Empire Garage Collapse Has Milwaukee Cracking Down On Parking Owners

Milwaukee officials, rattled by a partial collapse in a downtown apartment garage in January, are moving to put parking structure owners on a much shorter leash. A Zoning, Neighborhoods & Development Committee has advanced an ordinance that would force owners to hire independent engineers for regular structural inspections and file those reports with the city. The full Common Council is set to take up the proposal next week.

What happened at the Empire Building

On Jan. 7, part of the parking garage floor at the Empire Building, 1041 E. Knapp St., suddenly gave way, sending two vehicles crashing into the basement level below. The driver managed to get out without serious injury. Residents later described seeing sewer water and standing water pooled in the new void as crews worked to remove the cars and stabilize the scene. As reported by WISN, the Milwaukee Fire Department and the Department of Neighborhood Services (DNS) responded to assess both structural integrity and life-safety risks.

Why officials say the floor failed

The Milwaukee Fire Department told reporters that freshly poured concrete placed over an aging garage floor may have played a role in the collapse. CBS58 reported that DNS ordered the owner to obtain a structural engineer’s report and that emergency repairs were required to restore heat after a pipe broke. Engineers are now expected to determine whether corrosion, long-term water infiltration or deferred maintenance ultimately caused the failure.

City Hall’s oversight plan

Ald. Robert Bauman authored the draft ordinance after talking with parking-industry leaders, and the Zoning, Neighborhoods & Development Committee backed it with a unanimous vote. “No injuries, no loss of life, but it did raise the issue of ‘do we do post-construction inspection of parking structures and parking decks?’” Bauman told colleagues. DNS commercial division manager Jumaane Cheatham told the committee that the January collapse was linked to foundation cracks that had repeatedly taken on water, including salted runoff from winter conditions.

The proposal borrows heavily from Milwaukee’s existing facade-inspection program. It would sort parking structures into four categories, set a staggered filing schedule based on the age of the building and the materials in its walls, and require recurring structural checkups at intervals ranging from five to twelve years. Owners would be obligated to submit inspection reports to DNS, as reported by Urban Milwaukee.

How the state fits in

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