A cordon around an earthquake-damaged building was lifted
just days before it collapsed in the February 22 quake,
killing an Israeli backpacker who was eating lunch inside a
parked van.
But before Ofer Benyamin Mizrahi, 22, was crushed to death by
falling masonry he managed to save the lives of three friends
who escaped the van just before the Christchurch city centre
building came crashing down.
Engineers and city council officials were quizzed today at a
Royal Commission of Inquiry hearing into the Canterbury
earthquakes as to why the cordon in front of Winnie Bagoes
restaurant at 194 Gloucester St was lifted, despite it still
being rated as "earthquake prone'' and a "high risk''
building.
Mr Mizrahi was on holiday in Christchurch when the
magnitude-6.3 earthquake struck at 12.51pm on February 22,
last year. He and his three pals were eating lunch inside a
white Mitsubishi van parked outside the old Winnie Bagoes
restaurant when the violent shaking started.
Mr Mizrahi managed to get his friends out of the van, but was
unable to get out himself when the three-storey unreinforced
masonry heritage building collapsed.
After the magnitude 7.1 earthquake of September 4, 2010, the
building was "badly damaged'', with a parapet of the rear
wall collapsing.
Tenants vacated "immediately'' and engineering consultancy
firm Beca yellow-stickered the building after finding
"significant cracking and movement.''
When the magnitude 4.9 Boxing Day jolt struck, it suffered
more damage and was red-stickered.
On December 27, a "barrier fence'' was erected at the front
of the building.
Make-safe work was approved by Christchurch City Council on
January 6 last year, and building work was carried out under
Beca's supervision.
On February 11, building owner Devonia Realty Ltd was advised
by Beca that work was completed.
David Wallace of Devonia told the hearing: "As a result of
received advice from Beca, the city council removed the
barricades'' on either February 15 or 16.
Steve McCarthy, Environmental Policy and Approvals Manager of
Christchurch City Council, referred to correspondence from
Beca which was "critical'' to their consideration in lifting
the cordon.
A Beca letter to the council said: "Any potential dangerous
features have been secured ... and does not pose a threat to
the public.'' Mr McCarthy admitted that there was "a lot of
pressure'' from neighbouring businesses affected by the
cordon, to lift it "with urgency.''
"There seemed no reason to leave it up,'' he said.
But Beca today denied actually recommending the cordon's
removal.
Samir Govind, a technical director at Beca, told the
commission: "We only provided advice on the completion of the
Section 124 notice and that the building was still earthquake
prone and it was high risk.''
Asked by counsel assisting the commission, Marcus Elliott why
he didn't "take a step back'' and raise with the city council
the "wider risks'' associated with the building, Mr Govind
replied: "I thought I did.''
He added: "The council managed cordons - I didn't manage
them.''
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