“…Plans had both walkways hanging from the same vertical support rods. But a revision had the lower skywalk hanging from the upper one on separate rods. That increased the load on the upper skywalk and added to the stress on the bolts, which were doomed to pull free of the welded box beams to which the rods were attached. The flaw was obvious in hindsight…”
“…There were no criminal charges, but the engineers lost their licenses. There were about $140 million in judgments and settlements…”
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=715wyClHTVw]
 Thirty years ago today the music stopped when the skywalks in the elegant Hyatt Regency hotel lobby suddenly crashed down on a crowd of people enjoying big-band tunes and a night out. The 114 people killed in the disaster will never age. The injured, the victims’ loved ones and the rescuers, however, are three decades older.
A broken water pipe threatened to drown those trapped. Electrical wires were sparking. People were crushed beyond recognition.
The hours went by as Ortega and dozens of other emergency responders — firemen, emergency medical technicians, citizens — carried bodies either to a temporary morgue or a makeshift emergency room. A man’s leg was amputated by chainsaw in order to free him. Ortega saw a police officer try to pull a screaming man out and his arm came off.
Read more: http://www.kansascity.com/2011/07/16/3018298/the-hyatt-disaster-30-years-later.html#ixzz1STcYIVOk