Demolition work at collapsed German hotel uncovers owner's body
Aug 11, 2024
Niddatal [Germany], August 11: The body of the hotel owner, who died when an entire floor at his inn in the German town of Krov collapsed, was uncovered on Saturday morning as demolition work continued, the police said in a statement.
The fire brigade and the Federal Agency for Technical Relieve (THW) helped retrieve the body, the police said.
The floor collapsed late on Tuesday evening, killing two people. The other person was a 64-year-old woman whose body was recovered earlier. Police said she was a hotel guest.
Located near the banks of the River Moselle, the hotel's roof collapsed at around 23:00 local time (21:00 GMT) on Tuesday, shattering windows as the top floor of the building collapsed onto the lower floor.
Seven others, including a two-year-old child, were trapped after the floor collapsed. Some were rescued by emergency services after hours in the rubble. Five others had already brought themselves to safety earlier.
The cause of the accident is still unclear. The public prosecutor's office has opened an investigation and commissioned an expert to find out how the accident could have happened.
In a news conference on Wednesday fire inspector Jorg Teusch identified the two people killed as a man and a woman, who he said died during the night as a direct result of the building collapse.
Dutch media reported that a 23-year-old woman from Urk and her infant son were rescued early on Wednesday morning and taken to hospital. The woman's husband, aged 26, was rescued later the same day and his condition is not yet known.
Some 250 emergency services personnel were deployed to support rescue efforts, including firefighters, police, rescue dog teams and medics.
Nearby residents have been told to evacuate the area given concerns that the hotel building could collapse further.
It was initially unclear how long the demolition work would take.
A police spokeswoman said it was now a matter of removing the roof gable and the roof and clearing away the rubble so that the expert investigating the cause of the accident "can enter the next phase on Monday." A long-boom crane from a specialized company is being used.
Local residents got some relief, as the work is currently no longer expected to result in more dust, so that the original request to keep windows and doors closed within a radius of 150 metres of the accident site was lifted, at least for now, the police said.
The hotel collapse has hit the wine village in the western state of Rhineland-Palatinate hard. A church service is planned for this Sunday.
Source: Qatar Tribune