Massive
sinkhole swallows Florida resort villa
CLERMONT,
Fla. -- An official at the Florida resort where a villa was
partially swallowed into the ground says it doesn't appear the
sinkhole on the site is growing.
13
August, 2013
Summer
Bay Resort President Paul Caldwell told reporters during a news
conference Tuesday that engineers examined the 100-foot sinkhole at
Clermont resort and determined there's no reason to believe it will
grow.
Caldwell
says the resort remains open, but with three buildings still
unoccupied. The resort is taking claims from guests staying in the
collapsed building. Guests from two adjacent buildings that also were
evacuated are being allowed in with escorts to retrieve possessions.
On
Monday, about a third of one 24-unit villa collapsed. Affected guests
were evacuated, and no injuries were reported. The three-story villa
was reported as a total loss.
The
first sign of trouble came about 10:30 p.m. Sunday. Security guard
Richard Shanley had just started his shift, and he heard what sounded
like shouting from a building.
A
guest flagged him down to report that a window had blown out. Shanley
reported it to management, and another window popped. The resort's
staff decided to evacuate the villa.
Shanley
said the building seemed to sink by 10 to 20 inches and bannisters
began to fall off the building as he ran up and down three floors
trying to wake up guests. One couple with a baby on the third floor
couldn't get their door open and had to break a window to get out, he
said.
"It's
a scary situation," said Shanley, who guests credited with
saving lives by knocking on doors to awaken them. Inside, they heard
what sounded like thunder and then the storm of water, as if it were
a storm. Evacuation took about 10 to 15 minutes, according to staff
and witnesses.
Amy
Jedele heard screams coming from one of the adjacent buildings around
10:30 p.m., and several minutes later, the sounds of sirens. She and
her fiance, Darren Gade, went outside. "That's when you could
hear the pops and the metal, the concrete and the glass breaking,"
she said.
The
first portions of the building to sink were the walkways and the
elevator shaft, Gade said.
"You
could see the ground falling away from the building where the
building started leaning," Gade said. "People were in shock
to see a structure of that size just sink into the ground slowly. ...
You could see the stress fractures up the side of the structure
getting wider."
Then,
as a part of the leaning building crumbled quickly into the ground,
dust shot up around the site, amateur video of the collapse shows
(HTTP://BIT.LY/1CUOC1U ).
In
one of the adjacent buildings, firefighters and police officers
knocking on doors woke up Maggie Moreno of San Antonio. She couldn't
fully open the door to her unit.
"It
sounded like popcorn," said Moreno, who was visiting with her
husband, daughter and two grandchildren. "The building was just
snapping."
Luis
Perez also was staying at a nearby building. He said he was in his
room when the lights went off around 11:30 p.m. He said he was on his
way to the front desk to report it when he saw firefighters and
police outside.
"I
started walking toward where they were at, and you could see the
building leaning, and you could see a big crack at the base of the
building," said Perez, 54, of New Jersey.
Summer
Bay Resort employees install barricades around the collapsed building
by a sinkhole at Summer Bay Resort near Walt Disney World on August
12, 2013 in Clermont, Florida. No injuries or victims during the
incident. (Photo by Gerardo Mora/Getty Images)
Over
the next five hours, sections of the building sank into the ground.
Paul Caldwell, the development's president, said the resort gave all
affected guests other rooms. Some visitors - many of whom had to
leave their wallets, purses and other belongings behind in the quick
evacuation - were given cash advances by Summer Bay.
The
Red Cross also distributed food, clothing and medicines to
vacationers who had lost their belongings in their resort rooms.
There
were no signs before Sunday that a sinkhole was developing, Caldwell
said. He said the resort underwent geological testing when it was
built about 15 years ago, showing the ground to be stable.
Caldwell
said he was awaiting further inspections to determine if there was
any damage to the second and third buildings. The resort - with
condominiums, two-bedroom villas and vacation houses in addition to
standard rooms - has about 900 units spread over a large area about
10 miles west of Walt Disney World. It is set on a secluded 64-acre
lake.
Problems
with sinkholes are ongoing in Florida. They cause millions of dollars
in damage in the state annually. On March 1, a sinkhole underneath a
house in Seffner, about 60 miles southwest of the Summer Bay Resort,
swallowed a man who was in his bed. His body was never recovered.
But
such fatalities and injuries are rare, and most sinkholes are small.
They are caused by Florida's geology - the state sits on limestone, a
porous rock that easily dissolves in water, with a layer of clay on
top. The clay is thicker in some locations, making them even more
prone to sinkholes.
Last
week, Florida received a $1.08 million federal grant to study the
state's vulnerability to sinkholes. Other states sit atop limestone
in a similar way, but Florida has additional factors like extreme
weather, development, aquifer pumping and construction.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.