Seppe
Structural
- Mar 8, 2016
- 53
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Demented said:This unit appears it does have evidence of failure. That floor aint right. Door gaps are not even horizontally but are vertically. Cracking evident along single rows of tile. Sliding glass door is sunken in.
My preconceptions are that tension cables or supporting rebar were damaged in core drilling (related to railing installs, not to concrete testing), as well as heavy rainfall of 2.88" the days leading up to the collapse causing the deck that needed to be replaced back in 2018 to fall below, causing a progressive failure taking the building down because the deck and building were holding hands basically. I could be wrong.Retrograde said:None of those photos you posted show any indication whatsoever of failure. You are simply reading things into the photos that are not there to support your preconceptions.
IRstuff said:[/#511 was heavily remodeled, since they completely removed the wall between the kitchen and the multiuse area. If the contractor was sloppy, the floor cracks in the kitchen could simply be from the lack of proper floor prep.]
What is concerning about all the removing of a wall like kitchen area, is that takes a distributed load and converts it into two point loads.
Oops: I am ass_u_ming again that headers were installed where walls removed. Based upon the quality of work, and lack of consideration for structure with all the alterations, it is more likely that no header was installed where walls removed.....
Thus constantly changing load paths from possibly under nourished slab, as walls are removed or added in individual condo's with no consideration of how that affects the structure below or above a particular stack of units.....
Thermopile said:What is concerning about all the removing of a wall like kitchen area, is that takes a distributed load and converts it into two point loads.