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Construction Report 2019-2021

NYC Window Washer Plunges to Death Off Brooklyn Building (nydailynews.com)

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NEW YORK DAILY NEWSDEC 10, 2021  1:03 PM
The window washer, a New Jersey resident, fell to his death at about 9:30 a.m. Friday, cops and city officials said. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

A window washer died Friday when he fell from a Brooklyn high-rise under-construction, police said.

The 34-year-old worker, Harrison, N.J. resident Diego Rodriguez Celi, fell from the 12th floor of the 21-story condo building going up at the corner of York St. and Jay St. in Dumbo at about 9:30 a.m., cops and city officials said. He landed on a second floor parapet or balcony, authorities said. The cause of the fall is under investigation by the NYPD and the city Department of Buildings.

The condominium project is being built by New Line Structures and Development. A call to the company for comment was not immediately returned.
 
City records show 115 complaints have been filed against the construction project since it began in 2017, including nine within the last year. Recent complaints include a worker suffering from chest pains, a hardhat who hurt his back lifting material by himself and warnings about potential safety hazards.

The victim’s cousin, Bolivar Celi, 53. said he talked with him about the job, but he said he never said he felt unsafe. “He’s hard working,” Celi said. “He’s quiet. He’s a young man. It was an accident. I don’t know what happened.” Celi said his cousin had been on the job for a couple of years. “I spoke this morning with him and he was happy,” Celi said. “He didn’t have any problems with it.”

In September 2020, a worker at the site was hospitalized after falling off a four-foot ladder, according to city building records. On May 26, the Buildings Department fined New Line Structures $2,500 after an inspection revealed workers were not using carpentry equipment to the manufacturer’s specifications, causing a safety hazard, city records show.

A window washer died Friday after he fell from the 12th floor of an under-construction building at 135 York St. in Brooklyn. (Theodore Parisienne/for New York Daily News)

NYC Department of Buildings shuts down 322 construction sites in 'zero tolerance' safety sweep

The New York City Department of Buildings has shut down 322 construction sites across the city due to hazardous conditions in June 2021.

The DOB issued full and partial stop-work orders to the affected sites, citing more than 1,129 violations for safty and non-compliance issues. In total, the DOB has carried out safety inspections at more than 2,100 of New York’s larger and more complex construction sites. These orders are part of new “zero tolerance” safety sweeps initiated on June 1, 2021 by DOB Commissioner Melanie E. La Rocca, in response to a number of construction deaths that occurred earlier this year. Depending on the severity of safety infringements, inspectors issued enforcement actions or completely shut down sites. 

In addition, the DOB released a new building construction safety report early last week, that outlines construction safety trends in New York in 2019 and 2020 and examines department initiatives that led to declines in construction-related incidents and injuries during that time. According to the report, in 2019, the DOB reported 595 injuries and 12 deaths, compared to 502 injuries and eight deaths in 2020. This decline in construction-related incidents was the first such decrease in nearly ten years. 

In the report, the DOB claims this decline “coincided with a significant increase in the number of violations and related enforcement actions that were issued by the Department of Buildings in 2019 compared to the preceding year.”

The report also offers a first-of-its-kind analysis of onsite conditions that led to fatal or near-fatal outcomes, with details on factors that contributed to these incidents. 

“Construction deaths are not acceptable,” said Council Member and Chair of the Committee on Housing and Buildings Robert E. Cornegy, Jr. “In order to prevent avoidable fatalities, we need better information about construction sites and we need to learn from our mistakes that put workers at risk. This new report does just that.” 

The DOB’s “zero tolerance” safety sweeps are ongoing, so the number of sites to shut down could continue to rise.