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Miami Beach apartment building evacuated because of concrete deterioration

The building is at least the fourth in Florida to be partly or fully evacuated since the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium building.
Image: An excavator removes the rubble of the demolished section of the Champlain Towers South building, as recovery work continues at the site of the partially collapsed condo building
An excavator removes rubble of the demolished section of the Champlain Towers South building as recovery work continues at the site of the partly collapsed condominium building Monday in Surfside, Fla.Rebecca Blackwell / AP

City officials in Miami Beach, Florida, evacuated an apartment building Monday because of concrete deterioration, an attorney for the building's owners said.

The building, at 6881 Indian Creek Drive, is at least the fourth in Florida to be have been evacuated or partly evacuated since the partial collapse of the Champlain Towers South condominium building in Surfside on June 24.

Two days later, Miami-Dade County Mayor Daniella Levine Cava ordered an audit of buildings in the county that are five stories or higher and at or near 40 years old. She encouraged municipalities to do the same, offering the county's support.

Levine Cava said the audit should be completed within 30 days.

The Indian Creek Drive apartment building is 82 years old and two floors high. Miami Beach officials did not immediately respond to requests for comment Tuesday about what prompted the most recent review that led to the evacuation.

Manny J. Vadillo, who represents the owners of 6881 Indian Creek Drive, said the city posted a notice to vacate the property Monday.

The owners, he said, have been "diligently" working with the city since they decided in May to demolish the building by December. They started to "vacate the building in an orderly fashion," he said.

Fourteen people, half of whom were paying rent, remained in the building, he said. Miami Beach is giving them through the end of the week to evacuate, and the building's owners are helping them move, he said.

"My clients are extremely sensitive to safety and, in fact, visited the property several times since last week to speak with tenants when communications started with the city to ensure tenants were not caught by surprise," Vadillo said. "Some tenants have been there many years."

Evacuations were ordered this month for residents of the Crestview Towers Condominium in North Miami Beach after building officials determined that it was also unsafe.

Ninety-four people were confirmed to have died in the Champlain Towers South collapse as of Monday. Investigators have not determined what caused half the building to flatten in the middle of the night.

Documents released after the collapse included a 2018 report that highlighted an engineer's concerns that the building had "major structural damage." The engineer said his findings showed that there was "abundant cracking" and crumbling in the parking garage.