Sampoong Department Store collapse, disaster that occurred on June 29, 1995, when a department store in Seoul, South Korea, collapsed, killing more than 500 people and injuring more than 930.
South Korea’s construction boom in the 1980s and 1990s often meant that corners were cut, rules bent, and bribes tendered; the Sampoong Department Store, located atop a former landfill in Seoul’s popular Gangnam District, was no exception. When work started in 1987, planning permission had been granted for a four-storey office block, with four underground floors as well. But property developer Lee Joon redesigned it as a department store, with modifications which compromised its safety, including removal of support columns to accommodate escalators. His building contractors objected, but they were replaced. The bright pink store opened in 1989 and was a huge success, with around 4,000 shoppers a day “thinking pink.”
Lee Joon decided to add another floor. Further retail development was prohibited, so he opted for restaurants and a pool. Again his contractors protested, saying that the combined weight of additional concrete and air-conditioning equipment would be dangerous. Like their predecessors, they were fired, and the air-conditioning equipment, four times heavier than the building was designed for, was dragged across the rooftop rather than being lowered by helicopter or crane, causing visible structural damage.
On June 29, 1995, when cracks appeared in the ceiling of the fifth floor, it was simply closed off. The shop was particularly busy that day, and management were unwilling to evacuate the entire building. By lunchtime the cracks had widened and the fourth-floor ceiling was sagging, so the upper floors were shut. The staff finally sounded the alarm at 5:50 p.m., and a few minutes later the roof caved in, the support columns gave way, and, in less than 20 seconds, a huge section of the five-storey building collapsed into the basement, trapping shoppers and staff.
Thanks to the efficiency of rescue teams, hundreds of survivors were pulled from the wreckage, the last being freed after 17 days. Initially the disaster was blamed on a gas leak or terrorism, but investigations showed that the building had been seriously overloaded and constructed with inferior concrete. Lee Joon was sentenced to seven and a half years of confinement and was imprisoned, as were his son, Lee Han-Sang, and several city officials who were convicted of accepting bribes. After the Sampoong disaster, greater attention was given to improving building practices and strengthening and enforcing safety codes, and numerous buildings in the South Korean capital were condemned, razed, and rebuilt.
A luxury apartment complex now stands where the Sampoong Department Store once did.