Imperial Valley Press

4 die after constructi­on crane crushes cars in Seattle

-

SEATTLE (AP) — Four people died and three were injured when a constructi­on crane on the new Google Seattle campus collapsed Saturday, pinning six cars underneath.

One female and three males were dead by the time firefighte­rs got to the scene, Fire Chief Harold Scoggins said. He said two of the dead were crane operators and the other two were people who had been in cars.

A 25-year-old mother and her 4-month-old daughter as well as a 28-year-old man were taken to Harborview Medical Center, according to Seattle Fire spokesman Lance Garland. A fourth person also was injured and treated at the scene.

Harborview spokeswoma­n Susan Gregg said Saturday evening that the mother and baby would be discharged, while the man injured was in satisfacto­ry condition.

The King County Medical Examiner’s Office said it would not release names of people who died until Monday.

“My thoughts and prayers are with those killed and injured,” Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said on Twitter.

The crane collapsed near the intersecti­on of Mercer Street and Fairview Avenue near Interstate 5 shortly before 3:30 p.m., Scoggins said.

With Amazon and other tech companies increasing their hiring in Seattle, the city has dozens of constructi­on cranes building office towers and apartment buildings. As of January, there were about 60 constructi­on cranes in Seattle, more than any other American city.

Scoggins said o cials do not yet know the cause of the collapse.

Daren Konopaski, the business manager for the Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers Local 302, which represents heavy-equipment operators, told The Seattle Times he understood the crane was being dismantled when heavy winds moved through the area.

“We don’t know, but that’s what seems to have happened here,” he said. “We are in the process of trying to get informatio­n.”

The National Weather Service in Seattle said a line of showers moved over Seattle just about the time the crane fell. An observatio­n station on nearby Lake Union showed winds kicked up with gusts of up to 23 mph at 3:28 p.m., just about the time o cials said the crane fell.

“It was terrifying,” witness Esther Nelson, a biotech researcher who was working in a building nearby, told the newspaper.

“The wind was blowing really strong,” she said, and added that the crane appeared to break in half. “Half of it was flying down sideways on the building,” she said. “The other half fell down on the street, crossing both lanes of tra c.”

The office building the crane fell from was badly damaged, with several of its windows smashed.

A crane collapsed in the Seattle suburb of Bellevue in 2006, damaging three neighborin­g buildings and killing a Microsoft attorney who was sitting in his living room. The state Department of Labor and Industries cited two companies for workplace-safety violations after an investigat­ion that found a flawed design for the crane’s base.

“Trudi and I join all Washington­ians in extending our deepest condolence­s to the family and friends of the four people who died in this afternoon’s tragic accident,” Washington state Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement.

 ?? ALAN BERNER/THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP ?? Emergency crews work at the scene of a constructi­on crane collapse near the intersecti­on of Mercer Street and Fairview Avenue near Interstate 5 on Saturday in Seattle.
ALAN BERNER/THE SEATTLE TIMES VIA AP Emergency crews work at the scene of a constructi­on crane collapse near the intersecti­on of Mercer Street and Fairview Avenue near Interstate 5 on Saturday in Seattle.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States