At least one dead, 5 injured in Manhattan parking structure collapse
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[April 19, 2023]
By Natasha Ribeiro and Tyler Clifford
NEW YORK (Reuters) -A four-story parking facility collapsed in New York
City's lower Manhattan near Pace University and the New York Stock
Exchange on Tuesday, killing at least one worker and injuring five
others who were inside the structure, authorities said.
Emergency personnel using robotic devices after firefighters were pulled
back from the fallen structure due to unstable conditions checked the
site for any further casualties, but officials said they believed all
victims had been accounted for.
No foul play was suspected.
"We have no reason to believe that this was anything other than a
structural collapse," City Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell told
reporters.
Reuters video footage from the scene, in Manhattan's financial district
blocks from the World Trade Center and New York Stock Exchange, showed a
rescue operation getting underway and multiple cars stacked on top of
one another amid crumpled slabs of concrete.
One person was pronounced dead on the scene, four more were taken to
area hospitals for injuries and a sixth individual who was hurt declined
medical treatment, said John Esposito, chief of fire operations for the
New York City Fire Department.
He described all six as workers who were in the parking structure when
it collapsed.
"This was an extremely dangerous situation for our firefighters," he
told a late-afternoon news briefing. Esposito said firefighters ordered
out of the structure had still been inside conducting searches as "the
building was continuing to collapse."
Robot devices were then deployed, he said, marking the first time city
firefighters had flown a drone aircraft into a fallen building to
conduct a search.
Pace University, a private college campus whose students, faculty and
staff use the parking structure, was evacuated as a precaution,
authorities said.
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Cars are seen piled up after the
collapse of a parking garage in the Manhattan borough of New York
City, U.S., April 18, 2023. REUTERS/Brendan McDermid
"This building is completely unstable," New York City Mayor Eric
Adams told reporters.
The New York City Department of Buildings' online records showed
that the structure, at the site of the collapse had been cited for
45 violations, including 25 since 2003, many related to its
elevators.
One 2003 filing noted that "ceiling slab cracks exist" as well as
"defective concrete with exposed rear cracks." It said an $800
penalty had been paid for the violation.
Eyewitnesses said the collapse was swift and without warning.
"It all happened so fast," said Thai Nguyen, 35, who lives in
Chinatown and is a manager of the nearby Kollective Klub. "Our store
is two buildings from the parking garage, and we also have a hotel
next to us. People ran inside asking if they could take refuge
inside our store."
Sandy Imhoff, 78, who lives in an adjacent apartment on the same
street, said she fled her home with her two cats when her building
began to shudder from the force of the collapse.
"My building was shaking. I only had time to grab my dog and leave
the building," Imhoff said. "I'm really worried about my cats. But
at least everyone in my building was able to evacuate. It's so
unreal."
(Reporting by Tyler Clifford and Natasha Ribeiro in New York;
Additional reporting by Kanishka Singh and Jasper Ward in
Washington; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Josie Kao)
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