Recovering Damages From a Building or Structure Collapse in Norman, OK
A building or structure failing is rare — but devastating when it does happen. Victims usually suffer catastrophic injuries. Figuring out who’s responsible is rarely straightforward. A local lawyer experienced with construction defect injuries identifies every responsible party.
What Counts as a Structural Defect Accident?
Structural defect cases involve injuries caused by a failure in the design, construction, materials, or maintenance of a building, deck, balcony, staircase, walkway, parking structure, or similar feature.
Common Failures Behind These Claims
- Deck failures
- Stairway breakdowns
- Ceiling, soffit, or overhang failures
- Handrails giving way
- Subfloor or joist failures
- Multi-story parking structure failures
- Retaining wall failures
- Truss failures
- Temporary structure failures
- Lifting equipment collapses
Why These Cases Hinge on Expert Investigation
Unlike a slip-and-fall or auto accident, the technical evidence is everything. Without engineering analysis, the defendants will simply blame each other.
Building these claims means engaging:
- Forensic structural engineers
- Metallurgists or concrete experts
- Code compliance experts
- Industry standards witnesses
- Engineering specialists in subsurface conditions where applicable
The Long Chain of Potential Defendants
Structural defect cases often implicate multiple parties, each potentially responsible for a different aspect of the failure.
The Property Owner
Property owners must keep structures safe for foreseeable visitors. If they had notice of deterioration, rot, corrosion, or other warning signs, liability attaches.
The Property Manager
When property management is contracted out, the manager can share liability when they ignored maintenance needs.
The General Contractor
When the issue arose during the build (within the applicable OK statute of repose), the general contractor who built the structure can face breach of standard of care claims.
Subcontractors
Subcontractors who performed the defective work — whichever specialty did the work that failed — can be on the hook for their own work.
The Architect or Design Professional
If the structure was designed inadequately, the engineer of record carries professional liability.
Materials Manufacturers
When the issue is a product defect, the manufacturer of the failed material can face claims for defective materials. Examples include defective fasteners, corroded steel, failed concrete admixtures, or composite materials.
Inspectors
Building inspectors who signed off may face liability for missing visible defects when they failed to identify obvious problems.
Government Entities
If the structure is government-controlled, state or local government can face liability. Strict deadlines apply for claims against public entities that must be followed precisely.
Statutes of Repose Add Pressure
In addition to standard statutes of limitations, construction defect claims face a statute of repose that cuts off liability past a certain point after construction. This makes prompt investigation essential.
Critical Evidence in Structural Defect Cases
Preservation of the Failed Structure
Without the failed material, the case can’t be properly built. The natural response is to remove debris and repair. Formal notice must go out immediately.
Building Plans, Permits, and Inspection Records
Construction documentation reveals how the structure was supposed to be built. Construction permits and inspection histories often reveal what went wrong.
Maintenance Records
The owner’s maintenance history can show prior problems.
Photographs and Forensic Documentation
Forensic photographic documentation preserves what gets cleaned up.
Damages in These Cases
Given the severity of harm from these failures, claim values are usually significant. Recoverable damages include extensive past and future medical care, career-ending wage damages, adaptive equipment, pain and suffering, wrongful death in fatal cases, and punitive damages where the conduct was egregious.
Attorney Fees
Construction defect injury lawyers work on contingency. These cases require significant investment in expert witnesses fronted by counsel.
Get Started Immediately
No category of injury case turns on speed of investigation like structural defects. The scene gets cleaned up, repaired, or rebuilt. Engaging counsel immediately frequently decides the outcome before anyone steps into a courtroom. Both legal deadlines reinforce the need for fast action.