A midtown Manhattan building was evacuated Tuesday afternoon after steel beams started “bending like cigarettes,” as one expert put it, leaving tourists and locals scrambling for hotel rooms to spend the night.
After first responders determined the building was unstable, they started evacuations while “establishing a collapse zone,” Fire Commissioner Lillian Bonsignore said during a press conference Tuesday afternoon.
“They obviously didn’t add the right amount of steel, so the north side is crumbling,” Steamfitters union rep Cliff Johnson told local media. “The I-beams are bending like cigarettes in there, which is super dangerous.”
After finding no additional movement of the damaged columns, city officials allowed workers to start making emergency repairs Tuesday evening, the Associated Press reported.
But with the “collapse zone” still in effect, guests at the nearby Hampton Inn Manhattan Grand Central and Westin New York Grand Central were left to find new accommodations for the night, according to The New York Times.

“We just need a place to stay,” Christy Walls from West Virginia told the Times.
Walls was supposed to check into the Hampton Inn with her two children and college roommate during their vacation to see The Outsiders on Broadway, but the hotel was evacuated.
A group of three tourists from North Carolina was supposed to stay at the Westin for a couple of days before departing on an ocean cruise.
“I saw a breaking-news story pop up on Twitter,” 33-year-old Nika Whitsett, who was part of the group, told the New York Post. “I opened it and saw the streets. I said, ‘Oh, 42nd and Second. That’s where we’re headed!’”
Not only will tourists be looking for new accommodations, but locals will also have to try to check into a hotel or stay with a loved one due to the evacuations.

“Worst-case scenario, I probably will have to find a hotel somewhere,’’ Dr. Stefan Mitra, who had just come home from a 24-hour shift at a neurosurgery unit in the Bronx, told the Post. “There’s no other option. I can’t just wait forever.”
A 22-year-old local named Allie said that officials told her it could be two weeks until she can go back to her apartment.
“I’m really hoping that that’s some very cautious estimate,” she told the Post.
Residents of one building — 222 East 44th Street — were allowed to return home at around 7.30pm Tuesday, NBC New York reported, and officials are continuing to evaluate additional structures nearby, the outlet said.
It’s unclear when the “collapse zone” will be lifted, but the broader city, including subway lines, does not appear to be affected.
Around 8 a.m., fire crews were called to the 37-story building at 235 East 42nd Street near Grand Central Station after bricks began to fall from the building. Construction crews were working to convert the structure from its former Pfizer headquarters into 1,600 apartments. The workers noticed the structural support beams buckling on the 21st and 22nd floors, prompting the evacuation.

“Two structural columns have buckled, in addition to multiple cracks and sagging floors. The building remains unstable,” New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani said during the press conference.
There were no injuries reported, and all construction workers were accounted for, Mamdani said.
There were 50 units from the New York City Fire Department and over 150 fire and EMS personnel at the scene at midday.
Crowds had gathered near the police barricades to see crews rushing to keep the building from falling. At one point, spectators were pushed back from the perimeter set up by New York police.

Several nearby buildings, including a hotel and a school, were evacuated as a precaution, the New York City Fire Department told The Independent.
The buildings evacuated include 225 East 43rd Street, 221 East 43rd Street, 815 2nd Avenue, 212 East 43rd Street, 211 East 43rd Street, 235 East 42nd Street and 210 East 43rd Street.
The NYPD closed East 40th to 45th Street between First and Third avenues to tend to the scene. No pedestrian or vehicle traffic was allowed in that area for fear the building could collapse and debris would spread.
No trains at the Grand Central Station were impacted by the closure.

Fire officials said if the building, which has a steel frame, were to collapse, it would be more localized, and not a total collapse.
Video obtained by Pix 11 showed construction workers inspecting the area. The video showed the cracked floors and bent steel beams inside the construction site.
FDNY drones were used to examine the building. The New York City Department of Buildings was also at the scene investigating reports of structural issues.
“First responders have advised commuters to avoid the area and use alternate routes,” the agency said.
Mamdani noted during the press conference that officials were having a “minute-by-minute” assessment of the situation, but their main focus was keeping New Yorkers safe.
“We have evacuated not only the building, but also seven buildings around it. I really do appreciate the way in which New Yorkers have responded to this situation,” he said.
“We’ve seen that they have followed the instructions that have been provided by first responders on the ground, and that has been immensely helpful to ensuring that those first responders can be focused on the work at hand.”
New York Governor Kathy Hochul said she was working with city officials following the incident and that the New York State Department of Homeland Security was on the scene.
“The State stands ready to provide any assistance needed. Please avoid the area as emergency crews continue their work,” she said.

The building had seven New York City Building violations between July and December 2025 that resulted in $32,000 in fines, according to ABC7. It had 22 violations dating to 2020, according to the report. There were no further details given about the nature of the violations.
Metro Loft, the developer behind converting the space into apartments, released a statement after the building was evacuated.
“We are working closely with the Department of Buildings to understand the full scope of the situation,” it read. “The safety of our workers and the public has always been, and remains, our top priority.”