NYC garage collapse likely caused by too many cars on top floor
Preliminary FDNY reports said Wednesday that the deadly collapse of a Financial District parking garage was likely caused by the building’s age and the number of cars on its top deck — as the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office opened a probe into the disaster.
Photos from the scene show numerous vehicles, many of them bulky SUVs, jammed together on the roof of the fallen structure — which left the building’s manager, Willis Moore, dead and five others hurt Tuesday afternoon.
“There’s over 50 cars on the roof,” Mayor Eric Adams said at a press conference Wednesday.
“The building is not structurally sound, you think about hazardous materials that are in the garage, right gas tanks, fluids, further complicated by the fact that there are possibly some electric vehicles in that garage,” he added, noting the ongoing danger to investigators.
An internal memo from the FDNY said the working theory behind the cause of the disaster was that the three-story garage likely crumbled under the weight of the many vehicles on the roof.
The structure’s advanced age — it was originally built during the Coolidge administration in 1925 — also likely contributed, the memo said.
The office of Manhattan DA Alvin Bragg said Wednesday that they will probe the cause of the collapse, but did not give any details about if any criminality is suspected.
Meanwhile, the fire department on Wednesday was trying to remove the cars still trapped inside so it could demolish the pancaked deck. A massive backhoe with a clam bucket tore into building’s brick-and-mortar flanks Wednesday morning, hurling a cloud of dust and debris into the city streets.
Firefighters also have to remove the deceased man, who remains inside.
“We are unable to get to the victim,” one fire official said, blaming the building’s instability. “It’s going to be a prolonged operation over several days.
Fire officials are planning to carry out a controlled demolition on Thursday.
Zach Iscol, the commissioner of the city’s emergency management office, added that it was an “incredibly complex operation.”
The Ann Street garage caved in at about 4:10 p.m., swallowing dozens of cars and sending slabs of concrete plummeting from the fourth floor into the cellar.
Shocking footage from the scene showed multiple cars on top of the crushed roof.
Four of the five people injured were taken to the hospital. All of them had been working inside when the building collapsed.
The building was not under construction, although there were active permits.
It had also been cited for several violations dating back to 2003, many of which were related to issues with its concrete construction.