The Wild Story of New York’s Abandoned Skyscraper

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  • Опубликовано: 12 янв 2025

Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @TheB1M
    @TheB1M  Год назад +71

    Skip the waitlist and invest in blue-chip art for the very first time by signing up for Masterworks - www.masterworks.art/theb1m

    • @bocbinsgames6745
      @bocbinsgames6745 Год назад +173

      not another masterworks sponsor

    • @Arational
      @Arational Год назад +166

      It's sad that you're pushing Masterworks, a company with a troubling structure and questionable returns.

    • @JCO2002
      @JCO2002 Год назад +128

      Masterworks --> Ponzi scheme

    • @tomkrasinski938
      @tomkrasinski938 Год назад +110

      dont you feel yucky debasing good videos with that shady sponsor?

    • @jasonpark4293
      @jasonpark4293 Год назад

      A supposed waitlist whilst heavy marketing across all high influence channels. Do you think we are stupid? Are you stupid enough to believe this? And if you aren't, then are you deliberately throwing your loyal channel viewers under the bus for $$ ?

  • @nicoamatullo
    @nicoamatullo Год назад +434

    Lived near if for the past 9 years and kept wondering why it never has been completed yet. Thanks for shedding light on the leaning tower of New York

    • @SectorfiveYT
      @SectorfiveYT Год назад +22

      That's how long it's been going for? 9 years.

    • @clinton8421
      @clinton8421 Год назад +5

      ​@@SectorfiveYT Construction started in 2015 and it topped out in 2019. I kind of want to know what industry Nico Amatullo works in to afford real estate in Downtown Manhattan. Just affording to live in most parts of New York City is a feat all on its own.

    • @frankdenardo8684
      @frankdenardo8684 Год назад +5

      House the homeless in that building

    • @mikesweet5848
      @mikesweet5848 Год назад

      some people still dont know how to google in all honesty @@Look_What_You_Did

    • @theconnextionzgroup6115
      @theconnextionzgroup6115 Год назад

      @@Look_What_You_DidSome people have different priorities and lives. I always wondered too but I have better things to do then to ‘’sEaRcH FoR It‘’

  • @cilldublin07
    @cilldublin07 Год назад +563

    6:20 has to be the greatest moustache ever to appear on the B1M

    • @AndrewMcNairRatcliff
      @AndrewMcNairRatcliff Год назад +41

      Came here to say that. Magnificent!

    • @robonaut-nyne2331
      @robonaut-nyne2331 Год назад +43

      Almost reminds me of the Monopoly man.

    • @A_MapleBar
      @A_MapleBar Год назад +20

      @@robonaut-nyne2331 or the Pringles dude

    • @hitsamty1
      @hitsamty1 Год назад +20

      Maybe one of the greatest on-air mustaches of the modern era

    • @brettemurphy
      @brettemurphy Год назад +2

      I thought he was a parody....

  • @cyrilio
    @cyrilio Год назад +1298

    We need a top 5 most leaning towers. There are actually many lesser known out there.

    • @caesar7734
      @caesar7734 Год назад +18

      Do the Gate of Europe towers in Madrid count?

    • @taotaoliu2229
      @taotaoliu2229 Год назад +21

      Millennium Tower, San Francisco
      Ocean Tower, South Padre Island (demolished)

    • @JigilJigil
      @JigilJigil Год назад

      Go to China and you will find 100s of them having far more critical issues than just leaning and the best part is nobody cares there.

    • @harbl99
      @harbl99 Год назад +7

      Chesterfield parish church.

    • @David-xh9cw
      @David-xh9cw Год назад +30

      Ah don't start all that TOP 7 BLAHBLAH, 12 SUCH AND SUCH YOU NEED TO SEE clickbait shite videos. Proper focused videos are the content this channel has almost always had and they're far better for it.

  • @vbflyboy
    @vbflyboy Год назад +158

    The glaring explanation is in the history books: the Lower East Side of downtown Manhattan along the waterfront is all landfill from over 200-ish years ago. The Manhattan granite bedrock is there, but it's deeper than just a few blocks inland. As NYC population grew, they started using landfill to expand before they started to move developments north on the island. The lean is almost 100% the result of them not using pilings in the foundation and instead trying to create strong enough soil out of old landfill. VERY expensive lesson!

    • @edwardharley9
      @edwardharley9 Год назад +2

      thank you. I knew about the granite bedrock, but I did NOT know about the landfill issues..

    • @kineahora8736
      @kineahora8736 Год назад

      Not expensive enough yet.
      The courts need to demand the building be imploded- cannot be “fixed”

    • @alainportant6412
      @alainportant6412 Год назад

      @@edwardharley9 stupid birds

    • @andresinsurriaga1082
      @andresinsurriaga1082 Год назад +2

      I'm no engineer but it seems that the foundation should be wider. It's a lot of weight on a very narrow base.

    • @semahj
      @semahj Год назад

      That wouldnt mater with pilings@@andresinsurriaga1082

  • @hitsamty1
    @hitsamty1 Год назад +98

    Loved it! Thanks Christine, Fred and the B1M squad for having me on. I think this tower is in for a lot more twists and turns.

    • @Joedirt3349
      @Joedirt3349 Год назад +1

      Bruh...that 'stacbe is epic!?!

    • @hb1338
      @hb1338 Год назад

      The developers are certainly facing the prospect of a lean time.

  • @darrenmclellan6712
    @darrenmclellan6712 Год назад +77

    The statement from the contractor (7:17) that "The details of the foundation system were never provided to Pizzarotti". Who starts a multi-million dollar project without knowing how a major part is going to be built?

    • @giacintoboccia9386
      @giacintoboccia9386 Год назад +2

      Well, probably they assumed that they would have received the details after signing?
      Also, their lawyer may be dramatizing it a bit to stress that Pizzarotti was never involved in the foundation or in the evaluation of its adequacy.

  • @medea27
    @medea27 Год назад +122

    Frankly I'm stunned that they were approved to use soil treatment for foundations so close to the waterfront - large parts of Manhattan go underwater when there's a storm surge, and there's a lot of subsurface infrastructure all over the island. Not using pilings is pure insanity.

    • @cowboybob7093
      @cowboybob7093 Год назад +14

      7:13 - It's hard to believe the developer didn't have a supervisor on site who would notice the foundation process, and prior to that an engineering firm to insist the methods used "be revealed."

    • @donwise8767
      @donwise8767 Год назад +7

      It is all about the Holy and Almighty Dollar.

    • @sidharthghoshal
      @sidharthghoshal Год назад +5

      its possible someone on the developers team knew and ok'd it. But they can't sue an individual for a billion dollars. And even if they did send the poor bloke to jail they still wouldn't recuperate their financial losses. So the only way they get out of this without writing off the entire investment is suing the contracting company.

    • @tomwiggins1225
      @tomwiggins1225 Год назад

      @@sidharthghoshal I think the project engineer is the one we should be looking at

    • @aegaeon117
      @aegaeon117 Год назад +4

      Believe me, everyone knew and money got in the right account so they can turn a profit before something happened. It's not hard to believe that all.

  • @Itsmarkyoung
    @Itsmarkyoung Год назад +403

    I think people often think that skyscrapers are a perfect science because they go up all the time unhindered, but this is an important reminder that it’s extremely challenging to get 60 stories of concrete and metal to stand perfectly straight, and is a massive achievement by developers. It’s just unfortunate that when a lean like this occurs, it’s so expensive to correct.

    • @dankelly5150
      @dankelly5150 Год назад +16

      I just wish that they would automatically put pilings down to the bedrock with buildings as tall as this!

    • @willpugh8865
      @willpugh8865 Год назад +7

      I build high rise apartments think 10 story to 60 story and theres 3 dudes out if 70 with a tape a level and a laser , and 1 of those guys always is an apprentice 1 guys always so foreign you don’t know what he’s says and the 3rd guys a dick. Trust me not me single thing is near perfect

    • @danmcclaren5436
      @danmcclaren5436 Год назад +1

      well said. I live in Miami and its easy to get accustomed to high rises. But each tower is full science, engineering, and challenges that occurs behind the scenes. For me, I love when I see a tower under construction and all you see is concrete slabs cantilevered hundreds of feet in the air.

    • @philmorton4590
      @philmorton4590 Год назад +6

      Well if your not going to use piles in an area where most skyscrapers do, well you built a lemon

    • @KuK137
      @KuK137 Год назад +1

      But they are science? 99% of the time, when there is screw up as big as this, the reason is greed and/or whims of some rich nutjob, not science...

  • @bissycoon
    @bissycoon Год назад +162

    It’s cool to see videos like this as a soil and concrete inspector! Great video!

  • @TheSateef
    @TheSateef Год назад +58

    the fact that its so tall on such a tiny footprint would scare the crap out of me living in there

    • @Privat2840
      @Privat2840 Год назад +1

      The simple answers is to take this down. Or like San Fran you finish it, sell units to suckers than fight it out in court until it falls over.

    • @Privat2840
      @Privat2840 Год назад +5

      Second thought is that not all site are suitable for tall buildings.

    • @veronicaroach3667
      @veronicaroach3667 Год назад +4

      I suspect nobody is going to want to live there even after they have 'fixed it' , I surely will not be applying for an apt !

    • @Peaceinlove1432
      @Peaceinlove1432 7 месяцев назад

      So they saying that's not a safety And concern

    • @chickey333
      @chickey333 7 месяцев назад

      ​@@Privat2840 That could be. There's just nowhere near enough information in this video to determine anything relating to the building's construction and why it's leaning. And this area is loaded with tall buildings that appear to be standing just fine. Maybe this particular building design itself just isn't suitable for the site. Maybe we're both right... The ratio of height to footprint area of these tall skinny buildings has got to be a unique challenge all it's own.

  • @joermnyc
    @joermnyc Год назад +47

    I see this from my office every morning, I thought it was a weird design choice. This part of downtown is all landfill in the river! You have to use piles, soil treatment/grout/etc, won’t work! (Solid ground is several blocks inland, the landfilling started all the way back when the Dutch were here.)

    • @derkhaslol
      @derkhaslol Год назад +3

      Ty[ical Dutchies always creating land from water.

  • @northerngunner2756
    @northerngunner2756 Год назад +13

    As a builder I never never ever cut corners on the foundation. That is the single most important thing period . If you want to cut corners put in cheap cabinets or floor covers . Something easily fixed .

  • @ChaosDeary
    @ChaosDeary Год назад +201

    This skyscraper hasn’t changed for like 4 years at this point. The developers must be taking notes from the GTA V school of skyscraper construction

    • @joermnyc
      @joermnyc Год назад +20

      😂 someone actually tried to do a mod where that building is finished, but I think Rockstar rejected it.

    • @coenfilm
      @coenfilm Год назад +7

      Don’t forget the movie Idiocracy and the architects that designed those buildings.

    • @james6401
      @james6401 Год назад +1

      Ahhhhhhh

    • @vejet
      @vejet Год назад

      It's a make work project! Jobs for life!

    • @Rhaspun
      @Rhaspun Год назад

      No body wants to pay for the repairs.

  • @ayindestevens6152
    @ayindestevens6152 Год назад +237

    As much as I DESPISE that building I do want a solution to be found. It’s been looking unfinished for awhile now and it’s embarrassing it’s being dragged out.

    • @deplorablelibertarian
      @deplorablelibertarian Год назад +12

      That building not being finished isn't embarrassing....the out of control crime rates and homelessness are embarrassing. They will eventually have to take the building down. This is what happens when you build on top of a landfill.

    • @rubiconnn
      @rubiconnn Год назад +5

      I love seeing real estate investors getting shafted.

    • @allananderson949
      @allananderson949 Год назад

      Why's it embarrassing? Being embarrassed for other peoples actions is a sign of low self-esteem

    • @ayindestevens6152
      @ayindestevens6152 Год назад

      @@allananderson949 thanks for the unsolicited advice.

    • @alanoffer
      @alanoffer Год назад +2

      It’s an expensive tombstone for the worker that fell 27 stories to his death during construction

  • @RyannMarshall96
    @RyannMarshall96 Год назад +126

    I work for a piling specialist in the UK. Can confirm, foundations are hard. Love the videos! 👌

    • @TimToussaint
      @TimToussaint Год назад +6

      They better be hard

    • @MastaSquidge
      @MastaSquidge Год назад +2

      To be fair, this one is apparently soft.

    • @elizabethnilsson1815
      @elizabethnilsson1815 Год назад

      UK....???? ! ASSURE THE AMERICANS AND LEAD LIKE IN THE PAST CENTURY TO ALL THE SHIT HELL AND DISASTER...
      ONLY WAY TO SHOW THEY ARE MORE THAN OTHERS .. THRUST THEM AS NO ONE ELSE IN THE WORLD DO IT ... OTHER THAN THAN THE MACRONE WIFE AND CO. OP

  • @harlander-harpy
    @harlander-harpy Год назад +32

    Its genuinely terrifying that Fortess could just be lying about the scale of the problem

    • @dreamystone
      @dreamystone Год назад +1

      Wouldn't be the first time a company lied to get a project done with devastating effects. I don't know shit about dick when it comes to construction but my bs detector is intact and I don't believe them for a second.

  • @weedog24
    @weedog24 Год назад +6

    6:15 i hope you told Saaed what a magnificent mustache he has. Truly a work of art

  • @FacheChanteDeux
    @FacheChanteDeux Год назад +36

    This is what I call justice. I am from NY.C., and (like many other people) I am sick of the over-building and ugly character-less glass boxes that are ruining our skyline. This is far from the only glass tower that has serious issues. We are on a seafront, of course these types of buildings are inappropriate.

  • @chaadlosan
    @chaadlosan Год назад +9

    All of these super tall buildings are just insanity.

  • @adamiotime
    @adamiotime Год назад +25

    I feel like your tone was a little off when describing the death of a worker as a "string of bad luck" for the development. I would be a lot more scathing of a development that allows that to happen.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      They just switched coffee brands...to the one that's "good to the last drop"...

  • @ChristianBlueChimp
    @ChristianBlueChimp Год назад +38

    We actually have the same symtom with a building here in Copenhagen. It was due to a concrete foundation made of poor quality concrete. So now we have a tall building with some windows and a lot of open fronts.

    • @Szydencer
      @Szydencer Год назад +1

      Hvilken bygning er det? Jeg kan ikke finder det, jeg søger for "Copenhagen leaning tower" og får kun Rundetårnet og Bella Sky.

    • @olavjrgensen-uh6bw
      @olavjrgensen-uh6bw Год назад +1

      @@Szydencer Njals Tårn

  • @TheLiamster
    @TheLiamster Год назад +10

    I want to get me some of that “lovely, strong bedrock”. It sounds like a great foundation

  • @ULlisting
    @ULlisting Год назад +57

    A lot of lower Manhattan is landfill with no structural bearing capacity. In those cases, If you don't have foundations resting on bedrock, then you're probably building a disaster. Just ask the guys who developed Millenium Tower in San Francisco.

  • @GeraldWeinand
    @GeraldWeinand Год назад +5

    Yo B1M - not just the vertical weight has to be borne by the foundation, but wind loads, seismic loads, etc., are also transferred to the foundation. I've had to argue with structural engineers in California about door openings in a house - imagine how that plays on a 60 story building.

  • @el.aye.bee.4477
    @el.aye.bee.4477 Год назад +1

    As a construction worker myself (structural ironworker) I can tell you that a 3" lean is totally unacceptable, ESPECIALLY from such a narrow building. I'm willing to bet this has to do with the contractor not using pilings, as the narrator pointed out.

  • @j121212100
    @j121212100 Год назад +9

    "A simple redesign of the glass facade." If that does not scream "i'm guilty" i don't know what does.

  • @alohatraveler
    @alohatraveler Год назад +1

    I just wanted to say how much I enjoy this channel. Aloha from the island of kaua'i

  • @TaehunHa
    @TaehunHa Год назад +28

    The building's super structure also has an eccentric layout of core walls, which might cause differential shortening and leaning of the building to the direction of more shortening. All you have to do is investigate the shape of leaning because it is different whether the leaning comes from differential foundation settlement or from differential shortening.

    • @Ian-dj2nj
      @Ian-dj2nj Год назад +8

      100%. It's structural form means it will lean. This has to be compensated for during construction. Lots of tricky calculations and surveying, but it's not rocket science.

  • @daprovocateur
    @daprovocateur Год назад +52

    Despite knowing it is a knowable number, the idea of the “weight of a skyscraper” is mind-blowing.

    • @ronblack7870
      @ronblack7870 Год назад

      you have to know the weight just to bid the construction. you need to know how much steel and concrete you will need.

    • @velvetbees
      @velvetbees Год назад +1

      It's as boggling as wondering how many angles can dance on the head of a pin.

    • @sidwhiting665
      @sidwhiting665 Год назад +1

      @@velvetbees I don't think any angles can dance on the head of a pin.... they're too obtuse to try it!

  • @bizmen81
    @bizmen81 Год назад +24

    I remember being in the city and seeing this unfinished tower way back in 2018...so its been a VERY long time since anything has happened.

    • @cardboardboxification
      @cardboardboxification Год назад +5

      buildings are not designed for exposed ocean salty Air, after is gets a nice salt bath , they will probably have to demolish it

  • @ThePtlhome
    @ThePtlhome Год назад +1

    The idea that you can chemically treat a soil, especially on a riverbank, and then build a massive skyscraper on top of it, is ridiculous. It doesn't take a rocket scientist, or an engineer, or architect, to see that. I'm schocked and horrified that the City would approve such a plan. Pilings, pilings, pilings, into bedrock, is the ONLY foundation that should be allowed for skyscrapers, ESPECIALLY on a waterfront. But, I guess they won't learn that lesson until one comes down. Only then will they look back, in hindsight, to see what was obvious from the start. So frustrating and frightening.

  • @stevengalloway8052
    @stevengalloway8052 Год назад +18

    😳 How you transitioned into a commercial from your sponsor and back during the video is both astounding and astonishing! 😆

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +1

      A real work or art...

    • @GregOfficially
      @GregOfficially 26 дней назад

      Kinda scummy, blurring the line between advertisement and information.

  • @BlueBaron3x7
    @BlueBaron3x7 Год назад +2

    As someone that worked in construction for 40 years and specialised in concrete and highrised buildings the last 25+ years, that building is finished, it needs demolishing and starting again.

  • @stevieboy366
    @stevieboy366 Год назад +4

    The problem is even more basic than a broken foundation, it is greed...which means that this kind of thing will happen forever...

  • @Ekam-Sat
    @Ekam-Sat Год назад +1

    I used to live in Battery Park City. Tall building. Whenever you put a pen on the floor it rolled towards the direction of the Hudson River. Not sure if it it was just the floor which was not level or the building itself. But I never felt comfortable.

  • @memofromessex
    @memofromessex Год назад +7

    I'm surprised you didn't go with the title of Leaning Tower of Pizzarotti

  • @Chrisroygbiv
    @Chrisroygbiv Год назад +2

    “Lovely Strong Bed Rock” 😂 really enjoyed that

  • @tjr-007tt
    @tjr-007tt Год назад +35

    If you look up the history of the World Trade Center complex in lower Manhattan you would see that the whole area is basically reclaimed land from the Hudson River. The tallest building in the city sits on reclaimed land. Of course the building of the WTC complex they had to construct a retaining wall first to keep out the Hudson River and pile drive deep into bedrock.

    • @jamesjohnson1050
      @jamesjohnson1050 Год назад +7

      The World Trade Center complex isn't sitting on reclaimed land, but the World Financial Center which is next to it to the west is. The land that the World Financial Center is sitting on was made from the soil that was dug up to create the bathtub in which the original World Trade Center complex's foundation sat.

    • @emanuelmota7217
      @emanuelmota7217 Год назад +4

      @@jamesjohnson1050 And I believe any tall building in Manhatan is build on or tied to solid bedrock (which is exactly why they can build tall buildings in Manhattan). Maybe that was not the case wtih THIS building at the South Street Seaport....

    • @stevenj2380
      @stevenj2380 Год назад +2

      @@jamesjohnson1050 The original Hudson colonial shoreline barely extended to where Greenwich St. is.
      The condo tower is on 'river lots' fill; OG shore around there was what is now inland almost as far as Pearl St.
      Take it from the famous "Viele Map" - Sanitary & Topographical Map of the City and Island of New York (1865), and surely on other old sources harder to access at a moments notice online.
      That is the approx. edge of where the 'bathtub' of the west part of OG WTC site which included the towers was.

  • @thehammah8039
    @thehammah8039 Год назад +2

    I just love this channel!

  • @Prodigious1One
    @Prodigious1One Год назад +8

    Wow, I thought that of all cities, NYC would avoid this situation.

    • @smrk2452
      @smrk2452 Год назад +4

      Developers here are hungry, greedy, and wreckless. They are destroying our beautiful city.

  • @harbl99
    @harbl99 Год назад +6

    Today I learned the technical building industry term 'lovely strong bed rock'.

  • @GazMoby
    @GazMoby Год назад +5

    Top notch as usual 👍

  • @colinstu
    @colinstu Год назад +6

    7:13 what's with the blur on the left? Was the text supposed to pop out or something?

    • @mratt
      @mratt Год назад

      I suspect it's a redaction. Another comment around content at roughly the same timecode was deflected to telegram..

  • @ymd0706
    @ymd0706 Год назад +25

    Only B1M can make
    Infrastructure video look cool😅

  • @brookestephen
    @brookestephen Год назад +2

    the next building foundation on the tilt side is the problem. If they had built the neighboring foundation properly, this wouldn't have happened. That building must be deconstructed.

  • @alund2812
    @alund2812 Год назад +6

    The sewers, drains and water mains, that is, any leaks or sources of subsurface erosion could undermine the foundation causing the lean. Not easy to check.

  • @BorisG13
    @BorisG13 Год назад +5

    I love these videos! The content, the production quality!

  • @polaris1985
    @polaris1985 Год назад +12

    Thats my biggest nightmare, spending millions on a defective building

    • @craigpridemore7566
      @craigpridemore7566 Год назад +1

      Yeah. If you read about 1 Millennium in SF, some of the residents sank their retirement into buying the place they planned to live the rest of their lives.

    • @polaris1985
      @polaris1985 Год назад +2

      @@craigpridemore7566 its not only case in high end apartment buildings, in my city 6 floors of the living room came crashing down one on top of other and the whole complex is deemed unfit as it was made with unpure water which had too much chlorine in it.

  • @patricksanders858
    @patricksanders858 Год назад +2

    I love in the SF area. My opinion is same here as in NU or anywhere else... Take it down and redo plans. No one is going to want to invest in a tilting tower.

  • @HandmadeDarcy
    @HandmadeDarcy Год назад +7

    Even without the lean, I can't imagine anyone wanting to live in such a tall, skinny building. I mean, sure, the salespeople could have engineers on standby to educate potential buyers about its safety, but you really shouldn't need that. Frankly, the only point of even trying to keep it going, now, would be for it to be another empty, money-laundering building - which I suspect was the purpose from the start.

  • @chrismorris1304
    @chrismorris1304 Год назад +1

    Another masterpiece production. Thanks!

  • @mattmayo3539
    @mattmayo3539 Год назад +2

    Here in the San Francisco Bay Area. Shortly after the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake. Houses were built to standards that no longer exist because of expense. Our 1,700sqft one story has roughly 60 six foot deep 2’ wide concrete piers that the subfloor sit on top of. Giving a small crawl space to access plumbing and systems. Now all new homes in our area on a poured slab.

  • @phil4977
    @phil4977 Год назад +9

    I can’t even imagine living in a city that dense. It looks horrendous

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +2

      Like a giant prison

    • @personzorz
      @personzorz Год назад +1

      It has its advantages

  • @jalabi99
    @jalabi99 Год назад

    That last bit ("If you want to **lean in** to the definitive video channel on construction...") was just _chef's kiss_

  • @withershin
    @withershin Год назад +10

    If you ever go up the CN Tower during any decent weather just lean against a wall. It's really trippy.

    • @MaidenHell1977
      @MaidenHell1977 Год назад +2

      By design. 😊

    • @withershin
      @withershin Год назад +2

      @@MaidenHell1977 Good three point design. This one might be one of the last that got over engineered.

  • @Kiwibloke2025
    @Kiwibloke2025 Год назад +2

    It should be illegal to build such a skinny building so high, literally asking for issues

  • @crazybkallday
    @crazybkallday Год назад +11

    Love the channel keep it up

    • @aljobaris
      @aljobaris Год назад +2

      Unlike this building.

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover Год назад

      altogether fuckingly farcical...fraudsters abounding universally..!

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover Год назад

      this channel signifies (corporateers') mere headlines...less than ⅒ of ⅒ of its drivel ever warrants further investigation, right

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover Год назад

      why do you suppose its puppeteering corporateers lump you their $ sign caged by love's heart..?

    • @trainrover
      @trainrover Год назад

      our own leaning tower being the tallest must be how come it's featured in album covers 💡

  • @suekuan1540
    @suekuan1540 9 месяцев назад

    Marketing it as the Leaning Tower of Manhattan will be a great idea. People will love to own such a condo

  • @jacktoddy9783
    @jacktoddy9783 Год назад +15

    This problem should never have happened.
    As both a Chartered Architect and Structural Engineer; PhD in Building Material Physics, I suggest that someone runs some old fashion hand-calculations over the imposed façade loadings related to compensating structural stiffness, respecting Castigliano's second theorem (deflection) and then delves into Rankine Gordon and Perry-Robertson formulae regarding one-end fixed encastré cantilevers; using the building as a vertical column/cantilever projected off the foundations. i.e. the fixed part in the ground. The opposite end; where the deflection occurs in the sky - in this case, the wind replacing gravity as the cantilever is exposed to super-load forces, perhaps not factored holistically into the original calculations - think laterally! This is really simple stuff and the design straight forward to fix; if you are old school with experience in designing 'slippery' air-foil façades - The fault appears to be embodied within two factual logics. (i) the encastré presumption of load transfer to ground has not been sufficiently researched, therefore, the foundations; as designed are unsatisfactory, and, (ii) the wind-load on the superstructure is producing a 'resultant' eccentric force that was not considered properly within the calculations, thus: inducing an overturning moment; as per the cantilever acting as a lever upon the foundations that have become the cantilever's fulcrum. Most young engineers would not know what I am talking about because they have never run a hand calculation in their lives nor researched materials fit-for-purpose through design. i.e. this building has to have a steel frame not reinforced concrete due to the risk of flexure. Many engineers these days have become little more than computer button monkeys having never run an 'eye-inspection' or hand-calculation as a structural analysis safeguard, taking for granted that software acts as a catch-all. If one reads ISO documentation it generally states in the preambles on page 1, that the recommendations are not a Code of Practice, and, that utilisation of such ISO's do not provide protection from professional liability. Nonetheless, it is obvious that the superstructure is causing issues with structural 'stiffness' that in-turn has influenced the foundations. Thus there are two solutions. (i) Knock the building down and turn the site into: a car park, McDonaldo's, Pizza-Hut or whatever the New York moneyed-class has to have, or, (ii) Stiffen the design of the building's spine; which should have been conceived as the service core, and built as aforementioned, in steel due to flexible acknowledging "tall-thin column theory". The trouble is that the world is full of arseholes who do not wish to listen or learn. If this project was managed using BIM to the ISO19650 series, then I expect that such risk elements would have been thrown-up during the Appointed Parties' Risk Evaluation Statement - that is, both Lead Parties supervising: Architecture and Engineering would assess the risk potential of such a design as a 'thin structures' liable to deflection due to 'slenderness ratio'. If not, then all parties involved are utterly stupid. On a well managed project; BIM or otherwise, this type of incident should just not happen. Currently, I work in South East Asia and this type thing would not happen as structural simulation respecting earthquake design would have flagged-up the issues as a problem. Also, many engineers are female Koreans who never let a presumption pass through their hands, as they listen, are vigilant, validate software calculation checks, and never assume to know-it-all. Still it's the Big Apple - Hasta La Vista Baby - That's the way the cookie crumbles baby! これが世の中というものさ.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад +1

      Never underestimate a Korean woman

    • @runner0075
      @runner0075 Год назад

      Because todays engineers are just software users, not the mind behind the software concept. Poor minds do poor buildings.

    • @mentalphilanthropist35
      @mentalphilanthropist35 Год назад

      TLDR😢

  • @cosmefulanito5933
    @cosmefulanito5933 Год назад +1

    How horrible to live in a place so crowded with people.

  • @ahaveland
    @ahaveland Год назад +15

    It's nuts to build a skyscraper with such a ridiculous height to width ratio. Living in that would be like living at the top of a bamboo plant in the wind!

    • @meltedicecreamsandwich
      @meltedicecreamsandwich Год назад

      They go through wind testing usually before getting built

    • @word42069
      @word42069 Год назад +1

      Not really.

    • @watson956
      @watson956 Год назад +3

      @@meltedicecreamsandwich The design does (or should) go through wind testing, but the building itself is another matter entirely. NYC can get *really* nasty weather from time to time (remember Hurricane Sandy?)

    • @bassyey
      @bassyey Год назад +3

      That's real estate greed for you.

  • @S374PH
    @S374PH Год назад +1

    for 10 for freds sponsor transition jeez smoother than silk mate

  • @bobleonard4383
    @bobleonard4383 Год назад +14

    This episode was well written and well presented. I enjoyed it immensely. I fell more educaated.

    • @macias2097
      @macias2097 Год назад

      Wrongly educated. 3” is nothing considering the height of the building

  • @Darkk6969
    @Darkk6969 Год назад +1

    I've looked around via Google Maps and saw the current state of the building is in (2023). The unfinished walls and frame which are being exposed to daily salt air for over 4 years the damage is already done. They're not going to repair or fix the problem without pouring tons more money into it. It's cheaper now just demolish it and build something else there.

  • @puirYorick
    @puirYorick Год назад +7

    The city should consider requiring a completion bond in future from any developer before breaking ground on any such possible eyesore of this prominence.

    • @JTA1961
      @JTA1961 Год назад

      In a "New York minute"...

  • @muthonim2905
    @muthonim2905 Год назад +1

    This one of the best channels on YT. This has to be a top episode…I walk by this once a week 😮

  • @collectioneur
    @collectioneur Год назад +9

    I never really understand how anyone can decide to cut corners when building a skyscraper. I mean, it's not like it's going to go unnoticed...

  • @auaiao9
    @auaiao9 Год назад

    I love his mustache at 6:15!

  • @megamanx466
    @megamanx466 Год назад +20

    I'm REALLY surprised that all the skyscrapers don't have pilings in NYC. This one definitely should have, in my opinion. 😬

    • @balesjo
      @balesjo Год назад +6

      I really thought the skyscrapers normally required pilings extending down to solid bedrock below the island. Engineers have to include geological reports to ensure that all pilings stand on solid rock, avoiding having any resting on fissile or weaker rock layers that could potentially shift under the weight of the building.

    • @davidaar1947
      @davidaar1947 Год назад +2

      Depends what part of the city they are being built. By lower Manhattan, Brooklyn, East and Hudson Rivers fronts and adjacent areas, buildings are all typically built on piles , as deep as 150 feet. Towards the center of Manhattan bedrock is relatively shallow, making piles a bad choice.

  • @hellopinkham
    @hellopinkham Год назад

    That promotion was smooth. I didn’t even realize I was watching it. Haha

  • @YusufOnder
    @YusufOnder Год назад +5

    designed by hill west, i remember this project when i was working there 🙂

  • @JosuaKrause
    @JosuaKrause Год назад +2

    what is the blur at 7:14 supposed to cover? the document on the other side?

  • @CaptainMarvelsSon
    @CaptainMarvelsSon Год назад +11

    Great cinematography as always!

  • @Raptorman0909
    @Raptorman0909 10 месяцев назад +1

    We have a super slim building that is leaning in the direction of the narrowest direction. The building is wider in the east-west direction and narrower in the north-south direction and the lean is towards the north. Just as with the Millennium Tower in SF, the builders went cheap with the foundation and in both cases it looks like they will need to deconstruct them, piece by piece. Of course in SF they might bypass the deconstruction and let the next earthquake do it for them -- to the great harm for the other buildings around it. We've been in a 40-50 year period of deregulation and it should be obvious that regulations are lacking here. Ahh, late stage capitalism....

  • @garyjarvis2730
    @garyjarvis2730 Год назад +15

    Many of the floors in NYC's Freedom Tower in are completely out of level. It is standard procedure to bring in floor leveling contractors to correct the situation. One of the floors I worked on in the 80's part part of the stack was out of level by 3" across the entire structure. Big problem is the workers have no real supervision and no accountability. Buildings only get this messed up when a lot of people are not doing their jobs and looking the other way.

    • @longago3649
      @longago3649 Год назад

      It's interesting because I've seen documentaries about buildings in other parts of the world where leveling is checked on a daily basis to prevent any one issue compounding the situation. I have a retail space across from where I work. It's only a few stories high but they put in pilings. (noisy and the vibrations were something else). But it was done.

    • @jamie.777
      @jamie.777 Год назад +2

      I hear you. My dad is a retired Concrete Finisher and a Legend in Boston union construction. I also was a laborer for years. It's amazing how sloppy some crews can get

  • @NmSchlachter
    @NmSchlachter 10 месяцев назад +1

    In addition to the 3" lean, the structure is actually also 12" out of plum. It's basically the shape of a banana that's leaning 3"

  • @PhilipMurphy8Extra
    @PhilipMurphy8Extra Год назад +15

    Having the right foundation is most important before building any building, Even I know about that.

  • @kellymoses8566
    @kellymoses8566 Год назад +1

    Not using piles is the same issue that caused the Millennium Tower to tilt. You have to be nuts to not use piles.

  • @supaspydamn
    @supaspydamn Год назад +6

    Now I want to go downtown and see it 😅

  • @wootlesswocks
    @wootlesswocks 11 месяцев назад

    Saeed your mustache is phenomenal 🎉

  • @bibekdas5595
    @bibekdas5595 Год назад +3

    The B1m is the best of you tube

  • @davidanderson2915
    @davidanderson2915 Год назад +1

    What is the purpose of building permits and inspections when this is the result?

  • @tyrport
    @tyrport Год назад +3

    I understand on a typical American house the foundation cost about 20%. Is there a general formula for taller buildings.

  • @yourboy7093
    @yourboy7093 Год назад

    Love the videos bro!

  • @pratikdharanep.d.8938
    @pratikdharanep.d.8938 Год назад +2

    New York city is great...love from INDIA ❤️😍🇮🇳.....

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Год назад +1

      NYC sucks

    • @pratikdharanep.d.8938
      @pratikdharanep.d.8938 Год назад +1

      @@CheeseMiser its my favourite 😍😍😍

    • @CheeseMiser
      @CheeseMiser Год назад +1

      @@pratikdharanep.d.8938 uts full of jerks and racist, everything us expensive.

    • @pratikdharanep.d.8938
      @pratikdharanep.d.8938 Год назад +1

      @@CheeseMiser ohhh then how about CA SF L.A.🔥❤️❤️

  • @IcurseAtFishForFun
    @IcurseAtFishForFun 10 месяцев назад +1

    I can tell you for a fact that building was being built nonunion. That’s what you get when you hire cheap labor and unexperienced workers. This needs to be exposed. I can promise you that this will not be the only building that was built by a bunch of unskilled laborers that will be unsuitable for habitation. I was a union ironworker in New York City for 18 years I have built 100s of foundations. There have been so many instances that we had to come bail out the nonunion contractors because they had no idea what the hell they were doing.

  • @markhemsworth2670
    @markhemsworth2670 Год назад +19

    Masterworks is full of misleading statements

  • @donjensen785
    @donjensen785 Год назад +2

    You don't need to be an engineer to look at this building and say with certainty that it will fail. Greed has no limits.

  • @tomcartwright7134
    @tomcartwright7134 Год назад +4

    I believe much of the land at the rivers edge is fill dirt , probably a hundred years ago. In order to put up a structure that tall safely one must install pylons which connect to solid bedrock. Lots of luck with fixing this monstrous mistake.

  • @AidanKelly-h3f
    @AidanKelly-h3f Год назад +2

    I read before that New York has a limited amount of space where larger, taller buildings can be built due to much of the land being reclaimed and not with solid ground underneath but with stuff like landfill and old boats.
    I think I read about this when I was looking up why they demolished the beautiful huge hotel built by Astor after he perished in HMS Titanic.
    Such a huge luxurious building demolished after something like 40-50 years because the skyscrapers need the land with the solid rock deep below the foundations.

  • @laszlokaestner5766
    @laszlokaestner5766 Год назад +8

    I can well believe they have a problem. My local doctors surgery is about to close and be pulled down. It is a single story building that sits on "good" ground (I was there when a test trench was dug by an engineer who said as much when they looked in the hole). The fact I witnessed this gives a clue to the problem, its about eight years old and has suffered subsidence since the day it was completed. Cracks started appearing in the first two weeks it was open and are now 2 inches across. I remind you that this is a single story building on good ground. If they can screw that up I am sure a 60 story sky scrapper is a doddle to fubar.

  • @jamesrobertson9149
    @jamesrobertson9149 Год назад +1

    A moustache that big needs to be built on strong foundations!

  • @RobertMclean-wj2yg
    @RobertMclean-wj2yg Год назад +3

    Lots of mistakes were made. It starts with the planning commission. You have an existing tall building on land fill, and you start a huge project next door (trans bay), with lots of vibration. From there, a child can see what went wrong. The only solution is to stop vibrating the area, stop building so tall and heavy. If you are going to underpin, only augers (corkscrewing) should be done. Even then, it’s a gamble. To go big, you should go wide. Look at how the Marriott Marquis was built, and how Frank Lloyd Wright build foundations. Mr. Wright built the Imperal Palace in Japan that survived a huge earthquake, and the Marriott opened the day of Loma Prieta. Both of these cases should be required reading for anyone building on land fill.

  • @Grimmtht
    @Grimmtht Год назад +1

    These super skinny skyscrapers always make me anxious

  • @maxd3028
    @maxd3028 Год назад +5

    It's baffling how a construction leading companies making such catastrophic mistakes!

    • @goodwinter6017
      @goodwinter6017 Год назад +1

      Poor scheduling of plannings, these buildings getting the green light depends entirely on investors backers and the likes which can vary and become unpredictable in which these circumstances can force developers to green light everything with out 100% surity that's everything is in place.
      It's almost as though the patients of the financiers and investors dictates the meticulous planning and schedule of these buildings. 4:06

  • @93theproducer47
    @93theproducer47 Год назад

    New subscriber here. I'm loving these videos on NYC. Very interesting stuff!

  • @fyrman9092
    @fyrman9092 Год назад +9

    As contractors finish surfaces, having the building out of plumb just makes doing doors and cabinets much harder.

    • @jamie.777
      @jamie.777 Год назад

      Yep😂. I poured concrete floors in Boston for years
      Unless it was structural,.they didn't care how flat the floor was

  • @MyNameIsChristBringsASword
    @MyNameIsChristBringsASword Год назад +1

    I just don't understand how so much weight can be placed on this island without it sinking.

  • @SpaghettiKillah
    @SpaghettiKillah Год назад +3

    Pisa Tower: aaah finally a worthy opponent 🤣