| Dallas Cowboys’ Practice Facility Collapse Results in Several Serious Injuries
By Debra Wood
May 5, 2009
As Dallas Cowboys’ rookie football players practiced on Saturday afternoon during a thunderstorm, the fabric-clad building began to tremble, suspended light fixtures swayed and within seconds, the entire structure collapsed, sending 12 of the 70 people inside to the hospital, three sustaining serious injuries.
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| Credit: AP/Wideworld |
Summit Structures of Allentown, Pa., manufactured the 80-ft tall pre-engineered, steel-framed, fabric-covered membrane building at its Cover-All Building Systems manufacturing plant in Saskatoon, Canada, and installed the structure, which is larger than a football field, in 2003, according to a prepared statement issued by the company.
“The engineering, and related approvals for the facility were managed by professional engineers licensed to practice engineering in Texas, both in 2003 and again in 2008 when the building was upgraded and a new roof covering was installed on the facility,” said Nathan Stobbe, president of Summit Structures in the written statement.
“We understand there is a great deal of concern and curiosity about what happened on Saturday, but rather than speculate, we are focused on being part of the effort to find answers and assist the team,” Stobbe said in the statement.
Summit Structures spokesperson Mariellen Burns would not release the name of the engineers involved with the Cowboys’ dome. She said in response to a question about what specs the building was designed to withstand, “as is the industry standard, Summit Structures designs, engineers, and builds to meet local building codes.”
The Occupational Safety and Health Administration is investigating, says spokesperson Elizabeth Todd.
The National Weather Service determined, based on a survey of the damage, radar imagery and eyewitness reports that a microburst impacted the Valley Ranch area far north of Irving, according to a release provided by Summit Structures. It says the agency pegged the maximum winds near the ground at 70 mph at the time of the collapse. Winds could have been stronger higher off the ground, according to several reports.
While Summit initially installed the dome, The Dallas Morning News reported on May 5, 2009, that the Dallas Cowboys applied for the building permit to replace the fabric roof, registering as a general contractor on the same day, and that the team did not notify the city that the work was complete. No inspection was done; however, Irving’s director of planning and inspections, Gary Miller, told the Associated Press that the city “felt comfortable with the project when it issued a certificate of occupancy.”
Cowboys spokesperson Rich Dalrymple says the team is not commenting on anything relating to the accident or the history of the building. McGraw-Hill Construction will file a public records request for documents related to the construction or roof replacement.
The Cowboys announced that three members of its staff sustained serious injuries. Scouting assistant Rich Behm, 33, suffered a severed spinal cord, which will result in permanent paralysis from the waist down. Special teams coach Joe DeCamillis fractured a cervical vertebra, and assistant athletic trainer Greg Gaither fractured two bones in his right leg.
This is not the first time a Summit Structures’ frame-supported, fabric-covered building collapsed, according to records at the First Judicial District of Pennsylvania. A 100,000-sq-ft, double-vaulted building Summit constructed for the Philadelphia Regional Port Authority collapsed on February 17, 2003, after a major snowfall accompanied by windy conditions.
In a 2006 decision, Judge Allan L. Tereshko, relying on information provided by an expert witness for the Port Authority, said the “collapse of the plaintiff’s building was the failure of Defendant Summit to design a building that was in accordance with the requirements and duty created by the contract,” between it and the general contractor. “In addition to designing a building which was inadequate to perform under the conditions and requirements contracted for, Summit, further failed to construct the building in accordance with its own design requirements. These two fundamental failures produced a building which simply collapsed under the weight of the first significant snowfall of the new year which were conditions that would have been easily tolerated by the building had it been properly designed and constructed.” In that case, the court awarded damages of more than $3.9 million to the port authority, plus legal fees.
Weather also appeared to have contributed to the downing of the fabric-covered, air-supported dome at Arizona State University in Tempe, Ariz. The school reported the $8.4-million, 103,500-sq-ft indoor practice facility sustained about $1 million in damage during nighttime thunderstorms in August 2008. No injuries were reported. Yeadon Fabric Domes supplied the Arizona dome, which used air, rather than a steel frame to support the structure.
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