Report blames poor welds for Mexico City metro collapse
MEXICO CITY – Poorly welded, badly located and completely missing studs that joined steel support beams to a concrete layer supporting the track bed were to blame for the May 3 collapse of an elevated segment of Mexico City’s metro that killed 26 people, experts concluded in a report released Tuesday.
The Mexico City government hired Norwegian certification firm DNV to find the causes of the deadly accident. The final report arrived at similar conclusions as the firm’s preliminary report in June.
The sloppy installation of the studs created a situation where the elevated structure was working as “two independent parallel beams, a concrete beam and steal beam, that experienced loading conditions for which they were not designed,” the report said. That distorted the framework, leading to “fatigue cracks” that reduced the structure’s ability to bear weight.
Other possible factors included deficiencies in
the beams themselves and the design of the framework, the report said.
The $1.3 billion Line 12 of Mexico City’s metro system was built from
2010 to 2012 when current Foreign Affairs Secretary Marcelo Ebrard was the mayor. Ebrard is a likely contender to succeed President Andrés Manuel López Obrador.