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Indian Creek, Florida

Populated places on the Intracoastal Waterway in FloridaUse mdy dates from July 2023Villages in FloridaVillages in Miami-Dade County, Florida
Indian Creek, Looking toward 41st Street Bridge, Miami Beach, Florida (8029950230)
Indian Creek, Looking toward 41st Street Bridge, Miami Beach, Florida (8029950230)

Indian Creek is a village and man-made barrier island in Miami-Dade County, Florida, United States. It has 41 residential home sites and the Indian Creek Country Club. The village is part of the Miami metropolitan area of South Florida. The concentration of highly affluent people on the island has earned it the nickname Billionaire Bunker. The population was 84 at the 2020 census.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Indian Creek, Florida (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Indian Creek, Florida
Indian Creek Island Road,

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Wikipedia: Indian Creek, FloridaContinue reading on Wikipedia

Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 25.879166666667 ° E -80.131111111111 °
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Address

Indian Creek Island Road 38
33154
Florida, United States
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Indian Creek, Looking toward 41st Street Bridge, Miami Beach, Florida (8029950230)
Indian Creek, Looking toward 41st Street Bridge, Miami Beach, Florida (8029950230)
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Surfside condominium collapse
Surfside condominium collapse

On June 24, 2021, at approximately 1:22 a.m. EDT, Champlain Towers South, a 12-story beachfront condominium in the Miami suburb of Surfside, Florida, United States, partially collapsed, causing the deaths of 98 people. Four people were rescued from the rubble, but one died of injuries shortly after arriving at the hospital. Eleven others were injured. Approximately thirty-five were rescued the same day from the un-collapsed portion of the building, which was demolished ten days later. A contributing factor under investigation is long-term degradation of reinforced concrete structural support in the basement-level parking garage under the pool deck, due to water penetration and corrosion of the reinforcing steel. The problems had been reported in 2018 and noted as "much worse" in April 2021. A $15 million program of remedial works had been approved before the collapse, but the main structural work had not started. Other possible factors include land subsidence, insufficient reinforcing steel, and corruption during construction. The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) is investigating almost two dozen potential causes for the collapse. It is likely they will determine several factors happened simultaneously to cause the collapse.The Surfside collapse is tied with the Knickerbocker Theatre collapse as the third-deadliest non-deliberate structural engineering failure in United States history, behind the Hyatt Regency walkway collapse and the collapse of the Pemberton Mill.