Miami Herald

Report blames poor welds for Mexico City subway collapse

- BY MARK STEVENSON

A preliminar­y report by experts into the collapse of a Mexico City elevated subway line that killed 26 people placed much of the blame Wednesday on poor welds in studs that joined steel support beams to a concrete layer supporting the track bed.

The city government hired Norwegian certificat­ion firm DNV to study the possible causes of the May 3 accident, in which a span of the elevated line buckled to the ground, dragging down two subway cars.

The report also said there were apparently not enough studs, and the concrete poured over them may have been defective; the welds between stretches of steel beams also appear to have been badly done.

“The studs showed deficienci­es in the welding process,” the report states.

The existence of constructi­on defects when the line was built between 2010 and 2012 could be a major blow to the political career of Mexico’s top diplomat, who was mayor at the time, and to Mexico’s richest man, whose company built part of the subway line.

The report centered on photos and physical inspection that showed that metal studs welded to the top of steel support beams had broken or sheered off

cleanly, suggesting the welds were defective.

The beams could not carry the weight of the track bed on their own. The studs projecting upward from the beams were covered with a poured concrete

slab meant to help carry the weight.

But the studs were found to be still carrying ceramic rings that covered the welds. Used as a safety and control method to contain the molten steel, the rings were supposed to have been knocked off after welding so inspectors could see the welds themselves. The fact they were left in place may suggest the welds were not properly inspected.

That would fit in with reports that the project was rushed to completion so the Number 12 subway line could be inaugurate­d by current Foreign Relations Secretary Marcelo Ebrard before he left office as mayor in 2012.

The section was built by a company owned by telecom and constructi­on magnate Carlos Slim, currently Mexico’s richest man and once the world’s wealthiest. Slim is an engineer by training and his firms are currently involved in building some parts of the controvers­ial Maya Train project, which will circle the Yucatan Peninsula.

Any suggestion­s his firm did shoddy work on the subway would be a serious blow to his reputation as a sort of elder statesman of the Mexican business community.

The $1.3 billion Number 12 Line, the newest section of a vast subway system opened in 1969, was illfated from the start. The so-called Gold Line cost half again as much as projected, suffered repeated constructi­on delays and was hit with allegation­s of design flaws, corruption and conflicts of interest.

A top executive of one of the companies that built it was the brother of the man who oversaw the project for the government.

The scandal over forced closure of the costly new line in 2014 — just 17 months after it was inaugurate­d — essentiall­y forced Ebrard into political exile. He was rescued by his patron, new President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, who had helped make him mayor in 2006 and resuscitat­ed him by naming him foreign relations secretary in 2018.

 ?? PEDRO PARDO AFP via Getty Images/TNS ?? An aerial view shows the site of a metro train accident after an overpass for a metro partially collapsed in Mexico City on May 4. Twenty-six people died in the accident.
PEDRO PARDO AFP via Getty Images/TNS An aerial view shows the site of a metro train accident after an overpass for a metro partially collapsed in Mexico City on May 4. Twenty-six people died in the accident.

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