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Resident removes a structural column on the 6th floor of a 20-story building to enhance the view.

A resident slices through a structural column on the sixth floor of a twenty-story building to enhance the view.

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GhostChips42 • 5,424 points
Well, it will improve the view… for the buildings on either side of him.

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jakfischer • 2,146 points
And there will be a really cool memorial park in the neighborhood

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SilasX • 209 points
/r/JesusChristReddit

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Lord_Bling • 15 points
Oh I bet they have a bunch of interesting posts.

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Aggravating_Fox2035 • 73 points
😥😂

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Eldudeareno217 • 318 points
Yeah fuck anyone above or below because shits fucked up, how does one think like this? What in his mind made it make sense, like people who cut down structural walls to open up some space, that’s gonna fail and collapse it’s not if it’s when.

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RyanBallern • 59 points
As above, so below

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Squirll • 148 points
Cause people are stupid.

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ManiacalShen • 30 points
Even if a person is stupid and shortsighted, it would really help to train the thought, “Why doesn’t everyone do this?” into their head. We should all wonder that when we have a stroke of what feels like genius. We usually do not understand all the implications of what we are contemplating. In my case, the worst ignoring that has gone is that I’ve ended up with crappy baked goods or wonky craft projects, though. Not a structural engineering disaster about to happen.

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Itchy_Artichoke_5247 • 20 points
because they see themselves as visionaries. “Nobody else thought to do this and since I did it enforces my belief that I am super smart. Since I am super smart if there was a problem doing this I would have thought of this.” It is circular logic that just goes round and round reinforcing itself as it goes.

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Huju-ukko • 60 points
And selfish

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sdrawkcabstiho • 6 points
I don’t see how being a crab has anything to do with it.

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LeAlthos • 21 points
“it’s a big building, who cares if we remove a little bit of it anyway”

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HappyIsGott • 18 points
Here comes the neat part, they don’t think at all.

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xxandl • 8 points
Will improve his view as well. From above, that is…

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nightshift31 • 9,750 points
yup, this is a valid WTF

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nmyi • 3,035 points
i want to see a proper building inspector or structural engineer react to this vid lol. It’d be beyond WTF for them. It might induce brain aneurysm.

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ExtensionTruth4 • 1,212 points
I’m a structural engineer and I can confirm that I almost passed out seeing this. This is a code red situation where everybody in the building and the building around needs to be evacuated and measure needs to be taken immediately.

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nmyi • 289 points
i only studied architecture, so i’m curious how engineers would attempt to repair an act of stupidity like this lol. Other than “column shoring” what other entry words should i Google to learn how structural engineers would repair this? Any famous precedent cases i can look up?

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phidelt649 • 314 points
I”m trying to claw back into my brain and find the news report of the woman who blew the whistle on an apartment complex that was failing. IIRC, the underground parking garage pillars started to crumble and the owners refused to do anything about it. Edit: [Found it!](https://baynews9.com/fl/tampa/news/2025/05/06/clearwater-condo-building-structure-evacuation-)

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SuspiciousLettuce56 • 141 points
In sydney we had a similar situation with the Opal Towers, turns out that the builders were so incompetent and got their mates to sign off the construction instead of the government bodies.

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Fortune_Cat • 57 points
And as a result there are no real repercussions. No reform. We loosened regulations under the guise of housing crisis needing to build more shitboxes for meriton to make another billion

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andbruno • 60 points
>All 60 residents were evacuated yesterday after a crack was found in a support column >**a crack** They have VASTLY different understanding of the word “crack” because those images show complete structural failure. That shit is crumbling. No, that shit *had crumbled*, past-tense. “A crack” was step 1 in that thing self-demoing, it’s clearly past step 20 or so.

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midunda • 39 points
At least they evacuated, try reading this https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sampoong_Department_Store_collapse

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digbybare • 19 points
Jesus Christ, what a piece of shit: >To maximise the floor space, Lee Joon ordered that the diameter of the floor columns be reduced to 60 cm (24 in), instead of the minimum of 80 cm (31 in) in the original blueprint that was required for the building to stand safely. In addition, the spacing between columns was increased to 11 metres (36 ft); with fewer columns, each one had to support a larger load than originally designed. >In April 1995, cracks began to appear in the ceiling of the fifth floor in the south wing, but the only response by Lee Joon and staff management was to move merchandise and stores from the top floor to the basement. >An emergency [board of directors](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Board_of_directors) meeting was held when it became clear that the building’s collapse was inevitable. The directors suggested that all staff and customers should be evacuated, but Lee Joon violently refused to do so for fear of revenue losses. However, Lee Joon and the executives left the building safely before the collapse occurred. >At about 5:00 p.m., [KST](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_in_South_Korea) (UTC+9:00), as the fifth floor ceiling began to sink, store workers finally closed off all customer access to the fifth floor. Fifty-seven minutes before the collapse, the store was packed with hundreds of shoppers, but still, Lee Joon did not close the store or attempt any repairs. >During his interrogation with Professor Chung, Lee Joon sparked further controversy by saying that **his main concern was that the collapse** of the store not only harmed the customers, but also **inflicted great financial damage to his company**.

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PJ7 • 12 points
Seven years and six months is a ridiculously low sentence when considering he got 502 people killed and a further 1000 wounded.

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ToeChan • 22 points
didn’t a building in Miami, Florida collapse for this same reason?

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HurbleBurble • 7 points
Surfside, FL, but it collapsed from poor quality of concrete and lack of maintenance. I live pretty close to there, and unfortunately, they are just building another condo there without turning it into a memorial.

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SinisterCheese • 117 points
Structural engineers don’t generally deal with the fixing side of things; they are involved with higher level stuff like the entirety of the structural matrix at a theoretical level. Like seriously high level maths. There is an entire seperate discipline of construction and civil engineers that deal with the practical side (at least in European system); they would draft a support consideration based on structural masses and types above and below. Then after they got the support sorted, depending on structure type they’d call specific specialists. In case of steel structures someone like me would be involved, where we get the specs for the pillar (for example) that needs to be put in to replace it, we fabricate it according to specs and standards and install it to place according specs and standards. Then after that construction engineer would take over to deal with the concrete cast and seaming specs. But I have swapped out steel pillars in the past in an active structure. You get steel pylons (if the structure has not moved due to pillar related issues), if it has you get pylons and jacks to lift it up. Get carpenters for wide supports and wedges from wood. Then you just cut the pillar out, put new one in, with concrete casting gaps on both ends, and cast it in. Then hold it supported for like 30 days for curing. I’m probably making it sound more complex that it is, but having been involved with them, it is actually fairly uninteresting. However I been involved with some rarther… weird cases. Like there was a case of like 18 metres wide beam that spanned a big structure (like 500×500 mm in size), that wasn’t on it’s bearings and nobody was actually sure what held it up… but we all agreed that it probably should be on the bearings. So I developed a whole method of wedging for that stuff. Basically wedge it in, weld the wedges together and then make a collar around the wedges. **However**. If you want to know more about concrete pillars. Then you can look up stuff about partial demolitions of pillars, collumn repair, and concrete retrofitting and collum jacketing. Those are the methods used. You’ll find lots of weird videos from like Asia and middle-east, but honestly… The methods aren’t any different.

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nmyi • 13 points
wow – thank you for sharing your professional insight. Today i learned.

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