Don M.
SF VIP
- Location
- central Missouri
I've been wondering how this Florida building could have collapsed so suddenly and completely. It wasn't that old...built in 1981, from what I've read. The fact that it is built on a rather questionable foundation....sandy soil with a porous limestone base, is certainly a factor, but something else keeps making me wonder, and that date of 1981 keeps sticking in my mind.
In looking into events that occurred in Florida, during that time frame, One thing seems to stand out....The Cuban Mariel Boatlift, which occurred in the Summer of 1980, when thousands of Cuban refugees fled to Florida. While the names of the inhabitants of that building, and its residents/victims haven't been released, it seems that most of those interviewed on the news reports seem to have Spanish surnames.
This is making me wonder if that building, and others in that area, was initially built as part of some program to create housing for the thousands of those immigrants. Could it have been built rather hastily, with little attention given to high standards for construction?
This is just "speculation" on my part, but I think there is a whole lot more about that building that needs to be researched. There are hundreds of other buildings on the coastlines that have been built on a similar environment, and still holding up quite well, decades later. Is there something "unique" about this building, and perhaps others built in that area around the same time frame? There is quite likely a whole lot more to this tragedy than we currently know.
In looking into events that occurred in Florida, during that time frame, One thing seems to stand out....The Cuban Mariel Boatlift, which occurred in the Summer of 1980, when thousands of Cuban refugees fled to Florida. While the names of the inhabitants of that building, and its residents/victims haven't been released, it seems that most of those interviewed on the news reports seem to have Spanish surnames.
This is making me wonder if that building, and others in that area, was initially built as part of some program to create housing for the thousands of those immigrants. Could it have been built rather hastily, with little attention given to high standards for construction?
This is just "speculation" on my part, but I think there is a whole lot more about that building that needs to be researched. There are hundreds of other buildings on the coastlines that have been built on a similar environment, and still holding up quite well, decades later. Is there something "unique" about this building, and perhaps others built in that area around the same time frame? There is quite likely a whole lot more to this tragedy than we currently know.