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News

Crane collapses into houses in East London.

10 replies

HeIenaDove · 08/07/2020 20:40

BREAKING

Bow crane collapse: Woman dies after crane falls on houses in east London
A witness tells Sky News they saw the crane falling and "thought the world was ending" as it smashed into the roof.
Wednesday 8 July 2020 20:25, UK

A woman has died after a 20-metre crane collapsed on houses in east London.

The woman was found on the first floor of one of the properties that was damaged after the crane came down in Bow, London Fire Brigade said.

Two people are in hospital with head injuries while two others were treated by paramedics at the scene on Wednesday afternoon

The crane fell on two terraced houses and a block of flats under development.

Motiur Rahman told Sky News: "The whole roof of my house is gone. It's all twisted. I've had quite a shock

It was about two thirty in the afternoon and I opened the window into the garden and just saw this big red thing coming down, and I ran. I thought, 'I don't know what to do'. I thought the world was ending."

A woman, who did not give her name, said her home was also one of those damaged, adding: "I came out of the bathroom and if I had come out a second later, the attic door, which is above, could have fallen on me and that would have knocked me out.

"The way that everything fell - if my brother or sister had been in their rooms, which is where it hit directly, I just cannot bear to think about it.

"My dad was walking back into the house to tell everyone 'move, there is a crane coming down'.

"If anyone had been inside the two rooms there, they would have been completely crushed."

She said there was "rubble and stuff" in the doorway and "smoke and just bits and bobs around".

"I am not sure how I managed to run downstairs because there was stuff everywhere.

"All the smoke alarms were going off."

"It sounded to me like an earthquake or almost like a stone that someone had chucked into our home.

"We are all just so lucky to be alive - that is all I can really say."

The crane was being used by Swan Housing Association and NU living.

A spokeswoman said: "Swan Housing Association/NU living is aware of an incident that occurred at our Watts Grove development site in Tower Hamlets, east London, this afternoon.

"A full incident response has been implemented and our staff are on site supporting the emergency services in their response."

Unite national officer Jerry Swain called for "an urgent, full and complete investigation into the circumstances that led to this accident"

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cdtaylornats · 09/07/2020 23:19

Things fall.

Our department PA went to bed one night and woke up to a bedroom suddenly full of tree.

The Unite guy was just flapping his lips to feel important. Whoever insures the building company will be crawling all over it to try to get someone else to pay up.

SquishySquirmy · 09/07/2020 23:33

Things do not just "fall" cdt
A huge crane falling in a built up, residential area is not the same as a tree falling in bad weather.
Fatal industrial accidents cannot be compared to natural incidents like falling trees.
It should not happen.
If the post-mitigation risk of the crane falling was high (or even "unlikely but not very unlikely"), then the work should not have gone ahead with people living beneath it.
If the post mitigation risk was assessed as being very, very low, then what was missed and could it be missed again?
They need to understand why it happened (presumably despite multiple precautions) in order to prevent it happening again.
Were the precautions and safety measures inadequate? Or were they not followed correctly? It's not a freak, natural incident it is a failure.

Dizzywizz · 10/07/2020 06:50

This is terrible - and agree it is nothing like a tree falling. It should not happen

bluefoxmug · 10/07/2020 06:57

this is not a tree.
and even trees don't just fall unless it's diseased/weak or in high winds.
I saw the pictures, shocking. those poor families now displaced until the houses are repaired.
in addition to the grief and injuries.
and the battle with insurance, surveyors, builders.

prh47bridge · 11/07/2020 08:56

The Unite guy is absolutely not just "flapping his lips". A crane like this should not fall. There will be an investigation to determine if it was a manufacturing defect, faulty installation or a failure to maintain and inspect the crane properly.

Even when a tree falls the landowner may be liable.

cdtaylornats · 12/07/2020 22:31

www.popularmechanics.com/technology/infrastructure/a19612/why-cranes-fall/

They fall a lot. sometimes it is nobodies fault - a sinkhole opening under a crane for example.

The Unite spokesman will know 3 investigations are liable to happen the company, the insurers and HSE and now there is a fatality the coroner will hold a tribunal so he is just making noise to be noticed.

prh47bridge · 13/07/2020 00:12

That is a US site. Safety standards are somewhat higher in the UK. This is the first tower crane collapse in the UK since 2009 and the sixth since 2000. They do not fall a lot. If properly maintained, installed and operated they will not fall. Shifting ground conditions such as a sinkhole won't happen if the contractor has carried out the correct safety checks prior to installation. So it is somebody's fault.

cdtaylornats · 13/07/2020 22:38

No 2017 at Crewe
2014 Blackwall
2009 Chandlers Whart
2007 Croydon
2007 Elysium Fields, Liverpool
2006 Battersea
2005 Worthing
2000 Canary Wharf

plus 2020 crane onboard ship in Scotland
2017 offshore oil rig
2016 offshore oil rig

It might be somebody's fault but not necessarily.

I am intrigued why you think safety standards are more lax in the US.

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