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Bangkok building collapse tied to construction and design flaws
Bangkok building collapse tied to construction and design flaws

Bangkok Post

time5 days ago

  • Business
  • Bangkok Post

Bangkok building collapse tied to construction and design flaws

Thai investigators concluded that flaws in the design and construction methods caused the collapse of a partially built Bangkok building that killed at least 89 people during the March 28 earthquake, according to Prime Minister Paetongtarn Shinawatra. An investigation by a government agency and three universities found that the elevator and stairwell walls — key structures meant to absorb shear force — were improperly designed and built, Ms Paetongtarn said at a press briefing on Monday. She added that the quality of steel, concrete and other materials met required standards, disputing earlier reports that substandard steel bars had been used. The government agency is the Department of Public Works and Town & Country Planning, and the three universities are Chulalongkorn, Kasetsart and King Mongkut's Institute of Technology Ladkrabang, according to the Bangkok Post. 'The failure stemmed from deficiencies in both the design and construction methods,' she posted on social media platform X. 'In particular, the construction techniques, such as the construction of the elevator shaft wall, did not comply with engineering principles and standards.' The 30-story building intended to house the State Audit Office was the only structure in the capital to collapse following the 7.7-magnitude earthquake that struck central Myanmar. Police have filed criminal charges against a prominent Thai construction tycoon and about a dozen others for negligence resulting in the collapse and loss of life. The building was being constructed by ITD-CREC, a joint venture between Italian-Thai Development Plc and China Railway Number 10 Thailand Co. The venture was awarded the 2.14 billion baht contract through competitive bidding in 2020, with construction starting later that year, according to the State Audit Office. Premchai Karnasuta, president of Italian-Thai Development Plc, the project's main contractor, was among more than a dozen executives, engineers, designers and supervisors who reported to police after a court issued arrest warrants. A fact-finding committee will submit its report to the Department of Special Investigation and Royal Thai Police for further action, Ms Paetongtarn wrote on X.

Chinese firm investigated after Bangkok skyscraper collapses in earthquake
Chinese firm investigated after Bangkok skyscraper collapses in earthquake

Telegraph

time29-03-2025

  • Business
  • Telegraph

Chinese firm investigated after Bangkok skyscraper collapses in earthquake

A Chinese-backed contractor is facing an investigation over the collapse of a 33-floor skyscraper in Bangkok in Friday's earthquake. The unfinished building's glass facade tumbled to the ground in a heap of smoke and dust, trapping dozens of people in the rubble, when a 7.7 magnitude earthquake hit central Myanmar, some 800 miles from the Thai capital. But despite the skyline of the megacity being dotted with cranes, no other construction site reported similar collapses. Eight bodies have so far been recovered from the ruins of the skyscraper, with an estimated 50 people still missing. In Myanmar, there was massive destruction, with the death toll already surpassing 1,600. As rescue teams toiled in the blistering 36C Bangkok heat to reach other construction workers – whose friends and family gathered nearby in agonising suspense – questions began to circulate about how and why the skyscraper collapsed so quickly. 'Something was wrong, definitely,' Prof Suchatchavee Suwansawas, a civil engineer and politician from the Democrat Party, told The Telegraph. 'You see all other buildings, even high-rise buildings under construction, they're safe. So either the design was wrong or construction was wrong, but it's too soon to reach conclusions.' After visiting the site on Saturday, Anutin Charnvirakul, the deputy prime minister, said the government would launch a rapid investigation to better understand the disaster. 'I'm appointing the investigating committee. I've given them seven days to report back as to what's going on and what caused the falling down,' he told journalists. The collapsed building belonged to the national audit office and had been under construction for three years, at a reported cost of more than two billion Thai baht (roughly £45 million). Inquiries focus on design and materials The project was a joint venture between Italian-Thai Development Plc and China Railway Number 10 (Thailand) Ltd, according to The Nation, a local news outlet. The latter company's largest backer is a Chinese firm called China Railway Number 10 Engineering Group Company, which owns 49 per cent of shares – the maximum stake foreign entities can hold in a Thai company. The Telegraph contacted the firm, but has not received a response. There is no concrete evidence of wrongdoing. But the Ministry of Industry said it had sent an inspection team to explore, amongst other things, whether low quality steel or poor engineering design contributed to the crisis, according to the Thansettakij newspaper. Some international experts have also pointed to a 'flat slab' construction process, in which floors rest directly on columns without beams, and to Bangkok's soft soil – which may have amplified the shaking of the ground when seismic waves hit. Meanwhile, the relatives of those trapped inside were trapped in a hellish limbo, watching the complicated and agonisingly slow rescue proceed. There were some reasons for hope: thermal imaging drones deployed to seek signs of life identified at least 15 people may still be alive, officials said. But by Saturday afternoon optimism was waning. 'I never thought something like this would happen, and now I feel depressed,' Pat Kongporn, whose mother and father are both trapped under the rubble, told The Telegraph. 'My parents are hard-working people… they are people who give me love.' Ms Pat last spoke to the pair at around 12:30pm on Friday, just before the earthquake hit, and raced to the Thai capital from a city 50 miles north when she could not contact them later. 'I've been here since 6pm yesterday,' she said. 'I will stay until I know the news, until my parents or their bodies are found.' 'I feel guilty that I'm safe' Also eagerly awaiting information was Ponsak, 29, a construction worker who narrowly escaped being buried in the debris on Friday. 'I [was] so scared and I almost jumped out from the building,' he said, sitting on a red plastic chair as close to the destroyed building as he could get. 'I feel guilty that I'm safe, and [I couldn't] sleep last night because I was worried about other people. I'm still shocked.' Politicians said a thorough investigation was critical to prevent anything like this happening again. 'Right now, Thailand is at risk of earthquakes, no one can deny it,' said Prof Suchatchavee. 'We have to find out what is going on so we can come back to change the design, construction, and even the law. 'It's too soon to blame anyone or nationality, but if we find out, they have to take responsibility.'

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