A top civil and coastal engineering
expert from the University of Florida (UF) contributed to
new state legislation that aims to make condominium towers
safer in the wake of the collapse of a building in Surfside
three years ago.
Jennifer Bridge, associate professor at UF in the
engineering department, contributed to new legislation in
Florida that will improve and track building inspections for
condominiums and cooperatives. The development comes after
nearly 100 people were killed following the collapse of the
12-story Champlain Towers South building in South Florida in
June 2021.
“Surfside was devastating,” Bridge said in a prepared
statement provided by UF. “This should never have happened
because we have so many processes in place. We have so many
safety factors built into our engineering processes, whether
it’s in the design, the construction or the oversight of the
construction.”
Bridge helped develop consistent statewide forms for
building inspectors while working with the Florida Building
Commission. She also helped educate building industry
leaders, state officials, building departments, inspectors
and condo owners about the inspection form changes.
The new state legislation requires building inspections
within 30 years after construction of condo buildings and
then every 10 years statewide. Condo associations have also
been given responsibility as well, as they are required to
provide set-aside funds for repairs and upgrades along with
providing structural integrity studies on the buildings.
While the Surfside disaster may have been a flash point,
Bridge said the new legislation is about much more than just
that incident and is designed to provide comprehensive
reviews and building inspections, along with finding
vulnerabilities in inspection systems.
“What’s working? What’s not working? Where are the
bottlenecks?” she said. “The reaction I have to every
structural failure is ‘This should never happen,’ obviously.
If something like that happens, multiple things have gone
wrong. It’s never just one thing.”
The legislation was developed after Bridge focused on two
areas in her research. She wanted to emphasize how
inspection programs operated on a jurisdictional level and
inspections in general.
“If we saw an inspection report that did not say anything
about the structure — good, bad or otherwise — we put that
in a bucket that said, ‘Insufficient Information.’ And about
10 percent of the reports fell into that bucket,” Bridge
said.