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The residential building is 360 ft (110 m) with 32 floors. [4] The building was under construction when, on March 15, 2008, the luffing-jib tower crane used to construct the skyscraper snapped off and fell, killing seven people in what Mayor Michael Bloomberg called the worst construction accident in New York City's recent history. [3]
Crane 2 dead, 1 injured 2023 2023 New York City parking garage collapse: New York City, United States: Parking garage 1 dead, 5 injured 2023 Interstate 95 bridge collapse: Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States: Highway overpass 1 dead 2023 Davenport apartment collapse: Davenport, Iowa, United States: Apartment building 3 dead, 1 injured [76 ...
In August 2006, it was rumored that Google would be leasing most of the building's office space. [1] The building was scheduled for completion in October 2007, but was delayed when a fixed tower crane at the site collapsed in November 2006, killing one person in a neighboring apartment building. [5] In June 2007, Expedia announced that it would ...
Not the first crane accident for city, or equipment owner. 08:45, AP. The crane is owned by the New York Crane & Equipment Corp., one of the city’s most widely used crane providers, officials said.
A construction crane caught fire and partially collapsed in the heart of Manhattan on Wednesday morning, sending commuters fleeing for their lives as rubble rained down onto the streets below ...
The crane was being used to construct a luxury high-rise 46-story building — the tallest skyscraper in St. Petersburg — and couldn’t handle the wrath of the storm’s winds when it fell late ...
In March, CIM filed plans for the full building, revealing its 82-story, 1,397-foot (426 m) height. [86] The New York City Department of Buildings issued the construction permit two months later. [87] By September 2012, the building's concrete foundation had been completed [88] and the tower crane had been installed. [89]
The collapsed construction crane lying on the Tampa Bay Times building. Damage to the northeastern corner of 490 First Ave S. On October 9, 2024, a construction crane of 400 Central collapsed during Hurricane Milton, causing extensive structural damage to several floors of the adjacent 490 First Ave S, more commonly known as the Tampa Bay Times building.