Historic, newly renovated high-rise in Detroit evacuated after pipes burst

Residents and employees at the historic Broderick Tower in Detroit were evacuated today after a water main broke on the fifth floor of the downtown high-rise.

Today’s below-zero temperatures were to blame, causing flooding in the basement of the 34-story building just south of Grand Circus Park. Most of the building’s 124 units were without power.
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Calls seeking updates from the Broderick have gone unanswered.

The high-rise cost $53 million to redevelop. It reopened in November 2012, offering apartments that range from 420-square-feet to 2,200-square-feet.
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Check out our friends at Historic Detroit for the fascinating history of the building, which opened in 1927 and was the second tallest structure in Michigan at the time.

The Detroit Water and Sewerage is struggling to keep pace with a backlog of main breaks due to the extreme cold.
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Steve Neavling

Steve Neavling lives and works in Detroit as an investigative journalist. His stories have uncovered corruption, led to arrests and reforms and prompted FBI investigations.

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