Highland Towers collapse

Remaining Highland Towers in 2012.

The Highland Towers collapse was an apartment building collapse that occurred on 11 December 1993 in Taman Hillview, Ulu Klang, Selangor, Malaysia. The collapse of Block One of the apartments caused the deaths of 48 people and led to the complete evacuation of the remaining two blocks due to safety concerns. On 11 December 2010, coinciding with the seventeenth anniversary of the incident, AETN's History Channel showed an hour-long documentary on the tragedy, with accounts from the victims, their families and former residents.

Background

The Highland Towers consist of three 12-storey blocks, built in phases between 1974 and 1982 at the western base of a steeply sloped hill which was later terraced extensively in the early 1980s. Each block was respectively named:

A swimming pool was located between northwest side of Block 2 and northeast rear of Block 3. Block 1 collapsed after 10 continuous days of rainfall led to a landslide after the retaining wall behind the Tower's car park failed.

The towers were home to affluent middle-class families; a sizeable percentage of the residents were expatriates. The Highland Towers were notorious in the 1980s and early 1990s for being a popular spot for the wealthy people to hide their mistresses.

Cause of structural failure

Behind the Towers was a small stream of water known as 'East Creek'. East Creek flowed into the site of the Towers before the Towers' construction, so a pipe system was built to divert the stream to bypass the Towers.

In 1991, a new housing development project, known as 'Bukit Antarabangsa Development Project', commenced construction on the hilltop located behind the Towers. The hill was cleared of trees and other land-covering plants, exposing the soil to land erosion that is the leading factor of causing land slides.

The water from the new construction site was diverted into the existing pipe system used to divert the flow of East Creek. This overloaded the pipe system and water, sand and silt from both East Creek and the construction site infiltrated the pipes. The pipes burst at several locations on the hill, and the surrounding soil had to absorb the excessive water. The monsoon rainfall in December 1993 further worsened the situation.

The water content in the soil became over-saturated to the extent that the soil had turned viscous, in effect becoming mud. By October 1992, the hill slope had been saturated with water, and water was seen flowing down the hill slopes and the retaining walls.

Shortly thereafter, a landslip took place and destroyed the constructed retaining walls. The landslide contained an estimated 100,000 square metres of mud – a mass equivalent to 200 Boeing 747 jets. The soil rammed onto the foundation of Block One, incrementally pushing it forward. After a month of this constant pressure, the foundations snapped and in November 1993, residents began to see cracks forming and widening on the road around the Highland Towers, a forewarning of collapse. Unfortunately, there was no further investigation before Block 1 collapsed on 11 December 1993.

Victims who were killed

The official death toll released by the authorities was 48, though other sources gave a number greater than 55. The victims are mainly Malaysians, with 12 foreigners (a Briton, a Japanese, 2 Indians, 2 Koreans, 3 Filipino and 3 Indonesian). Among the victims were Carlos Abdul Rashid (son of former Deputy Prime Minister Tun Musa Hitam) and his wife, Rosina Datuk Abu Bakar.[1]

Rescuers heard knocking and voices right up to the seventh day after the collapse. Only three people, including an infant, were pulled out from the rubble alive, and only within the first 24 hours. One of them died later in hospital.

Chronology of events

Legacy and recent history

In November 2002, almost nine years after the incident, a bungalow belonging to Affin Bank chairman General (Retired) Tan Sri Ismail Omar collapsed due to a landslide. It was located just metres away from the towers.

On 11 December 2004, in conjunction with the eleventh anniversary of the tragedy, all former residents and victims of the Highland Towers gathered at the site as a final farewell, after knowing that the property will be transferred to AmBank.

Later, on 6 December 2008, just five days short of the 15th anniversary of the incident, another landslide in Bukit Antarabangsa took place just 1.5 kilometres away from Highland Towers. The landslide buried 14 bungalows. All these incidents occurred late in the year, at the height of the northeastern monsoon season when heavy rainfall is common.

After the tragedy, The Highland Towers memorial stone was placed at the site of Block 1, but it was a victim of much vandalism. The abandoned Blocks 2 and 3 of the Highland Towers still stand as of August 2014, but they have been the site of much vandalism and the buildings are now in complete disarray and near ruin. In 1998, five years after the tragedy, a team from the Court in charge of the lawsuit visited the Towers and found out all contents of its tower (e.g. balcony grill/window glasses) have been stripped off, leaving it just a naked structure. Drug addicts are known to use the abandoned apartments for temporary shelter.

The Highland Towers has been a popular source of hearing eerie/horror stories about the Tower, exploring into the haunted tower and doing paranormal activities; after 2 decades since the collapse, as a result of the dreadful tragedy.

Plans of redevelopment

There were plans to repair the two remaining blocks and re-occupy them back in 1995, but inspection has revealed that the blocks were no longer structurally safe and demolition was the only option, as the other 2 buildings will collapse at anytime. As of present, the remaining blocks of Highland Tower still steadfast, not demolished and remain abandoned.

See also

Notes

References

External links