W.T.C. WORKER’S FALL WAS WAITING TO HAPPEN VOLUME 25, NUMBER 3
JULY 11-24, 2012
Downtown Express photo by Terese Loeb Kreuzer. Turn to page 12 to see more.
CRUISING THE HUDSON ON INDEPENDENCE DAY
B.M.C.C. gears up for new Fiterman Hall grand opening BY A L I N E R E Y NO L D S fter more than a decade, a brand new building named after the Borough of Manhattan Community College’s famed Fiterman Hall, which was irreparably damaged on 9/11, is reopening to students and teachers in August. The building’s opening marks the culmination of close to three years of construction work on the $325 million building, which is approximately 15,000 square feet more spacious than the original. The former building was demolished in 2009 following years of financial- and construction-related impasses.
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The new Fiterman Hall will house 80 classrooms equipped with technologically advanced equipment along with individual offices for staff and soundproof music rooms. With an enrollment of approximately 24,500 students — roughly 8,500 more than it had in 2001 — B.M.C.C. claims the title of the largest undergraduate institution in New York City, according to college president Antonio Perez. The president, along with administration and planning vice president Scott Anderson and a representative of Hunter Roberts Construction, the building’s contractor, recently gave the
Downtown Express a private tour of the new building. Though the brick-and-glass building, situated on Greenwich Street between Barclay Street and Park Place, boasts 10 more classrooms than its predecessor and increases B.M.C.C.’s classroom capacity by a third, B.M.C.C. is still considerably short of adequate space for its students. Currently, the school offers classes at the college’s main building at 199 Chambers St. and at a building at 70 Murray St., in addition to locations in Upper Manhattan, Brooklyn and the Continued on page 20
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B Y SAM SPOKONY n Tues., June 26, a construction worker at 4 World Trade Center fell from a height of about six feet and was hospitalized for his injuries. While the worker has since been released from the hospital and the incident hasn’t appeared to disrupt construction, the Downtown Express has gained access to federal records revealing that a lack of safeguards has resulted in major safety hazards at the W.T.C. in recent years. According to documents from the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (O.S.H.A.), an agency of the U.S. Department of Labor (D.O.L.), four different contractors on the W.T.C. site have been slammed with violations resulting from inadequate fall protection since October 2010. Three of the four violations were categorized as “serious.” According to O.S.H.A. regulations, a serious citation is given when death or physical harm is likely to result from a safety hazard uncovered by inspectors. The most recent of the four violations was issued in June 2011 to the Laquila Group, a contractor at the time for 3 W.T.C. The situation, deemed serious, was described by O.S.H.A. safety inspectors as one in which a construction worker “stood on top of uncapped rebar up to six feet high, exposing himself to a fall to the cement foundation below.” In the 4 W.T.C. incident, which took place on June 26, the worker injured himself on a piece of rebar, according to a statement released by John Gallagher, a spokesperson for Tishman Construction, construction manager for Towers 1, 3 and 4. A spokesperson for Laquila said that his company no longer has workers at the W.T.C. site. Tishman declined a request for comment. Two O.S.H.A. violations were issued in February 2011 — to two different contractors — for inad-
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“CLYBOURNE PARK” PROVOKES. TURN TO ARTS , PAGE 26.