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Berkeley Balcony Tragedy

conarb

Registered User
Joined
Oct 22, 2009
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3,505
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California East Bay Area
The investigation of this tragedy continues, the State Contractors' License Board is sanctioning several fo the contractors involved, but the District Attorney is not prosecuting them criminally, there are now Senate Hearings and the architects' board is going to be disciplining the architects. I decided to put this information here in the architects' forum but it covers several areas, ADA requirements, the use of cheaper materials, and inspection requirements as to moisture content and manufactured wood sealer in light of the experts' investigations.

\ said:
SACRAMENTO -- In the first indication that the design, and not just construction mistakes, may have contributed to the Berkeley balcony collapse last summer, the board that oversees licensed architects revealed Monday that it has joined the investigation into the tragedy that killed six people.To date, prosecutors, victims' attorneys and state contractor investigators have said the cause of the collapse was water infiltration during the construction of the Library Gardens balcony, which led to catastrophic dry rot. Investigators and attorneys have alleged that five construction firms failed to meet industry standards, using cheaper materials that would exacerbate water infiltration and covering up wet wood with waterproofing materials that sealed in the moisture.

However, Doug McCauley, executive director of the California Architects Board, told the Senate Committee on Business, Professions and Economic Development on Monday afternoon that the design of the balcony is also receiving attention.

"As far as I know, our investigation is still open," McCauley told state Sen. Loni Hancock, D-Berkeley, when asked about the balcony design. "I can say this much, we've cooperated extensively with the (Alameda County District Attorney's) efforts."¹
And we start to get into it:

\ said:
Bill Leys, a San Luis Obispo-based deck expert, said the architect specified a cheaper laminated wood beam and called for it to be notched two inches before it extended out from the building's main structure. That additional space would allow room for a concrete topping slab to be added, complying with disability-access requirements to the deck.Deck joists must have a 2 percent slope, which allows water to move away from the building as required by code, Leys said. Manufactured wood products also require wood sealer to be applied to areas that have been cut open to further prevent water intrusion, he said.

Leys said none of that was called for in the architectural designs.

"As soon as that beam got wet where the notch is, it was the beginning of the end," Leys said.
Consequences of LBJ's stupid Civil Rights Act to make everybody equal, "people with disabilities" must have "architectural barriers" removed (even in existing structures) so there can be no step down to decks, I see this coming to single family too as obnoxious Disability Activists are demanding "visitability" codes for single family homes, Austin Texas is the first city nationally to start imposing them.

They are going to hold the architects responsible for specifying "a cheaper laminated wood beam and called for it to be notched two inches before it extended out from the building's main structure.", I think we determined that the end joists were LVLs and not PSLs?

Apparently all "Manufactured wood products also require wood sealer to be applied to areas that have been cut open to further prevent water intrusion", I've never used LVLs, PSLs, or OSB, but I have used lots of Glue Lams, I've never sealed the cuts in Glue Lams, do you guys who have inspected these other "manufactured wood products" require they seal the cut surfaces?

\ said:
Also at the hearing, Berkeley building officials spoke about the accident. Patrick Emmons, supervising building inspector, said that only now are his inspectors required to use moisture sensors to determine whether wood registers below 19 percent moisture content, the maximum allowed by state building codes before wood is enclosed. Heavy rain during the Library Gardens construction allowed water to soak the wood before the balcony interior was covered, investigators found.
I've never seen an inspector carry a moisture meter, I've never even had an inspector ask me if I had checked the moisture content before closing in a building, a building in the framing stages could be delayed months waiting for the lumber to dry down unless the builder hired one fo those fire/flood restoration companies to seal the houses up and install those huge drying fans to dry them out.

This could get interesting, even though the District Attorney is not criminally prosecuting the contractors will she prosecute the architects criminally? The article just refers to administrative sanctions. If so will the architects put the blame on the city for requiring cheap construction to comply with their "affordable housing" requirements and their money-losing mixed use requirements? As I've said before, liability should run clear back to BlackRock, the hedge fund that set the unrealistically low budget. Will the city be held liable for failure of the building inspector to check the moisture content of the wood at framing inspection?

¹ http://www.eastbaytimes.com/news/ci_29811157/berkeley:-scrutiny-turns-to-balcony-design-during-state-senate-hearing
 
From a prior Senate hearing on code changes.

East Bay Times said:
Bill Leys, a San Luis Obispo-based deck expert, said the architect specified a cheaper laminated wood beam and called for it to be notched two inches before it extended out from the building's main structure. That additional space would allow room for a concrete topping slab to be added, complying with disability-access requirements to the deck.

Deck joists must have a 2 percent slope, which allows water to move away from the building as required by code, Leys said. Manufactured wood products also require wood sealer to be applied to areas that have been cut open to further prevent water intrusion, he said.

Leys said none of that was called for in the architectural designs.

"As soon as that beam got wet where the notch is, it was the beginning of the end," Leys said..¹

Today's paper reports that the civil action has been settled, the reason the case settled out quickly is that Seque is bankrupt and the attorneys must have determined that they can't pierce the corporate veil and get to the owners' personal assets and their liability carrier has tendered policy limits allowing them to walk away with no more legal expenses,strange that there is no mention of subcontractors like framing, waterproofing, flashing, etc.

East Bay Times said:
BERKELEY — A partial settlement has been reached in the deadly balcony collapse that killed six young people and injured seven others.

“This settlement will never restore health or life but reflects an element of justice from the wrongdoers for the deaths and serious injuries caused by the tragedy,” attorney Matthew Davis said. “The litigation continues to proceed against other defendants including the apartment complex’s corporate owner and property manager.”

Last month, the California State Contractor’s Licensing Board revoked the general contracting license of Segue Construction of Pleasanton, determining it had willfully ignored building plans.

Segue agreed to the terms in a settlement with the state, the agency announced Friday. The company was accused of using cheaper, weaker material on the balcony than plans specified during construction from 2005 to 2007. That material became waterlogged after a sub-subcontractor failed to install a membrane to keep out moisture. Segue’s attorney Alicia Kennon said she could not comment at this time.

Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley opted to not file criminal charges in the deaths. In the wake of the deaths, state lawmakers passed a law requiring the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the state licensing board to share information about citations or other actions taken against a contractor.²

To summarize, there are three types of actions, criminal, and the DA has determined there they couldn't prove criminal intent (like FBI Director Comey and Hillary), administrative, the Contractors' License Board has revoked Segue's license, and the big one, civil, the damaged parties have settled for policy limits.

The case is going to proceed against the remaining deep pockets, the owner hedge fund BlackRock and the management company. Unfortunately we will find out no more construction defect information since the remaining defendants were not involved in the actual construction.

This is just plain wrong: "The company was accused of using cheaper, weaker material on the balcony than plans specified during construction from 2005 to 2007. That material became waterlogged after a sub-subcontractor failed to install a membrane to keep out moisture." If you recall the plans called for plywood sheathing on the deck and Segue substituted cheaper OSB, this case is about these deaths only, had Segue installed plywood it would have lasted longer and these five people would not have been killed, this civil case doesn't consider the fact that plywood would have eventually failed potentially killing a different group of people, but this is a civil case to collect damages for these people. As I recall Seque installed LVLs at the ends that failed, I don't think LVLs are cheaper than anything specified, Berkeley is changing it's code to require steel there and the state to require PT material. The fact that they say "sub-subcontractor failed to install a membrane to keep out moisture." is wrong, anyone can clearly see the Bituthene is clearly hanging there so it was installed, they didn't even go to workmanship and the fact that Bituthene was an approved deck waterproofing material at the time the plans were drawn, but Grace withdrew that approval prior to the time of permit issuance, so the issue of any liability on the part of the city or architect for not informing Segue of the withdrawal of the approval was never even approached, bad lawyering or what, it's my opinion that they should have tried to get to the deeper pockets of the city and the architect, I would try to make the case, win or lose but try, that it's the responsibility of both building departments and architects to stay current on building material specifications, the lawyers may have considered that but decided that the burden of keeping current was too much and decided to not even try.



¹ http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2016/04...o-balcony-design-during-state-senate-hearing/

² http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/05...-reach-settlement-in-deadly-balcony-collapse/
 
The state has released the evidence that they used to revoke the contractor's license, it comes down to the use of OSB instead of plywood, rain during construction saturated the OSB causing the joists below to rot out.

East Bay Times said:
BERKELEY — More than a month after state regulators revoked the license of the general contractor who built a Berkeley apartment complex where six people died and seven were hurt when a balcony collapsed, the agency released 145 pages of supporting materials about the construction failures.

The documents include two expert reports on the construction and engineering of the doomed balcony, which gave way June 16, 2015, as 13 people, mostly Irish students working abroad over the summer, were celebrating a birthday party. The state revoked Pleasanton-based Segue Construction’s license in April, finding it used cheaper, weaker material on the balcony than plans specified. That material then became waterlogged after a sub-subcontractor failed to install a membrane to keep out moisture.

“All that water sitting around on top of the joists was a recipe for disaster,” said Robert Perry in a phone interview Thursday. Perry is a licensed architect and general contractor whose 18-page report on construction flaws at the Library Gardens apartments on Kittredge Street served as the state’s expert analysis. “It’s rare that it’s so catastrophic in nature,” he added.

Perry and another expert said the balcony was designed properly and should have been able to hold the 13 students. He pinpointed the collapse as “dry rot damage which had occurred along the top of the cantilever balcony deck joists,” according to his report.

From October 2005 when the balcony framing was completed, until August 2006 when the structure was waterproofed and sealed, the Berkeley area received more than 38 inches of rain, according to Perry’s report. Instead of using more water-resistant plywood atop the joists, workers used oriented strand board (OSB), which can soak up water like a sponge, even if the surface appears dry.

“There is no mention of framing protection from inclement weather,” Perry notes in his report. The rain likely led to other water infiltration issues on the second floor of the building when 10 units had mold removal and dehumidifying treatments in 2006.

Had it been dry during construction and no rain had infiltrated the wood and been sealed inside, a catastrophic collapse would’ve been “highly unlikely,” Perry said.

Bill Leys, a San Luis Obispo-based deck expert who has followed the Berkeley tragedy, said the reports show a construction operation where no one followed instructions.

“Basically, it says that anything that could’ve been (expletive) up, was (expletive) up,” Leys said. “In a nutshell, the report reads like one of Stephen King’s horror stories if he wrote construction horror stories.”

Five Irish nationals visiting Berkeley for the summer died in the collapse along with a woman from Sonoma County. Olivia Burke, 21; Eoghan Culligan, 21; Niccolai Schuster, 21; Lorcan Miller, 21; and Eimear Walsh, 21, were from Ireland. The other victim was Ashley Donohoe, 22, of Rohnert Park.

Alameda County District Attorney Nancy O’Malley opted to not file criminal charges. In the wake of the deaths, state lawmakers passed a law requiring the Division of Occupational Safety and Health and the state licensing board to share information about citations or other actions taken against a contractor.

In early May, a confidential settlement was reached between the injured victims and families of the dead and those responsible for construction work at the building.¹

Bottom line, OSB can't get wet during construction.


¹ http://www.eastbaytimes.com/2017/06...ocuments-on-cause-of-deadly-balcony-collapse/
 
If as some suggest the problem was the result of the OSB getting wet during construction I would expect the water to be uniformly distributed which would lead to uniformly distributed rot. But what we see is the rot being concentrated several feet from the face of the wall apparently near the termination of the flashing.
 
I would try to make the case, win or lose but try, that it's the responsibility of both building departments and architects to stay current on building material specifications,

So let me get this straight...You want a smaller government, but you want every building inspector to know the exact approvals at any given moment for every product in existence? How bout the people using it know how to use it instead?
 
So let me get this straight...You want a smaller government, but you want every building inspector to know the exact approvals at any given moment for every product in existence? How bout the people using it know how to use it instead?
Steve:

I see your point, the problem is that we have architects and engineers specifying an ever growing number of products that are being approved, we end up an increasingly unknowledgeable workforce installing them. Maybe the architects specifying them should take responsibility?
 
Architects and engineers do take responsibility for the products they specify while building officials and those working for him have essentially no liability.

If a product is addressed in the code and if it is being used as provided for in the code there is no need for approval. The building official is required to allow these products.
 
Mark:

I skimmed through the report(s) and don't agree with them, remember this is a license board proceeding to revoke Segue's contractors' license. I am not reading anything about disciplinary proceedings against other subcontractors like the lath, sheet metal, and waterproofing contractors.

Waterproofing decks has always been a problem for me and others, I have one going now where a deck started leaking after a few years of no problems and have been trying to figure out a way to trace the leak that keeps moving around, disappears for a year or two then returns. The report states that they used infrared technology, I am told you can't use infrared since it only "looks" 1mm into the surface, how do they know that it wasn't active leaks in the flashing joints of the deck to wall and the french door pan? Much of that was all destroyed in the collapse and joints would have been pulled apart in the collapse even if they hadn't failed ad initio causing the problem? The same goes for the Bituthene waterproofing, there must have been all kinds of tears and holes in it, how could they know that it hadn't failed prior to the collapse?

Apparently Segue hired no experts in it's defense, I have to assume they knew they were going to lose the license so they decided not to spend any money in their defense, the License Board had them in substituting OSB for the specified plywood, they were guilty of that without question, I think the license Board's experts were just trying to pin the failure on the indisputable statutory violation. I also agree with you that had it been due to saturated OSB, and not active leaks, that the damage would have been more uniform all over the substructure and not confined to the areas against the building.

Mark said:
Architects and engineers do take responsibility for the products they specify while building officials and those working for him have essentially no liability.

If a product is addressed in the code and if it is being used as provided for in the code there is no need for approval. The building official is required to allow these products.

The architect specifies it, the contractor installs it, the city inspects it, who should be liable for failure?
 
Who is liable depends on the cause of the problem except by statute the city is not responsible. The architect will be liable if the design was the faulty. The contractor is responsible if the work was not in conformance with the construction documents. In some cases there may be shared responsibility.

In addition the building owner may be liable. Assume a situation where either the contractor or the architect were the cause of a problem that the owner was aware of but the owner failed to correct and as a result there were other problems. The architect and or the contractor would be liable for correcting the original problem but the owner would be liable for the additional problems resulting from a failure to correct the problem.

It has been suggested that the owner and or its management company had knowledge that there were water problems but took no action. In this case you could argue that the owner or his agent was responsible for the loss of life.
 
The interesting thing here is that W.R. Grace had approvals for Bituthene when it was specified by the architect and when the plans were approved, but Grace withdrew the approval as a deck waterproofing prior to the actual construction. I think when a manufacturer goes so far as to withdraw approval of a product there should be some requirement to notify architects and/or AHJs. Of course if the experts are right here the Bituthene and nothing to do with the failure.
 
Just keep in mind that the Architects, Engineers and to some extent contractors have some control over which materials they are using. I don't unless it violates the code.

I guess the questions is does every building inspector need to know every product's installation instructions?

Subcontractors can't read the instructions and it's the only thing they do.
 
You just hit a nail on the head, with many projects being CM - Multiple Prime with no superintendents and many workers for whom English is not their native language and architects not being retained for CA, these types of problems happen.
 
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