-
Emergency crews have been working at the site of the Champlain Towers South building collapse around the clock since last Thursday.
-
The 2018 report found major damage to the concrete structural slab below the pool deck and warned that extensive repairs would be needed soon. The mayor is considering evacuating a sister building.
-
Relatives of those missing in the Surfside condo collapse visited the site Sunday — and many mourned, including the family of Colombian Luis Fernando Barth
-
Four bodies and "additional human remains" have been discovered. The Miami-Dade County mayor says they are making every effort to identify the remains.
-
The partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South condo building in Surfside, Fla., killed at least four people and left another 159 unaccounted for.
-
Nearly three years before an oceanfront building collapsed near Miami, an engineering firm estimated the building needed more than $9 million in major repairs.
-
Surfside officials have released a nine-page structural engineering report by Morabito Consultants, Inc. that detailed extensive problems and repairs needed at the Champlain Towers South condo building.
-
The National Institute of Standards and Technology was given the authority to investigate building collapses after the attacks of 9/11. Now, six researchers are in Surfside gathering information about Thursday's partial building collapse.
-
Stacie Fang, 54, died at the hospital from blunt force injuries due to the building collapse, the medical examiner's office told NPR. At least four people died due to the collapse.
-
Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava said Friday that 159 people are missing, based on data collected at the reunification site at the Surfside Community Center and missing person reports.
-
The building was undergoing a county-required 40-year inspection. There were some indications the area of the building was sinking.
-
President Joe Biden early Friday approved federal assistance as crews continued working at the scene of a collapsed condominium building in Miami-Dade County and as dozens of people remained missing.