Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Residents of tower next to collapsed condo building decide to stay.

- By Terry Spencer and Russ Bynum Associated Press reporter Adriana Gomez Licon in Miami contribute­d to this report.

SURFSIDE — About a block from the Miami-area beachfront condominiu­m tower that collapsed sits its sister building, erected a year later by the same company, using the same materials and a similar design. It has faced the same tides and salty air.

This has made some residents of Champlain Towers North worried enough to leave, though many have remained, saying they are confident their almost 40-yearold, 12-story building is better maintained. They say their building doesn’t have the same problems with cracking in support beams and in the pool area that 2018 engineerin­g reports show the south tower had.

The collapse of Champlain Towers South in Surfside on Thursday has drawn attention to older high-rise buildings throughout South Florida and prompted Miami-Dade Mayor Daniella Levine Cava to order a 30-day audit of whether such buildings under her jurisdicti­on are complying with a required recertific­ation of structural integrity at 40 years. She said she wants any issues raised by inspection­s to be immediatel­y addressed. She’s also urged municipali­ties within the county to follow suit. Miami, for example, has launched a 45-day audit of buildings six stories and higher that are 40 years old or older.

Inspectors performed a quick-hit examinatio­n of the north building and Surfside Mayor Charles Burkett said nothing was found that indicates the tower is in danger of collapse.

That didn’t reassure everyone.

“I’m petrified of returning,” said Rebecca Weinstock, a snowbird who bought a sixth-floor condo in the north building four years ago with her husband. She is in New York, where she was when the south tower collapsed early Thursday, killing at least 11 people and leaving 150 missing.

While she agrees the north building is well maintained, she said that’s not enough to satisfy her that it’s completely safe.

It was completed in 1982, one year after the south tower, and built by the same developer, Nathan Reiber, through his firm, Nattel Constructi­on. The possibilit­y that the collapse was caused by a design or constructi­on flaw means she won’t be returning anytime soon.

“I am out my investment, I am out my apartment, I am out my future, but we are talking about lives here,” she said. The only way she’ll return, she said, is if two independen­t engineers — not from South Florida — agree it’s safe.

North tower residents who want to temporaril­y relocate are being offered private assistance from Support Surfside, a charity group helping victims of the collapse. The group did a survey of the

building’s full-time residents and found about half are staying and half have left. Overall, about half the units are owned by snowbirds like Weinstock and those residents left before the collapse, the group’s survey showed.

Overall, 28 of the 113 units are currently occupied, the group found.

Most residents who are staying took the position of Philip and Nora Zyne, who remain in their fifth-floor condo. The Zynes bought their condo 12 years ago, and have lived there full time for six. They have several friends and acquaintan­ces who lived in the south tower and remain missing.

Zyne said Monday that he’s seen numerous inspectors in his building since the collapse.

“I’ve never seen any major structural issues” in the north building, said Philip Zyne, an attorney. “I’m not worried at all right now. I do want to get a full structural engineerin­g and forensic examinatio­n done.”

Salomon Gold, who spent 10 years as the condo associatio­n president for the north tower and 20 on the board, is convinced the building is safe, saying he and the other board members never skimped on maintenanc­e. He compared the building collapse to airplanes: Just because one crashes doesn’t mean others of that same make and model will.

“We are in good shape,” said Gold, 89.

The current condo associatio­n president, Naum Lusky, declined comment Monday.

Surfside Mayor Burkett said a deepdive inspection of the north tower will be conducted Tuesday by an engineerin­g firm hired by the residents. The town will inspect other older buildings soon. Given the results of the preliminar­y examinatio­n of the north tower, he said he doesn’t see a reason to order an evacuation. Still, he said, he’s not sure he would stay there.

“If you asked me if I wanted to spend the night in that building, I’d be a little ... I wouldn’t be willing to do that until we went through it,” he said.

Esther Drachman and her husband aren’t taking any chances. Drachman’s

91-year-old mother-in-law lives in the north tower.

“My mother-in-law is bedridden, so we took her out and brought her to our house,” Drachman said. “We just felt like we couldn’t get her out in five minutes” if a rapid evacuation became necessary.

Drachman said her mother-in-law wasn’t worried or very aware of the details of the disaster. She said she and her husband are waiting to see if a thorough inspection turns up any problems.

“We’ll see if that building ’s fine,” Drachman said. “And if it is, we’ll put her back in.”

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/AP ?? A sister building of the condominiu­m tower that partially collapsed Thursday stands the same day in Surfside. This building, erected a year later by the same company, using the same materials and a similar design, has faced the same tides and salty air as the building that collapsed.
WILFREDO LEE/AP A sister building of the condominiu­m tower that partially collapsed Thursday stands the same day in Surfside. This building, erected a year later by the same company, using the same materials and a similar design, has faced the same tides and salty air as the building that collapsed.

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