bradw1128 (Civil/Environmental) 2 Jul 21 18:10 said:
I would assume an accident. People drive drunk. Elderly drivers get confused and hit the wrong pedal. People get their foot stuck. In the middle of the night in the dark especially, none of those things alone would be surprising.
Agreed.
You have more faith in the system than I do but I hope they haven't overlooked anything.
aggualaqisaaq (Nuclear) 3 Jul 21 03:26 said:
One of the round objects is the marquee on the vehicle gate. The other roundish object down in the debris field is possibly the patio furniture from 111. It’s hard to see but the pedestrian gate for the terrace of 111 appears to be just inside the right arc.
The roundish object is likely an object in front of the vehicle. The reason I suspect a pickup truck is the square box that abuts the "broken column" (if that's what it is). The roundish object could be the wheel well or not.
What is missing in the frame grab is the column at the back of stall 27 which is why I pose the hypothesis that the two concrete peices bent over the back of the vehicle are the remains of that column.
Additionally, if the slab dropped into the parkade, I would expect a notable depth of debris on the parkade floor but I don't see that.
Fair game on calling whether the vehicle is parked sqaure in the stall or not. At any rate, I hope it is useful to post my suggestion as to what the image shows and its positioning beneath the pool slab/building footprint. I didn't expect to get that much out of this little project. I only did one frame and perhaps other frames can lend more clarity but of the ten frames that I glanced at, this one seemed to offer the most clarity.
aggualaqisaaq (Nuclear) 3 Jul 21 03:26 said:
A chilling animation of what likely happened, and worse. The animation is likely predicated on sound (but marginal) column caps. From the images of the actual collapse, the column caps or what was left of them (after corrosion) were minimally provisioned and gave up without a fight, ergo, after the first column or grid line gave out, the remaining slab came down as one piece.