I'm going to point something out here.
a) there seems to be an "it's a facade" presumption going around in New York City. Not based on anything, mind, the engineers are just presuming this without any basis. This will cause problems. Particularly when a load-bearing wall (cough, obvious now from the wood studs, cough) is presumed to be a "facade".
b) Even a facade can kill, in fact, it frankly OFTEN does. Let's remember the building that killed Erica Tishman had a "facade" problem that killed her. So yea, a facade condition CAN be the same as an unsafe building. That's how people get killed by unsafe buildings, when things fall on them. (I'm looking at you Neil Gorsuch, freezing to death is a life-safety issue). At least at one point, blaming the victim was the strategy du jour. Erica, as an Architect, should have known.....
this is a reskinned version of "what was she wearing." Reprehensible. Columbus, Ohio has a facade ordinance because a city councilman was killed by falling building debris from a disintegrated facade as well. (OK, I guess Ben Espy survived, I wasn't there at the time.
c) let's also remember that somewhere in the Tishman sequence, the building owner sued and got the department of building inspections to stop "harrassing" them to address a life-safety issue, courtesy of a judge, so the fines for failing to do anything besides scaffolding stopped.
(Correct me if I'm wrong on that one, but that's what I remember finding out, but it wasn't widely reported.)
There's a lot of ethical language about when your judgement as a professional engineer is being overridden by non engineers, and yet. Now, that doesn't quite seem to be the case in this particular one, but even so. I wanted to mention it.
(I'll skip over the part where most of this facade stuff can be done by either a licensed architect or a structural engineer. The two are not equivalent.)