9676 Did not collapse all at once it collapsed in stages and even the final collapse was not all at once.
@@davidquinn9676 You have a hypothesis ? Why would you say that? I think you have another theory, right? Tell us please.
Once again, a top notch presentation....Thank you for putting so much effort into these videos which help us understand how this building was designed.
Structural engineer here, learning a lot. Thank you.
I am not an engineer but I find your videos fascinating and very informative for non-intellectual as myself. Awesome job thanks for all this effort.
I live in a similarish building in Chicago (12 stories, 130 units, parking garage attached in part of the first three floors). When I look at the massive concrete columns and giant beams holding things up, it just completely blows my mind that someone could build something comparable with such puny columns and no beams.
Can you bring it all together in your next video and explain how and initiation of collapse here would propagate through the rest of the structure and how it meshes with the video evidence of the initial partial collapse in the garage? You have made a lot of good points throughout the series, but it would really help us less technically minded folks to see it all put together into one timeline. Thanks for the great work you are doing!
Yes I seen is explained before and that things can be done to insure the failure in that area effected nothing else. Basic a Patio failure should never have been able to make anything else fail and vise versa.
Been waiting for unsurprising ending, and I’m sure this is as close to saying “design flaw” as you will get (at least for now). I hope people are looking into other buildings designed by this firm and these specific engineers. Thanks for another excellent video, I know there is a lot of analysis invested in this and much work producing the video.
You explain everything so well, in simple terms we can understand, while still telling us about technical terms and rules. It's a damn shame someone didn't look at this revision closer and/or put a stop to that penthouse that was added on. So many ticking time bombs in this fated building that I agree it's surprising it took that long to fall. 😞
I think that even if someone would notice, they (?) would just brush it away. Pfff.... Peasant!
@@johna5874 Because they down-think on/of you. If you see a fault, they will never admit it. And brush you off... pfff. Peasant.
It would slow the building time down.
John A Woooooshhh
These videos have been incredibly insightful and well researched. I'm imaging most people here right now aren't engineers by training or by trade, and it's clear you've taken that into consideration in how it is you're explaining out all of these otherwise highly complex and technical concepts in laymen terms. It's recognized and greatly appreciated, and I wanted to make sure to call this out specifically because you've done an exceptional job in putting all of these together. So thank you for that.
Somebody's probably already mentioned this, but would it be wise to go check Champlain Towers North to see if the 21" beam was removed there too?
Right! I find myself wondering what kind of mindset those folks have right now since, I'm guessing, they're twins, right? I would prob be considering another living arrangement, regardless
@@carvalone3076 they would probably move, though I shudder to think that the best they will get away wjtb is a serious loss of capital as their apartment will simply not sell anymore.
@@hoihoi12250 It was rated ok for now but I'd get two more opinions including three different firms to go over the plans again. Probably find that even if it safe now it built close to failure and if safe now will not stay safe for long.
My god. Columns and slabs being loaded to 100% on dead load alone is insane. It seems like their ability to carry live load for 40 years before collapsing was probably just down to the materials being stronger than specified and nothing more. This seems like gross malpractice.
Then add planters, sand, pavers, water, and 6,000 moving vehicles and it's just a matter of time.
Exactly...I would like to see a discussion on this.
I expect there is a lot of safety margin in the 100% load factor to allow for variances in construction, variations in concrete within even a single load, and to allow for some degradation over time. But, a building which is over 100% loaded is gross malpractice. Allowing a landscaping permit to put materials on a building at 100% load already is another surprise. The live load of people on a concrete structure is negligible. Cars which rapidly start and stop 6000 lb loads is another matter when considering live loads. There is a reason for speed limits in parking garages beyond preventing collisions, and it's to limit live load impact on the building.
@@johnhaller5851 Oh, that makes me remember why I HATE parking garages. Again. They mark it 10 or 5mph, and then put it on a ridiculous slope to accommodate the lack of footprint...
@@johnhaller5851 If you need people to follow a speed limit in a parking lot were you can't legally ticket people, the building is unsafe. And as others stated you can't have support column they can run into thus way less parking as one Japanese Building I saw every side parking space in effect a bunker for the Car with support walls on every side not columns. I was thinking what this a former fighter plane bunker each spot protected by blast walls from another. (It was certainly not any plane bunkers from the war on the surface)
A++ Josh 👍 Thank you.
Prayers, condolences and love to everyone effected by this tragedy.
Once again - amazing analysis! LOVE this series. Thank you for spending the time to make sense of this tragedy and present it in a way that is easy to understand for non engineers. A++
All Josh does is talk engineering and numbers but I am still convinced that he's the most wholesome man on UA-cam. It's not like I have anything to go off of since he doesn't talk about anything deep or personal but I can just tell.
Everyone is saying the collapse was caused by multiple issues so every new theory is very important. Thanks for making these videos somewhat easy and interesting for us novices to try to follow along.
Yes, there is rarely a single explanation for a building collapse. New insights are not new theories, they are new factors in the overall analysis.
Interestingly, there are many details in the column/slab designs which would not have satisfied UK codes 40 years ago but the underlying issue seems to me to be that any building loaded to 100% of capacity by its "as built" dead weight leaves no room at all for construction defects, alterations, change of use, deterioration or subsidence.
Absolutely love your videos on this tragedy. Very interesting and informative and in plain English that doesn't require a engineering degree to understand. I can't imagine the amount of time that you put into creating these videos and that it's all available for free for anyone interested to watch. Thank you very much. I have learned a lot about this from your videos. I mentioned this in one of your past videos that if you aren't already, you should really consider being an engineering teacher. I could actually sit through one of your classes every day without falling asleep.
Wow. Your analysis is really interesting. I can completely see how this design would have initiated the collapse. I don't think I will ever go into a tall building with the same care free attitude that I have in the past.
I think that this video, in combination with your punching shear video, is the most complete, plausible, and well-elucidated explanation on UA-cam of why this building fell.
I have seen many youtubers go over these plans, but you are one of few who goes through them with a professional eye, using your knowledge and actual calculations/analysis, instead of "what I think". You actually know what you are talking about and what to pay attention to:)
Excellent research and presentation. I am an electrical engineer with considerable large project management experience. This is a good example how change orders cause problems when initiated in later phases of the project. They do not have to cause problems but there is a a tendency to treat them lightly in order to keep project schedule and to control engineering costs. I hope this tragedy helps project owners and the public understand this.
Thanks again for all your hard work. I thoroughly enjoy your videos and find them incredibly informative.
Many years ago, I remember a magazine article that suggested that engineering changes was one of the biggest hazards in design. This was based on observations going all the way back to the Romans. It looks like that same principle may have struck again.
I'm thinking last minute changes require going through all the calculations again, and that didn't happen. You would have to check everything else works with the last minute change. I have no mathematical ability whatsoever, but I sure wouldn't want to go without rechecking the original plans match the revision - that they still work. It sounds ridiculous that they wouldn't recheck. Should have delayed everything for that purpose. It's not like it's the paint color being changed.
The Hyatt Kansas City walkways collapse (1981) involved changes from original design. Probably what you are thinking about.
@@isveryrill1234567 Yes, it’s a failure to see the whole thing as a SYSTEM rather than discrete parts. That’s what he was saying about the secondary function of the beams I think - they may have been put in for the step down but they also played a role in the entire *system* of the building by directing forces along specific paths. Even ‘just’ adding an extra planter is changing the system because you’re putting a bunch of extra weight in one bit, which needs to be accounted for - if the part of the structure you put the planter on is already stressed due to the role it is playing in the system then it may not handle the extra stress even though the same sort of construction standing independently (I.e. unable to be stressed by other parts of a larger building) might be fine.
So changes need to be assessed systemically, not just locally.
When I heard for the first time they were designing the Space Shuttle around a pair of solid fuel rockets, my thought was "This will not end well!"
@@davidvoinier6008 LOL Same. Solid fuel and humans should not normally mix. But launching below the known temperature the units were rated to work it criminally bad as well. Damm things had a do not use below temperature rating and they launched substantially lower than that.
Love your work!!!
Thanks for taking the time to make this, and other, videos. I mainly design steel structures and take for granted the 'what you see is what you get' aspect of it. It's been years since my basic reinforced concrete class, so this was a nice refresher on those topics as well. Thanks, again.
These videos are like doing a crash course on engineering and I never thought I'd be interested but I'm goddamn addicted by now. Thank you so much for these detailed classes!
This.
Literal crash course.
Josh, you are very thorough and professional, and I think you found the perverbial "smoking gun" that ultimately caused this collapse. Being at 100% of dead load capacity when it was built made it a ticking time bomb, and I agree that it's amazing the thing lasted for 40 years. What's also amazing is that those columns were only 16" x 12", and they removed all of those beams that would have carried the loads to the columns. To me, it really looks as if they skimped on lots of things when they designed this death trap. It's very sad that so many innocents died because of some truly piss-poor building engineering back in 1979/80.
That makes me wonder if the other Champlain Towers are built with shoddy construction just as the Champlain Towers South was.
Also remember that it was all done by hand. No computer aided design system to flag that these beams had dual purposes. Architects are human and unfortunately their was a failure. It’s so easy to sit back and place blame and yes it seems justified. If only everyone could be perfect but as you can see our society is plummeting into a sick hell all because humans cut corners or made a calculation error. It amazes be how hateful we humans are these days. Pointing fingers and yet none of the owners of these places is also being made to realize they played a role too. Ignorance is bliss. Humans adding granite and tile and all kinds of heavy materials as decorations which also contributed to its failure which the architect would have never known about or expected. Tragedy absolute tragedy and loss of lives all boiled down to explanation to punish human error. It is all just sickening.
Empire State Building & others were built very well. There was several causes in this structure failure unfortunately. I wouldnt be surprised if pay offs & kick backs played a part causing people to overlook obvious problems.
@@jwmiles In reality, the tenants may have played a role too. They may have voted against a lot of maintenance and pressured it to be deferred until the 40-year recertification. We don't know. In their defense though, engineers often use technical jargon that doesn't properly communicate urgency. Saying "if these issues are not addressed, a risk of continued structural deterioration is significant" is not the same as, "if these issues are not addressed with urgency, the building could be in danger of collapse." Lay people think a "loss of structural integrity" means repairs to some cracks - not a building collapse.
Please do your own calculations on those beams and tell us if they would carry the loads to the columns. Hint- no they wouldn't.
You are so clear with your explanations and so intelligent. I surely hope you are in a position to be appreciated for this fine work.
An excellent and well presented analysis in an understandable fashion for us non-engineers. While a lot of us can look at something and think, "that doesn't look right (or substantial)" in a construction, you are very talented in showing the reasons behind something that doesn't look quite right. I have learned a lot from each of your video presentations.
It's a pretty good video for those of us who were engineers as well!
The columns not being in line been noticed way back as a "that looks funny" as in it might not be a problem but it needs a serious look at.
Or Holland American Cruse line that takes maintenance seriously and clearly follows the Military and good restaurant rule that if something visible is messed up or untidy who cares if it not important for safety it an indicator that the things that are important are also not maintained time to turn every thing upside down In a inspection.
I had noticed the constant drills and no missing detail on Holland America till one year during life boat drill I noticed the screws holding a bottom rail on the life boat were clearly not of the same metal and a good deal rusted away which can happen very fast when salt water and different metals mix as the electrical connector involved rusts one fast, still fast in fresh but not as fast).
Turned out that was the worst looking life boats but all showed it when I looked. But within 6 days every single screw on the life boats were replaced they had noticed too reassuring me they on the job. Probably the life boats had been reworked recently and because that form of rusting can be super fast they noticed it and ordered new screws out as fast as possible out to what ever non US port they got them at probably not cheap shipping and then the crew slammed in the new screws in a few days. I don't think the bottom rails directly effect the ability of the boats to float the rails just protect the bottom of the boats when launched and recovered.
And Holland America they have to recover life boats as they regularly launch a few probably in rotation along with a life raft or two for the crews assigned to them to practice using them at a lot of ports when visiting.
On board in visiting ports places it can be a tad annoying all the emergency drills they running with alerts almost every day. But I don't mind much as drill, drill, drill, drill is how you make a good crew who acts in emergencies without even thinking of what they have to do.
I do like that Carnival runs each Cruse line it owns as a independent business. You would never be able to guess on Holland America it was not still a Dutch ran company. Ship Officers almost all trained in Holland, easy noticed by the constant good looking blond twenty something junior officers male and female best spotted in lifeboat drills. Clearly following the military system Officers right out of Holland's Marine Academy start commanding from day one no matter how many years a non officer been onboard. (although just like 2nd Lt in Army/Air force or Ensigns in Navy they all told to listen to experienced crew with higher crew rank) No signs anywhere on web site or materials that Carnival owns them and there are NO combined promotions.
This totally separate devisions system I learned in the 80's the only constant thing in that system normally is accounting systems so head office can be sure of financial data otherwise head office only gets involved to replace a head CEO of subsidiary if performance is bad but they try to avoid telling the CEO of any subsidiary what to do.
genuine engineering analysis, im a MECH. ENGINEER thumbs up good breakdown
I completely agree. Clearly explained and captivating. I'm an EE and had the usual year of ME courses (Statics, Dynamics and Mech of Materials) required for all engineering disciplines/students. Those courses that I had years ago weren't necessary because Josh did such a good job explaining, but it helped in captivating me because I had enough background to follow each point with my head nodding through the entire video. Two thumbs up Josh!
Thanks for breaking down a really complex topic. You did a great job. Some attorney is probably going to hire you to break this down to a jury.
I appreciate that!
I think you nailed the root cause of failure here sir. 12" X 16" concrete columns supporting cars with 1000's of pounds of planters on them to boot? 39:25. Great analysis. Very thorough.
I think you could be right Glenn Davis. I would like to know if there is a reason why an incipient, creeping failure in this area could have caused popping noises or deformation in the part of the building that had the unit 11's....including that unit on the ground floor.
Cars... yes that's another issue. My sense is that in 1979, when this building was being designed, the cars that people drove weren't the monstrous SUVs that people often drive to day. Are current building codes and 40-year inspections of older buildings taking that into account?
@@Inkling777 cars and SUV are actually much lighter now than they were back then! Believe it or not. Everything now is made out of plastic and tin. Back then everything was solid steel, body on frame designs. Much heavier!
@@All-Miles-Matter You're mistaken.
Let's use a 1978 oldsmobile cutlass supreme since that was one of the most popular cars being sold. Curb weight is around 3300lb. This is also in the middle of the range of the 2018 Toyota Camry. Larger cars? How about a 1982 Ford Crown Vic; 3600lb. Modern counterpart? 2019 Ford Taurus weighs around 4100lb, give or take 200lb for options. 2019 Ford Explorer, popular choice? 4400-4900lb. How about that swanky guy with the purple dodge challenger from 2018? That car weighs 3900-4400lb. A modern challenger weighs the same as a 1978 Cadillac Fleetwood Brougham.
Old cars were larger and made of steel, yes. They also had a LOT more dead space... air. Modern cars cram structure, equipment, options, and all manner of things into every possible nook and cranny not intended for passenger space. Ever see someone work on an old car and stand between the core support and the engine? That space weighs nothing.
If that challenger didn't have all the aluminum suspension components and lightweight materials it does, it would probably outweigh a Lincoln Mark IV. Even a frickin' Ford Focus from the last couple years is 3200lb... the 1979 Mustang came out at 2550lb, just a couple golf bags heavier than a brand new Miata.
@@bitey-facepuppyguy2038 From Engineering forum the Pool Deck should have been designed so that anything that happened to it did not effect the rest of the building at all. In layman terms I thing that means breakaways and things like the pool deck slab not connected to any slab under the building as part of that. A rubber gasket or something filling the crack between them to help junk and people losing stuff in the crack.
You are a gifted teacher!
I think you have found the 'smoking gun'!
Your professional analysis and knowledge of structural engineering has resulted in videos (on this topic) that outclass others by a wide margin.
IKR. I have recommended this excellent channel to many others.
I remember about 25 years ago, when I was doing some of my first project work on commercial construction sites. What I was doing was the kind of video systems you find in a sports bar. Specifically, these were mostly BW3's. Most of them were in either end/corner units at higher end strip malls, or some kind of stand-alone, so other than just a few locations, like Chicago, we weren't dealing with multi-floor structures.
So I would get there after the shell was closed in, and I would do the wiring, make sure blocking & reinforcement went into the walls where TV's were going to get mounted, and build the ceiling mounts for the projectors.
Without exception, I would run into problems with multiple objects specified to be in the same location. Typically HVAC ducting, Sprinkler system piping (and sometimes a sprinkler head), and my projectors.
With ONE exception, which if I recall correctly was at Kings Island near Cincinnati, Ohio; I couldn't get a straight answer from any of the trades about what was happening that day or that week. Not because they were being difficult either, it was because they didn't know. And I did a LOT of these system installations. The one exception was a site super who ran the tightest operation I've ever seen. HE could tell you EXACTLY what was happening, off the top of his head.
This period in my career was when I learned how to read prints, because I had to. By the time I came in to do my work, we were about a week away from the soft open and there was NO buffer time left.
So the problems that I saw way back then, which is still going on today:
1. Too much stuff wasn't on the print. AT ALL. It was just taken for granted that it was part of the finish work, not the "real" construction, and it didn't matter.
2. People read the prints in two dimensions while building in three.
3. Nobody talked to anyone else outside of their individual crew. Nobody knew what anyone else was doing, when they were doing it or how they were planning to get it done. This was a total lack of a communications plan so that everyone knew what the big picture was, and every trade was siloed. My opinion...? This was down to a lack of a site superintendent, who was actually ON SITE. Having a G.C. does you no good if there isn't a conductor on site to lead the orchestra.
I was looking at those planters at about the 40 minute mark and I did a visual guesstimation of how much volume the encompassed, concrete and dirt included. Based on my SWAG (scientific wild-assed guess), I'd say I'm looking at 36,000 pounds of concentrated static load right next to probably 30,000 pounds of static load just based on the cars I can see. A load which would have been dynamic on a regular basis.
I'm not saying that the planters caused the collapse, I'm asking with what is admittedly hindsight; was there any communication between the architect/engineer and the builders? Any Change Management system at all?
A guy I used to know liked to say; "Any idiot can build a bridge that will last 1,000 years. It takes real skill and engineering to build one that will last 50 years."
He would probably agree that if you build something with no excess capacity, somebody fucked up.
I like that joke, keeping that one.
Very professional presentation! For laymen it was completely descriptive as to the Surfside Condo fails in construction. (Due the removal of load bearing essential beams eliminated between 79 and 80 revisions.) Add the planters, accident waiting to happen! The heat and cooling of materials was interesting to learn about. Then add the salty, sandy site influencing stability.
@@markonw6661 Thank you Mark, I am always interested in learning something new.
AH YES! A 41 MINUTE VIDEO!
I always watch these at 2X speed.
Good video.
The 6" overlap on the bottom bars actually meets the code requirement for temperature/shrinkage steel. The reason is that you have top steel in the same location that is in excess of the minimum splice length. This is a common detail. However, I would ordinarily just note the bottom mat to lap at column lines and not dimension the lap at the column.
It is well worthwhile to mention that the design load for the cars is only 40psf and 100psf for the patio assembly load. Nowadays, in most codes the parking load is 50psf so it is a little bit different but not that significantly. The 100psf just isn't for people load, it is for maintenance equipment on the ground floor deck. People are generally heavier than cars on a per square foot basis. It is not intuitive but a heavy pick up is about 35psf (this is strictly over the area of the vehicle but it is even less when you consider the additional space around the vehicle) and a crowd is about 45psf. It there is music, with the impact load, you can get up to 100psf or even more. A braking or accelerating car does not add vertical load but it does re distribute the vertical load to the front and back tires respectively. The added topping/pavers applies more total load to the columns than the cars.
It is worth noting that the corroded steel substantially reduced the punching shear capacity. There appears to be missing steel at the pour joint as well.
It is important to note that integrity steel is now required at columns in flat slabs and was not required in the 1970s and early 80s. This is additional bottom steel at the column. The intent is to still have catenary resistance if the top steel fails or you have a punching shear failure. It is a second line of defense. Although the top steel is sized for bending, it is critical to the punching shear resistance of the slab. Without top steel, the punching resistance is essentially eliminated.
All correct and as pointed out on Engineering Forum I'm reading the Patio Deck should not have been connected to the building with some way if it failed it did not effect the rest of the building. These separations of areas is often critical and when ever possible a failure in one thing should not cascade into other things.
@@RedRocket4000 Designers should try to design the structure so that you won't get a cascading failure but that is a lot easier said than done. I don't think it is possible to completely alleviate a progressive collapse.
An expansion joint is actually not a great idea. They are notorious for leaking which can cause a failure of columns, a bending or shear failure of the joint which could also cause a cascading failure of the building. Having the ground floor run through is a very common approach. Sometimes when you try to solve one problem, you create another. Don't forget that there were multiple issues with the pool deck slab. If there was just one thing wrong with one joint, you won't likely get a cascading collapse.
@@yodaiam1000 Were the designer and structural engineer qualified?
@@ffxbellini They were legally qualified. You have to be to sign, seal and submit drawings for permit. You need to a professional engineer or architect to seal the drawings.
However, there have been cases where a mechanical engineer will seal structural drawings. They may think they know more than do. This is legal but they may have a misconstrued impression of their own knowledge and abilities.
So legally qualified doesn't mean practically qualified or able. An architect can also seal structural draws but may know little about structural issues.
Some jurisdiction are now requiring an S.E. or Struct. Eng. (depending on where you live) to seal structural drawings but this is a more recent development and is still not a common requirement.
@@yodaiam1000 You are absolutely right about the six-inch lap over the columns. That was standard in the late 70s and early 80s. It’s also true that the top steel over the columns, likely of greater cross-sectional area than the bottom steel, would have satisfied the temperature steel requirement, and, moreover, would have been in the correct plane for limiting the crack width of any temperature, or shrinkage, cracking, in combination with the tendency for cracks to develop due to flexural tension. Today those splices would be for full development in the interest of preventing a full collapse if a single column were lost due to, say, impact due to a collision, or an explosion.
Wonderfully clear and concise explanations with no waffle. Everything science-based and grounded in reality. Cheers, Josh. You're doing good work.
JOSH - Thank you for this detailed analysis. We should hope that your analyses will find their way into textbooks on this subject. ♥
FANTASTIC!!! I have followed you all the way through your analysis. While I completely understand and agree I could never explain the “deep details” of the pool area. I said I wonder how it made it forty years and factor in the building was settling 2.9 inches each year. Then you mentioned the forty years and that let me know I was understanding your analysis. YOU ARE A WONDERFUL TEACHER. I’m 77 years old and I was able to comprehend everything. The person that wanted the beams removed messed the whole thing up. The architect should have put the brakes on it right there. Forty years is amazing. Thank you very much.
Good analysis again. In regard to temperatures steel, I think the engineer meant to extend each bottom #4 bar over the columns as a minimum, not as a lap. However, as you pointed, this does not work for temperature steel. Catching the removed beams bit is huge. I can hardly believe the engineer would do that. Good stuff thank you for taking the time to do this!
I’ve got so much out of this series of videos. I’ve learned so much. You have taken the stress of a tragedy with no answers and given us understanding and rational explanation for many things. Understanding helps us cope with stress. So not only are you a fantastic teacher, you helped to stop me fixating on the unknown and stressing over it.
Why did the third part of the collapse, the last bit to fall, appear to twist a bit and then right itself before it started to go down?
He covered that in his video about Sheering
I wish you could inspect every building that goes up. Seriously, yikes.
@Ben Dover There is no need of AI. Modern CAD programs already do these calculations and warn you about problems. At the end of the day, you don't need intelligence, just a lot of math, and computers are great at it.
@@DrBernon A good session with a finite element analysis suite would have given the designers a hell of a shock... nice pretty graphics with lots of red, purple, black.....
@@DrBernon CAD all you want, but it has absolutely NOTHING to do with anything being PHYSICALLY BUILT correctly. Site-Engineer who actually knows what they are really looking at are the key.
@@flipnotrab But usually the problems are in the design the workers follow, like in this case. Someone drew the design without the beams, and sent that design to the construction workers. With modern tools, the program would have warned the architects they made a mistake.
Also, a site-engineer will make sure the design the architect sent is followed, nothing more. Unless the mistake is glaringly obvious, it is far too easy to trust the designer did their job correctly.
@@flipnotrab Also... the design the architect forward to the construction company has absolutely everything to do with the things that will be physically built. With a construction as big as this, everything has to be well-designed. You can't make something half assed and then improvise during construction. So construction workers must follow the design that should have gone through a bunch of revisions and analysis.
This was fascinating to watch. Lots of hard work put into this analysis, thanks for sharing it with us.