A New York City parking garage that caved in on Tuesday killing at least one person was ‘hazardous’ with four open building violations, according to reports.
The horror incident left a fleet of vehicles piled on top of another amongst crumbled concrete, causing a huge emergency response at the site near Wall Street.
Terrifying footage captured the moment it came down yesterday afternoon, revealing how the cars on a lower level were crushed after the upper floor caved in and vehicles fell through the broken concrete.
One resident who lives near Financial District parking garage described hearing ‘big bangs’ before the wall came down, leaving a hole in her apartment.
With investigations into the shocking incident underway, the New York City Department of Buildings has confirmed that there are four open property violations relating to the garage in Lower Manhattan.

Cars and debris are seen piled up in the lower Manhattan parking lot after the collapse on Tuesday that resulted in the death of one person and five other injuries

Cars piled up on top of each other after the building’s floors ‘pancaked’ on top of each other

Terrifying footage captured the moment Enterprise Ann Parkin in lower Manhattan collapsed in on itself
One of the violations, from 2003, is described as a ‘failure to maintain building’. The city called the violation ‘hazardous’, with missing or defective concrete in at least one party of the building noted in the report.
Another open violation from 2009 includes the description of a ‘loose piece of concrete in danger of falling at various locations.’
CBS News said it had found other violations over the years listed as resolved.
Speaking to the New York Post, Sandy Imhoff – whose second-floor apartment shared a walk with the garage on Ann Street – described the collapse.
‘There were a lot of really big bangs first. Then part of the wall started coming down,’ she told the publication. ‘Bricks were coming through. The place was filling up with dirt … part of my wall is gone now.’
The incident resulted in the deaths of one worker, while five others were injured.
It also saw people trapped in an elevator shaft, as the decrepit building’s floors ‘pancaked’ on top of each other at 4.10pm, according to city officials.
‘I was just in shock,’ Imhoff told the New York Post. ‘I was worried for the other people in the building.’ She said she fled outside, but that her cats were still inside her apartment as the garage came down.
While building violations were still active, officials have said the garage was not under construction. Despite this, Imhoff told the news outlet that she heard ‘banging’ coming from the garage at around 10am – which she thought was the sound of building works going on at the site.
Six hours later, the building collapsed.
According to Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, the building was built in 1925 and recieved its certificate of occupancy in 1957 for automobile parking.
He shared an old sepia image of the building from when it first opened.
Levine found a city record from 2010 which shows 34 new auto lifts were installed on the property, which would have ‘added to the weight’ of the building.
As a result of the lifts, he wrote on Twitter, ‘there was a lot of weight on each of these floor plates. There was construction, there was even installing an electrical charger for electrical vehicles, but it feels like weight was the culprit here.’
Investigations into the cause of the collapse are on-going.
Footage of the collapse, which was shot on a Ring surveillance camera, shows the vehicles inside in the dark become quickly submerged by falling concrete.
Numerous vehicles were seen crashing through the openings as the collapse caused significant damage.
Witnesses described a woman screaming ‘get out!’ as the structure caved in, and images showed the top floor fallen through with vehicles stacked on broken concrete.
Several New York residents who live near the building told DailyMail.com the structure was known to be old, saying the tragedy was ‘not surprising’.

According to Manhattan Borough President Mark Levine, the building was built in 1925 (pictured) and recieved its certificate of occupancy in 1957 for automobile parking

An injured person being rushed from the scene

Members of the mayor’s team are seen at the scene on Tuesday evening
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Eric Adams, the mayor of New York, speaks beside NYPD Commissioner Keechant Sewell (left)
A parking attendant, who was seen being taken from the scene with his leg wrapped in a bandage, told DailyMail.com that he had been ‘telling them that something like this was going to happen.’
Shannon Wu, who lives on the same street as the collapsed building, was among around 100 people waiting outside after cops closed an area off around two blocks.
‘It’s a very old building, so it’s honestly not surprising,’ she told DailyMail.com. ‘It’s known as a really old building.
‘My boyfriend was home when it happened, and he said the whole street was shaking.’ He described it as ‘like the subway shaking underneath the building’.
The incident occurred at Enterprise Ann Parking at 57 Ann Street, between Nassau Street and William Street in lower Manhattan, near Wall Street at around 4:15pm.
The cause of death of the deceased individual has not been made public, and five people are being treated at a local hospital, FDNY Chief of Operations James Esposito said.
Several buildings in the immediate area were evacuated after the incident, and officials told DailyMail.com a police presence will remain in the area as authorities continue to investigate the cause of the accident.
Don Mulligan, who was inside the hotel directly next to the garage when it collapsed, told DailyMail.com: ‘The evacuation was very orderly, they weren’t rushing people, just went over the intercom and got everyone out.’
New York City Mayor Eric Adams told the media that a robotic dog, which is also known as a Digidog, was needed to go into the building when officials arrived on the scene because the collapsed building was unstable.
‘At this time this building is completely unstable and the chief – we do not want to send in someone until we can make sure the building is shored up,’ the mayor added.
Police Commissioner Keechant Sewell, speaking at the scene, called the incident a ‘structural collapse’.
Responding firefighters did enter the building upon arrival, but retreated when the structure was deemed unstable.

A robotic dog also known as a Digidog was needed to go into the building because it was unstable

An aerial shot over 57 Ann Street showing where the collapse occurred
A witness to the horror incident described the sound of the crash as being an ‘incredible noise’.
‘I was wondering what that was so I went to the window and I just saw the top floor of this garage…just beginning to cave in and cars just following into this pit,’ Erasmo Guerra told NBC New York.
Angela Aparico was working in a hotel building about a block away.
‘It just felt like everything was shaking,’ she told DailyMail.com. ‘It was like the whole ground was unsettled, almost like an earthquake.
‘I just hope everybody is okay.’
An Ann Street resident told DailyMail.com: ‘The building looked unsound for years, like a converted residential structure with no additional structural supports, even though the cars were packed onto every floor and the roof, the walls seemed bent and winding outwards. By sight alone it seemed unsound.’
The building has been cited multiple times since 2008 for violations relating to cracks in the concrete, reports ABC New York.
As a result of the incident, the nearby Pace University has canceled all classes and evacuated their nearby campus.
Michael Papayianis, a film student at Pace University, was sent a text message from the university about cancelled classes. ‘It is such an old building,’ he said. ‘Almost all the metal inside is rusty… I wouldn’t be surprised if they just overbooked it with cars.’

Residents along the street were seen with suitcases late Tuesday evening

Law enforcement on the scene warned DailyMail.com that the building collapse could cause damage to surrounding structures, leading to evacuations
The garage is used for parking by the New York Sheriff’s Department, all of their staff are accounted for.
Another Pace University student Charlie Franklin told Pix11 that he and his roommate frequently talked about how unsafe the building looked.
‘It was bound to happen sooner or later. Hopefully they can get their stuff together and Pace can give us accommodations for tonight,’ Franklin said.
Numerous residents in apartments and hotels on the street were spotted being escorted through the evening to new accommodation.