@Nukeman
I have respect for others work, just no respect for shoddy work. Hard concept to grab, but there was a lot of "good enough" done on this building to be as cheap as possible. I used to joke a lot at work about stuff being good enough you could throw it off the roof and it'd survive. Yeah, you know what, a co-worker's rails actually fucking survived that fall. I gave him props.
Maybe I worked with these guys in the past.
If anyone in SoFla knows a loud mouth drunken POS drunk who wears penny loafers to job sites while screaming about tits and ass, you know this isn't the only cooling tower. The aluminum ones this dude did on that Target have glued on bolt heads.
The work on the W side, as well as the permitting and plans there, hell of a lot different than the ocean side. The town only seemed concerned with turtle lights on the beach side, but making the street side beautiful and correct.
Sorry, but even the welds were not done to the new engineers callouts. Clear as day in the photos from Morabito. So yeah, I'm gunna knock what would have been a fail if a CWI would have inspected the weldment. If we start allowing bullshit to slide, we're going to start seeing more issues with structures. When are people going to have the balls to stand up, put their fist down, and demand it be done right?
And yeah, you're right, you could power a bank of tig machines up there. These days inverter machines are so nice I can get 200A at my torch out of a 115v wall socket. You're not dragging a tig up there though for that job. There was also no crane, so that's a no on hoisting the Trailblazer. You're not dragging leads 12 stories up either and expexting to be able to weld. A small AC/DC 220v transformer power soure was carried up.
I got my first Dynasty 200DX around this time they came out. Aint no way I'm dragging that to a roof in the FL rain reason.
BTW, where in any of their plans for the beam replacement did it call for supporting the upper beam that was being supported by the steel beam, with a lower beam on top that was resting on the slab? I haven't found that in any drawing, permit, nothing so far.
There seems to be 2 crews that did a few jobs on this site, and did it very poorly. Even reading the entirety of the filed reports and inspections, the work was knowing done incorrect, but passed off by the FI, SI, and town building inspector. And this was concrete restoration work on the roof, columns, balcony, interior slabs, AND POOL DECK. Hell, even if the pool deck did fail first, and the building really did just crumble and fall, which is a possibility that I am fucking terrified of, so what if I'm chasing crazy, ignore it, focus on the very damning evidence of shoddy work that was done to the support structure of this building by these crews. Poor maintenance indeed, but not by the condo board as I've seen suggested by a few.
I'll keep chasing my tail in lala land until my FOIA on the images from the above mentioned work is handed over. Sadly at this point I think those pictures may be gone.
@Santos81
Blurrier than the TiKTok video, lol. Yeah I guess that's what it is. I suspect you've seen the full videos as I think you've hinted at in the past so no reason to doubt what you've seen. Scratching that off the list.
Have newer models begun to take into account the rebar replacement, or lack of, as well as delaminated sections of full or half depth slab replacements?
BTW you still got those flow surveys? Was interested in seeing that.
@Waross
Until then, I had never seen spots like that, and as you can recall, I highly suspected they were NOT patches. We don't see those patterns on the tops of slabs or the side of walls in pre-cast structure from the foundry's that have been involved, so sorry I've never seen them before. For the last 15 years or so all I've seen if OSB for wood forms. I do my best to avoid wood and have no shame in admitting I know not a damn thing about it. I even asked our wood shop guy, and he's never seen that, and he's been working with wood since before Jesus; round, oval, and the occasional square is all he's ever seen until I showed him that. Learn something new every day.
Also no, this was a varied age condo. The Avg age likely being somewhere in the 40's.
@Spalso,
To add to that, could we let out of state construction firms build everything too?
I've done 3 month stints at timeswith a certain Texas company who's been doing a lot of work in the below Orlando area for the last dozen or so years. It is a whole other world of proper that I just don't see with Florida based companies.
@Nessman
Planter drains were upgraded and waterproofing was replaced. Maintenance was done. Crews just neglected to do the job correctly as can be seen from the odd layering in places.
@MaudSTL
The FCP had a silence feature for certain alarms to be programmed in during certain hours. I need to read the manual for it again but I believe you could even program the system to only flash the fire lights but not trigger the buzzer even in the event a fire handle (jefferson alarm) were pulled. There's no indication that this was ever programmed to be silenced, but another possibility in the "why were there no alarms" until after.