Home ALT MEDIAWhy 432 Park Avenue and Millennium Tower are Sinking Faster

Why 432 Park Avenue and Millennium Tower are Sinking Faster

by Bergeracpas
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 Compiled by Patrice Greanville 




Construction FilesConstruction Files
Jun 24, 2026 #BillionairesRow #Skyscraper #SanFrancisco

Two Billion-Dollar Towers. Two Opposite Disasters. One Question. On the east coast, the skinniest skyscraper ever built is cracking in the wind 1,000 feet over Manhattan — a 10-inch fracture in its spine, 1,893 documented defects, and a penthouse that lost 80% of its value. On the west coast, San Francisco's Millennium Tower is sinking into the ground and tilting toward its neighbors, because its foundation stopped in mud instead of bedrock. 432 Park Avenue was too thin. Millennium Tower was too heavy. One is cracking. One is sinking. Both were sold as the future of luxury living — and both became billion-dollar warnings about what happens when ambition outruns physics and greed outruns honesty. This is the full documentary on the two most expensive structural failures in modern American real estate — what went wrong, who knew, who paid, and why the people who built them keep asking the same quiet question on every project: how little can we get away with? Everything here is checked against the lawsuits, the engineering record, and the public filings. We tell you what actually happened. WHICH IS WORSE — the tower that's cracking, or the one that's sinking? Make your case in the comments.
 

 

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