Menu

Topics

Connect

Comments

Want to discuss? Please read our Commenting Policy first.

Northwest Edmonton building in early construction stage damaged after windy evening

Global News

A building in early construction stages in northwest Edmonton was heavily damaged following a stormy Wednesday evening.

Story continues below advertisement

Dozens of steel beams were blown over and scattered at the site at 184 Street and 126 Avenue on Thursday morning.

Emergency crews were called early Thursday after workers started to arrive on the scene.

There have been no injuries reported.

“It looks like there’s been some equipment damaged underneath (the beams),” said district chief Glenn Roseboom.

“We can’t speculate on how it came down or what caused it, but we had a really good storm last night.”

Some equipment was crushed under steel beams after a windy evening in Edmonton on July 21, 2021. Global News

A severe thunderstorm hit the Edmonton and surrounding area on Wednesday evening.

Story continues below advertisement

Some areas outside of Edmonton were also placed under a tornado warning for part of the night.

A spokesperson for Hopewell, the building’s developer, confirmed the wind precipitated the collapse.

Security cameras on site show the building fall during Wednesday’s windstorm, they said.

Global News. Global News

“It was really hard to believe,” construction worker Eric Button said as he taped off the area on Thursday. “I’ve never seen something like that before.”

Story continues below advertisement

Chris Hebert and Vibeke Bradbury work in the area and had been watching the building go up for the past week. Bradbury said crews had just started building the structure on Monday.

The building before it collapsed Wednesday night. Courtesy: Vibeke Bradbury

She couldn’t believe the building had been levelled by the storm.

“’Did that storm really do that?’” she thought after seeing the destruction when she got to work on Thursday. “That’s a lot of work to just be gone. It blew my mind, to be honest.”

Story continues below advertisement

“The first thing I thought was that somebody messed up somewhere. Somebody didn’t do something right,” Hebert said. “For that to fall down…

“I used to be scaffolder and I’ve had scaffolding in wind storms like that and they don’t come down. That’s a big structure to come down.”

An investigation is underway into the collapse.

Advertisement

You are viewing an Accelerated Mobile Webpage.

View Original Article