2 Window Washers Saved After Dangling 69 Stories on World Trade Center Scaffolding

New York City firefighters have been called to the World Trade Center site, where two workers are stuck on scaffolding that’s about 69 stories above street level.
2 Window Washers Saved After Dangling 69 Stories on World Trade Center Scaffolding
A partially collapsed scaffolding hangs from the 1 World Trade Center in New York, Wednesday, Nov. 12, 2014. New York City firefighters have been called to the nation's tallest skyscraper, where two workers are stuck on scaffolding 69 stories above street level. AP Photo/Kathy Willens
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NEW YORK—Two men cleaning windows of the One World Trade Center building spent two frightening hours injured and hanging on for their lives 900 feet above ground Wednesday as one side of the suspension cables of their platform failed.

Firefighters, police, and Port Authority personnel managed to cut a hole through one of the windows and pulled the men to safety.

Both window washers, Juan Lizama, 41, and Juan Lopez, 33, were taken to Bellevue Hospital in serious, but not life-threatening condition, according to the city’s Fire Department representative. 

The incident happened at 1:44 p.m. According to construction workers who were in the tower, one side of the cables that held the platform got loose at its rooftop fixture plunging the platform to a sharp angle.

 

One construction worker saw the platform outside the 38th floor and noticed it seemed unstable. “It was shaking already,” said the worker, wishing to remain anonymous.

The rescuers first tried to break through the window on the 69th floor from the inside, but the glass was too thick.

Plan B was to bring down another platform and pick up one trapped window washer at a time.

In the end rescue workers managed to cut a man-sized hole through three layers of glass. They used a special suction cup method to protect workers and people below from shattered glass.

 

Shannon Liao
Shannon Liao
Author
Shannon Liao is a native New Yorker who attended Vassar College and the Bronx High School of Science. She writes business and tech news and is an aspiring novelist.
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