Balcony collapse tied to rotted wood beams
BERKELEY, Calif. — The balcony collapse that killed six college students appears to have been caused by rotted wooden beams, Berkeley’s mayor said Wednesday as the victims’ heartbroken loved ones began arriving in the U.S. from Ireland.
Mayor Tom Bates said investigators believe the wood was not caulked and sealed properly at the time of construction and was damaged by moisture as a result.
The crowded fifth-floor balcony broke off an apartment building during a 21st-birthday party early Tuesday held by visiting Irish college students, dumping 13 people 50 feet onto the pavement. In addition to the six killed, seven were seriously hurt.
“More than likely it was caused by rain and caused by water damage that was done to the support beams,” Bates said. He said it was “obviously a bad idea” for 13 people to crowd onto such a small balcony — it was about 40 square feet — but added that he is not blaming the victims.
Later in the day, however, the mayor said the water-damage theory was speculation on his part and not an official conclusion, and that the investigation is still underway.
Building inspectors also determined another balcony at the Library Gardens apartment complex was “structurally unsafe and presented a collapse hazard.” They ordered it demolished.
Two other balconies were red-tagged, or declared offlimits, at the apartments, which were completed in 2007 and are popular among visiting students and those at the nearby University of California, Berkeley.
Segue Construction, the Library Gardens general contractor, was involved in two San Francisco Bay Area lawsuits in recent years involving allegations of dry rot and substandard balconies at condo and apartment projects in Millbrae and San Jose. Among other things, Segue was accused of improperly waterproofing balconies.
Both cases were settled in 2013 with Segue, developers and other parties agreeing to pay millions of dollars.
Segue spokesman Sam Singer said such litigation is common on large projects and “has no bearing on the tragedy” in Berkeley.
“They are completely different projects. They are completely different types of balconies,” he said. Singer said of the balcony collapse: “Segue Construction has never had an incident like this in its history.”
Cassandra Bujarski, a spokeswoman for the apartments’ property management firm, Greystar, had no comment.
Across the Atlantic, flags flew at half-staff around Ireland and the country’s parliament suspended normal business as the nation mourned the dead: Ashley Donohoe, 22, of Rohnert Park, California, and Olivia Burke, Eoghan Culligan, Niccolai Schuster, Lorcan Miller and Eimear Walsh, all 21-year-olds from Ireland.
“They were in the prime of their lives,” said Bernadette Prendiville, principal of the high school from which Burke and Walsh graduated. “They had a successful time in school, went about their work quietly and had everything going for them, everything ahead of them.”
Josh Wilson, assistant principal at Rancho Cotate High School, said Donohoe was a remarkably wellliked and cheerful young woman who returned after graduating to help coach the soccer team.
“She just always had a smile on her face and transcended peer groups and cliques and had a friend in just about every social circle,” he said.
Grieving family members declined to speak with the media after arriving from Ireland and being met at San Francisco International Airport by a priest and representatives from the Irish Consulate.
Later Wednesday night a Mass was held at a cathedral in nearby Oakland in the students’ honor. The gathering of about 300 people, which included some fellow Irish students but no relatives of the victims, heard “Amazing Grace” played on bagpipes as they mourned.
“All we can do is to pray, to love and to care for them,” Father Aidan McAleenan, who had met with some of the victims, said at the Mass.
The Irish students were working and traveling in the U.S. over the summer.