Miami Herald

Noted engineer was beloved neighbor

- BY LINDA ROBERTSON lrobertson@miamiheral­d.com

Simon Segal devoted his career to the science of engineerin­g, the craft of constructi­on and the business of building.

He died in the inexplicab­le collapse of his condominiu­m. He lived on the top floor, in penthouse 1203 of Champlain Towers South in Surfside.

Segal, 80, a Havana native who immigrated to Miami in 1960, was an amiable lifelong bachelor affectiona­tely known as “Simoncito,” according to his friend Isaac Osin.

KNOWN AS ‘SIMONCITO’

“He was a short fellow and everyone called him Simoncito,” Osin said.

“He was a brilliant guy with a quick wit. He always had a joke or a smile. He was never mad at anybody. Everybody in that building knew Simoncito.”

Segal’s body was recovered July 6 by searchers in the Champlain rubble on Collins Avenue, the result of the June 24 partial collapse of the building, leading to the deaths of 95 people, based on Tuesday’s toll. Perhaps Segal, who was a master of the cutting comeback, Osin recalled, would have noted the irony of his death.

After earning his civilengin­eering degree from Cornell University in

1965, Segal worked tirelessly for half a century as an engineer. He focused on bridge design early in his career. On his résumé he listed areas of expertise in constructi­on management and structural engineerin­g, including

“beams, columns, slabs, footings, wind load designs, reinforced concrete, steel design.”

The cause of the Champlain South collapse is under investigat­ion but a 2018 engineer’s report that became a source of dissension among the condo owners cited a design flaw in the pooldeck slab and “abundant” cracking and spalling in the concrete of the undergroun­d parking garage, where puddles were a frequent problem.

Segal listed his skills as a certificat­ion reviewer, his knowledge of the Florida Building Code and his qualificat­ions in “office building constructi­on, condominiu­m constructi­on, reinforced concrete repairs, residentia­l remodeling, commercial land developmen­t, design-build contracts, government­al permitting and plans preparatio­ns.”

Osin, whose sister and brother-in-law lived in a

third-floor unit and were among the survivors, did not know if Segal was involved in contentiou­s condo-associatio­n discussion­s about renovation­s and costly assessment­s.

Segal earned three master’s degrees in management, finance and business administra­tion from FIU and taught finance and real-estate developmen­t as an adjunct professor at FIU.

He was president of two real-estate investment companies, owner of Simon Segal Constructi­on and senior engineer for A&A Arnold Associates in Hialeah and C.K. Constructi­on Associates of Bay Harbor Islands as well as a licensed real-estate and mortgage broker. A member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, he served as secretary and treasurer of the South Florida chapter.

MET AT CUBAN HEBREW CONGREGATI­ON

Osin, who immigrated to Miami with his family in 1961, became friends with Segal at the Cuban Hebrew Congregati­on in Miami Beach. Gatherings were held in a meeting room at the old Washington Federal Savings & Loan.

“We were younger than him and impressed by his intelligen­ce and his accomplish­ments,” Osin said. “He was going to an Ivy League school. Then he got a good job and a nice car. We were just Cuban refugees who could barely speak English and couldn’t even afford a bike.

“We used to have fun going out dancing or to the Miami Beach clubs where we’d try to meet girls — like the Surfcomber Hotel, the Shelborne, the Castaways.

“Simoncito was a very pleasant, smart, caring person. We used to say, ‘Next Christmas in Cuba.’ Because Cubans in Miami thought we’d go back to Cuba in a year or two. It became a running joke.”

 ??  ?? Simon Segal moved from Havana to Miami in 1960.
Simon Segal moved from Havana to Miami in 1960.

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