LAUSANNE Switzerland), July 13 (NNN-AGENCIES) — Three people were killed and eight injured on Friday when scaffolding collapsed off a 19-storey building under construction in the western Swiss city of Lausanne, police said.
The scaffolding collapsed shortly before 9:30 am, falling “like a house of cards”, according to one witness.
The entire scaffolding structure on one side of the 60-metre tower came down, sending construction workers plummeting to the ground.
Regional police said around a dozen people were directly impacted by the accident in Prilly, on the outskirts of Lausanne, including the three construction workers who died.
Friday evening, police said they had identified the deceased as a 43-year-old Swiss man, a 35-year-old from Cape Verde and a 30-year-old Frenchman.
The men’s families had been informed and were receiving psychological support, the police statement said.
Four of those who survived were seriously injured. They and two people who were moderately injured had been taken to nearby hospitals, police said.
Journalists saw yellow-clad firefighters clambering on top of a jumble of twisted metal at the foot of the building, while others worked to stabilise the remaining parts of the scaffolding.
Police said that work would continue through the night and into Saturday, even as poor weather conditions were complicating the job.
Police spokesman Jean-Christophe Sauterel said the cause of the accident remained unclear.
“We see that the scaffolding across the entire facade has collapsed, but we do not know the causes,” he said, adding that the public prosecutor’s office had opened an investigation.
The RTS public broadcaster reported that initial information indicated the freight elevator used to transport construction workers and material to the top of the building had fallen when it was at around the 13th floor, bringing the scaffolding down with it.
Construction workers at the site, which is due to house up to 200 people when completed, said there had not been any particular safety concerns at the site.
The men, who did not want to give their names, suggested that too much weight in the freight elevator might have caused the accident. — NNN-AGENCIES