The Bergen Record

Residents displaced after Bronx building collapse

- Christophe­r Cann

Maridelsa Fana, a New York City school bus driver, was looking for a place to park Monday afternoon when she heard what sounded like an explosion.

By the time she looked up at her rearview mirror, an entire corner of the seven-story apartment building where she’s lived for over a decade had fallen in a massive heap onto the street below. She sped down the block and leaped out of the passenger door, afraid the entire building would topple over.

No one was seriously injured or killed in the partial collapse but the more than 140 residents who lived in the building, like Fana, have had their lives upended and are now searching for a permanent place to stay.

“I haven’t been able to sleep,” Fana, 50, told USA TODAY. “I’m not OK.”

The right corner of the century-old apartment building in the Morris Heights neighborho­od of the Bronx crumpled around 3:30 p.m. Monday.

“Miraculous­ly, no one was severely injured at the partial building collapse at 1915 Billingsle­y Terrace,” Fire Commission­er Laura Kavanagh said in a post on X. “From looking at the scene and surveillan­ce footage, it could have been so much worse.”

Two people received minor injuries while they were fleeing the building. As of Tuesday afternoon, the Red Cross had registered 141 people for assistance, including meals and, for the majority of residents, emergency housing.

The building, built in 1927, was flagged as having an unsafe facade in 2021, said James Oddo, the commission­er of the New York City Department of Buildings in a news conference Monday evening.

He said a report submitted by the building’s owner in 2021 found seven unsafe facade conditions, including cracked bricks and deteriorat­ing mortar, though, he noted, “Unsafe facade conditions is not the same as an unsafe building.” Work on the building’s facade was being done as recently as a

few days ago, Oddo said. It’s what the work entailed and whether it was completed.

Drawings submitted by the building’s owner as part of the permit process “speaks to the” section of the building that collapsed, Oddo said.

“Obviously, we’ll take a strong look at that,” he said. “Our engineers hope to be able – once given the green light from FDNY – to get into the building ... to do an inspection, and we’ll have more answers after that.”

In the last two years, the building has been the subject of 179 complaints, raging from heating issues to a collapsed ceiling, which was reported in November and was soon closed following an inspection by the New York City Department of Housing Preservati­on and Developmen­t. There were also 103 open property violations dating back to May 2019, according to the HPD website.

Fana said while she’s thankful she and her family are safe, she dreads the thought of searching for a new apartment, considerin­g the city’s high rent prices and her modest income.

“We’re going to have to move out of there – no question,” she said. “But I don’t know where we’re going to go.”

 ?? JOE FREDERICK/AP ?? Firefighters continue to work the scene at a six-story corner of a Bronx apartment building that collapsed Monday in New York. More than 140 people were displaced as a result of the collapse.
JOE FREDERICK/AP Firefighters continue to work the scene at a six-story corner of a Bronx apartment building that collapsed Monday in New York. More than 140 people were displaced as a result of the collapse.

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