Porterville Recorder

Cracked $2B transit hub tarnishes San Francisco's reputation

- By JANIE HAR and PAUL ELIAS

SAN FRANCISCO — San Francisco officials struggled Wednesday to find the source of unusual cracking in support beams that shut down a just-opened, $2 billion transit center meant to serve as a bold architectu­ral statement from a wealthy, high-tech city.

The Salesforce Transit Center opened to great fanfare last month as an embodiment of San Francisco's reputation for innovation and sustainabi­lity. Its rooftop park would provide green space for people to socialize while commuters could take buses from the multistory building that spans three city blocks.

Now, the transit hub named for a cloud computing giant appears to be the latest example of problems in a city brimming with homelessne­ss and poor infrastruc­ture. The shutdown, which officials say will last until the facility can be declared safe, caused chaos during Tuesday's evening rush hour.

Enveloped in wavy white sheets of metal veil, the fivelevel center with a towering sky-lit central entrance hall sits in the South of Market neighborho­od, where constructi­on is booming. It's adjacent to the so-called sinking condominiu­m, Millennium Tower, which has settled about 18 inches (45 centimeter­s) since it opened over a former landfill in 2009.

Officials and constructi­on experts say the transit center's two cracked beams are not tied to the condo woes, though some homeowners have sued the developer and city alleging constructi­on of the transit facility caused the Millennium Tower to sink.

Workers installing roof tiles Tuesday morning found the first crack, about 2½ feet long and 4 inches deep, on a steel beam holding up the transit center's rooftop park. A second, smaller crack was found later that day on a parallel beam.

Two other similar beams do not show signs of cracking, said Mark Zabaneh, executive director of Transbay Joint Powers Authority, which operates the transit hub.

He said their first priority is to shore up the beams so the facility can reopen while engineers search for a permanent fix. He said he expects the center to remain closed at least through the end of next week.

"We're working hard to rectify the situation," Zabeneh said. "We're very disappoint­ed with what happened; we will get to the bottom of this."

He said the steel came from Stockton-based Herrick Corp. The beams looked fine when they were installed in January 2016. The problem could be in the fabricatio­n, installati­on or design of the beams, Zabeneh said.

Constructi­on experts say it's exceedingl­y rare for steel girders that support buildings to crack.

Engineer David Friedman said it's likely the beams arrived without cracks but that once the weight of the roof garden and other structures were added, "new stresses may have exacerbate­d the possible fabricatio­n flaws."

The beams likely passed inspection after installati­on, engineer Joe Maffei said.

"If that's the case, it's likely welding caused the problem," he said.

 ?? AP PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG ?? People are directed around the Salesforce Transit Center following its closure Tuesday, Sept. 25, in San Francisco.
AP PHOTO BY ERIC RISBERG People are directed around the Salesforce Transit Center following its closure Tuesday, Sept. 25, in San Francisco.

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