Cancelled - Hard Rock Hotel Collapse New Orleans

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Published 2023-11-17
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In October of 2019, the nearly completed Hard Rock Hotel New Orleans suffered a catastrophic failure. The massive collapse injured 30 people, killed 3 workers and became the worst American engineering failure in years. Today I'm going to investigate what happened, look at the history behind this controversial tower and find out why this major disaster happened.

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Other Reporting on the New Orleans Collapse -
WWLTV Full Collapse Video -    • Never before seen video of the Hard R...  
Engineers Discussing Faults -    • Engineer says several problems with H...  
Rare Photos From Inside -    • Photos: Inside the damage at Hard Roc...  
Drone Footage -    • Hard Rock Hotel Collapse one month la...  

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Bright Sun Films 2023

Presented in 4K

All Comments (21)
  • @whizwart1
    I don't know if maybe I missed you mentioning it, but the really screwed up part was that the body of one of the construction workers was visible from street level for months. It was right on a really unstable part, so no one could get to it. Somehow they got a tarp over him, but it blew off sometime later. The community was livid that there's a victims body just sitting there while everyone argued what to do.
  • @mahatmarandy5977
    The prosecutor being dismissed was most likely because of corruption on the part of the city. You described the shortcomings of city oversight, but I wouldn’t be at all surprised if there were some bribes that led to those oversights. Investigation would have implicated city officials, so they derailed the investigation. I’m not saying that’s what happened, but I wouldn’t be surprised if it was the case. New Orleans is not known for its square-dealing ways and forthright morality, after all
  • @L-A-C-IV
    Anyone from New Orleans could tell you how shockingly textbook this level of mismanagement and insanity is when it comes to infrastructure in the city. Seriously, the number of calamities and truly bizarre urban planning/development projects where everything goes wrong, nothing gets done, and everyone gets shafted (or worse) and no one is held accountable is staggering. It's a whole rabbit hole you can go down. From miles of highway exits to nowhere in places that never should have been approved that have sat for 50 years, the fall of Pontchartrain Beach, 8000 insane projects with the airport(s) & of course the city being left holding the bag with Six Flags amongst so many others you could literally do a whole series of full length documentaries on it. My father was an urban planner for the city for 25 years and some of the shit that I heard about growing up is insane.
  • @joshuadupay1285
    I was going to engineering school in New Orleans at the time of the collapse and the cleanup effort. Me and my peers all knew that the city would screw up every step of the process from the day of the collapse. We all gathered on our balconies to see how badly they would screw up the crane demolition and unfortunately we were right. The demo was rushed and given to the lowest bidder, so the outcome was in now way a shock. New Orleans is incredibly corrupt and sadly we all knew that nothing meaningful would come from the investigation and no justice would take place. It was very obvious throughout the whole process that the mayor and the city were trying to get rid of the evidence as fast as possible to cover up how bad they screwed up because they knew they didn’t do their jobs. Very sad and frustrating.
  • @jimoran5265
    Soon as I saw "Hard Rock Hotel New Orleans" I just thought "Oh no..." because literally the only thing I knew about this project is the collapse and how they left the remains in public view for months. It's terrible.
  • @Q-anon
    'Our project was an objective failure in every way' 'Let's try it again and sue the city too' Incredible.
  • @wstadlock
    As a retired Design build Engineering and General Contractor, I'm disgusted at all the incompetence and failure to prosecute
  • @Housewarmin
    I'm from New Orleans and I'm so glad you covered this! The fact a MAN'S BODY lay exposed in the rubble for weeks, is just so disrespectful and greusome to him, his family and the city.
  • @gracayaasir4515
    I worked a few blocks away from this tragedy. It still haunts me. There was no justice for the families of the lives lost.
  • @fortunax22
    It's disgusting that no criminal charges were brought up when it's clear so many people were at fault. Part of me wonders who paid of the grand jury.
  • @moldywool
    22 gauge steel for the floor pan is absolutely insane. If I were working on that job site and saw that I’d quit immediately
  • @norgeek
    The absolute corruption necessary for everyone to walk away scott free from something like this is mind boggling 🤯
  • @KevinxDoll
    as a metal worker, 16 gauge sheet metal is a little tough to bend by hand. pretty strong. 20 gauge is stuff you can bend with your fingers.
  • So shameful that no one has been held accountable. RIP to the 3 men that lost their lives.
  • @pianowithmark
    I was at the next-door Saenger Theatre the night before the Hard Rock collapsed. Part of the building damaged the roof, closing the theatre for months on end. Huge fatality. It's disgraceful how long it took them to clean up that mess.
  • @mindwarp42
    ... this was a highrise being built after 9/11 in a city that has dealt with major hurricanes. Being a native New Yorker who now lives in a historic city in the South that also has to deal with severe tropical weather, the fact that so much was wrong about the design and construction of that building, including lack of proper trained code inspectors/enforcers, is appalling. I can only pray that somehow everyone involved does finally get punished for this...
  • @funken079
    Crazy no one was held accountable for clearly shady job site and design. The loss of life is horrible
  • @jeremy6606
    As a New Orleans native, I’m not surprised the ball was dropped that many times with no accountability. It’s like that there.
  • @edwinsalisbury83
    I remember being in school at the time and it was history class and all of sudden a teacher came running into the room and said that there had been a building collapse. It killed multiple people and disabled a streetcar line. My heart goes out to those families who were impacted.
  • @user-fo7yi4qi9o
    I know you’ve intentionally left it out of this video out of respect (and the photos have been removed from the internet, anyone with an ounce of respect for human life wouldn’t look it up anyway) but I think it’s important to acknowledge how THOROUGHLY disrespected the body of one of the men who died was. He was left exposed for people on the street to observe and then covered with a tarp. I saw it by accident at the time and how bleak and disrespectful it was is one of the things that keeps me awake at night. Shame on those corrupt developers and the city for allowing any of this to happen. SHAME. That poor man and his poor family.