-
Day six of search and rescue in Surfside and Miami-Dade has identified new buildings with overdue concerns that need to be addressed.
-
About a block from the Surfside beachfront condominium tower that collapsed sits its sister building. It was erected a year later by the same company, using the same materials and a similar design.
-
Law enforcement in Surfside, Fla., is using DNA samples from family members to help identify the victims recovered from the rubble. "It's very emotional," police official Alfredo Ramirez III says.
-
The Biden administration has provided assistance to rescue efforts through FEMA and the Army Corps of Engineers.
-
"The concrete deterioration is accelerating," the Champlain Towers South's condo board president wrote as she asked for a $15 million special assessment for major structural repairs.
-
Officials are actively expediting visas for family members of victims and survivors of the Surfside condo collapse.
-
Day five of search-and-rescue efforts continue in Surfside, after the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South building.
-
A commercial pool contractor who visited the building last Tuesday, just 36 hours before half of the building unexpectedly collapsed, said things looked well maintained. Then, he saw the basement-level garage and noted cracking concrete and severely corroded rebar under the pool.
-
State and federal legislation could be proposed to address construction or engineering issues after the deadly condominium-building collapse in Surfside, where crews continued to search the rubble Monday.
-
The search-and-rescue effort at the Champlain Towers South building collapse site in Surfside includes an international nonprofit group of volunteers trained in Israel called Cadena.
-
The partial collapse of a building in Surfside, just north of Miami Beach, has left at least 11 people dead, many injured, and dozens missing. Here are some ways to give back.
-
An engineering report in Oct. 2018 warned of "major structural damage" in the Florida building that collapsed last week. The next month, a town inspector said the building was in "very good shape."