Sagging NYC skyscraper STABILIZED after fears of collapse as officials say evacuation plans in place for 'sense of movement' while hundreds in nearby areas left displaced

Sagging NYC skyscraper STABILIZED after fears of collapse as officials say evacuation plans in place for 'sense of movement' while hundreds in nearby areas left displaced
By: dailymail Posted On: July 08, 2026 View: 13

New York City authorities announced that they were 'confident' the Midtown Manhattan skyscraper in danger of collapsing like a 'pancake' has been stabilized, while warning that movement could still occur.

Ahmed Tigani, the NYC Department of Buildings commissioner, said Tuesday evening that the emergency shoring measures installed at the former Pfizer headquarters on East 42nd Street were working.

'We've been monitoring the building for many hours,' Tigani said. 'We have not seen any movement.'

However, Tigani cautioned that authorities were still closely watching the 37-story building, both inside and outside.

'If there is any movement or if we sense any movement, we have protocols in place to make sure we're quickly removing people outside the building to evaluate and reassess,' he added.

A 'frozen zone' was enacted around the building, originally extending from 40th Street to 45th Street and from First Avenue to Third Avenue.

That displaced hundreds of locals, tourists and workers, with NYC authorities unable to explain for hours when they could return to Midtown. 

'I haven't taken out the trash, I left all my medicine in there,' Mercy Muriungi, 52, told the New York Post. 'I had to walk over to the pharmacy to see if they would give me some medicine for a day or two.' 

FDNY Chief of Operations John Esposito had said the building on East 42nd Street could 'possibly' collapse into itself like a 'pancake'

FDNY officials had warned the 37-story former Pfizer headquarters on East 42nd Street was at risk of a localized structural collapse

FDNY found two structural columns had buckled on the 21st floor of the high-rise

NYC Department of Buildings commissioner Ahmed Tigani said Tuesday evening that authorities were 'confident' the towering building had stabilized

Stefan Mitra, a doctor who lives at East 41st Street and First Avenue, said he would likely have to 'find a hotel somewhere.' 

'I slept an hour or two after my shift to be safe to drive, and then I came home thinking I'd be able to go home and get to sleep some more, but now I'm stuck,' Mitra told the outlet.

Though some feared that the area could be 'frozen' for weeks, authorities announced Tuesday night that 'all traffic and pedestrian restrictions' had been lifted as of shortly before 11pm.

The only exception were areas on 42nd and 43rd Streets between 2nd and 3rd avenues, according to NYC emergency authorities on X

People living and working there can access that stretch, but cars cannot.

Officials had said earlier that two structural columns on the high-rise building's 21st floor had buckled, while another column was also showing movement. 

Tigani explained that authorities visited the 21st floor themselves to inspect the work, leading to their assessment.

He added that crews were installing 'new steel' as 'another emergency intervention' to help keep the skyscraper stable.

The building, at 235 East 42nd Street near Second Avenue, was evacuated during the morning rush after construction workers discovered structural columns buckling inside the high-rise. 

A complaint was filed on Tuesday as investigators began scrutinizing what went wrong inside one of the nation's largest office-to-residential conversion projects.

Four nearby buildings - 815 2nd Avenue, 235 East 43rd Street, 231 East 43rd Street and 225 East 43rd Street - remained under an evacuation order as of Tuesday night. 

Meanwhile, 217 East 43rd Street was under a partial evacuation, with just the restaurant on the ground floor required to stay away from the area. However, residents on higher floors were allowed to return.

Terrifying footage filmed by workers inside the building showed the massive silver beams buckling and bending just moments before the floor started to crumble

The 21st to 26th floors of the building near Grand Central Terminal caved in under stress, officials say. Multiple cracks and sagging floors have been reported throughout the site

Mayor Zohran Mamdani said emergency crews observed continued movement in the building throughout the day on Tuesday

Mayor Zohran Mamdani had said emergency officials had been monitoring the building continuously since the first signs of structural failure emerged Tuesday morning - and the movement had not stopped.

'The concern is that since we have been on site in the early morning, we have seen continued shifting of the structure,' Mamdani said during an earlier afternoon briefing.

Authorities quickly cleared eight neighboring buildings and established a large exclusion zone spanning East 40th to East 45th Streets between First and Third avenues, shutting the busy Midtown corridor to both pedestrians and traffic.

Officials previouslysaid highly sensitive monitoring equipment detected continued movement within the structure as crews watched the building from outside.

FDNY Chief of Operations John Esposito had said the building's steel-frame design meant authorities were not expecting a total collapse, but warned that a localized structural failure remained a very real possibility.

'The way this building is constructed, it's a steel-frame building, so it would not be a total collapse, it would be more of a localized collapse,' Esposito said.

'That remains our concern - that it's moving. We have seen continual movement. It does mean it is not stable.'

When asked whether such a failure could resemble the floors collapsing into one another like a pancake, Esposito replied: 'Possibly.'

Officials had said two structural columns on the building's 21st floor had buckled, while another column was also showing movement.

Mamdani described the response earlier on Tuesday as a 'minute-by-minute assessment,' urging locals to stay away from the area as engineers determined the safest course of action.

Several FDNY crews outside the 37-story skyscraper on East 42nd Street on Tuesday 

East 42nd Street, between Second and Third avenues, is closed to pedestrian and vehicle traffic as officials continue their investigation. Commuters are advised to avoid the area

Authorities said six specialists representing the FDNY, the Department of Buildings and the project's construction management team, entered the building on Tuesday afternoon to conduct a closer inspection after monitoring suggested the structure had not shifted for about two hours.

Drones were also deployed around the building as engineers examined the damaged areas from above.

Esposito said firefighters have been using specialized monitoring equipment capable of detecting movement measuring only fractions of an inch.

'It's a very serious situation because the box beams, the steel beams, have started to bend and deflect from the weight,' Esposito said.

'We evacuated the building and started evacuations of surrounding buildings. The building has continued to move since we have been on the scene.'

Behind the emergency response, investigators were also examining whether problems during the renovation project contributed to the dangerous conditions now gripping the building.

The Department of Buildings filed a complaint Tuesday against the property's owner, 235 Fee Owner LLC, alleging construction had exceeded previously approved plans.

Although the full details of the complaint have not yet been made public, the agency's online records state that 'no support of excavation has been approved.'

 People look up at the building on Tuesday. Numerous streets were closed to both cars and pedestrians as officials continued to examine the building

Concerned New Yorkers look up with worry as streets around the building are shuttered

The former Pfizer office tower has been undergoing an ambitious transformation since 2024 into a residential development expected to contain roughly 1,500 to 1,600 apartments by 2027.

As part of the project, contractors had been adding 11 new stories above an existing 22-story section of the structure, according to Tigani.

Sources familiar with the response said the compromised areas appear to include the 17th and 21st floors, both located beneath the newly added construction.

Officials later said the 21st through 26th floors had caved under stress, with multiple cracks and sagging floors reported throughout sections of the building.

Despite the alarming damage, city officials have repeatedly emphasized that any structural failure would likely remain confined to part of the building because of its steel-frame construction rather than bringing down the entire tower.

The underlying cause of the structural failure remains unknown.

The Daily Mail has reached out to the New York City Department of Buildings Commissioner's office for further comment.

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