Two missing, 8 injured in Singapore construction site

Construction News

Singaporean rescuers gather outside the Downtown Line (DTL) Bugis Station subway construction site in Singapore on July 18, 2012. Two workers are still missing after the temporary scaffolding used for the construction of the new subway link roof slab gave way.
It was the latest incident to hit Singapore’s metro train system, which has been under pressure to improve its services and system after two major breakdowns in December last year.

Civil defence crews, trucks, ambulances and sniffer dogs were on site to carry out search and rescue operations, an AFP reporter at the scene said.

A civil defence spokesman at the site said two workers were missing while eight others who suffered minor injuries were treated at a nearby hospital.

A panel commissioned to investigate last year’s breakdowns criticised train operator SMRT for prioritising resumption of revenue service over addressing underlying problems which caused the two breakdowns.

It also concluded that SMRT’s metro system had been plagued by outdated equipment and poor maintenance for years, and that the company did not have enough engineers capable of overseeing maintenance.

The Land Transport Authority this month also imposed the maximum fine of Sg$2 million ($1.59 million) on SMRT for the breakdowns, which stranded thousands of workers.

The site of Wednesday’s accident is a new station for the latest metro line, portions of which are still under construction in a bid to meet the transport needs of a growing population.

Singapore now has a population of over five million people, including citizens, permanent residents and foreign workers.

Source: http://www.bangkokpost.com/news/asia/303068/two-china-workers-killed-in-singapore-tunnel-accident

1 thought on “Two missing, 8 injured in Singapore construction site

  1. “not enough engineers” sounds more like the operations and infrastructure around the whole world, not just Sing. Of, course quantity of staff low paid engineer salary drones does not fix it either. Bean counters, low salaries and human resources wanting only engineers exactly experienced in one small specialty and wanting them to stay inline and be low cost. Try contracting and paying for real engineers instead with a wide range of worldly experience.
    Maybe then subway would run, structures would hold and runways would not keep cracking.
    What ? me bitter?

Leave a Reply