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The Men Lost to 20 Bruckner Boulevard

They were transforming a century-old Bronx ice house into a charter school. It became one of the deadliest construction sites in New York City in …

The Men Lost to 
20 Bruckner Boulevard
30.05.2022 15:59
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They were transforming a century-old Bronx ice house into a charter school. It became one of the deadliest construction sites in New York City in almost two decades.

The Men Lost To 20 Bruckner BoulevardThe Men Lost To 20 Bruckner Boulevard

By Dan Barry and Karen Zraick

May 30, 2022


Two laborers board an elevator at the top of a five-story building under renovation in the Bronx. They wear construction helmets, reflective vests and face masks, none of which will do them any good.

The older man, a supervisor, rarely talks about anything beyond what needs to be done at this work site at 20 Bruckner Boulevard. But he and his younger co-worker have become friends through a morning ritual: One buys the coffee and the other, the doughnuts.

The job at hand is to take two waist-high containers of construction debris down to the ground. The doors are closed and a button is pushed. The elevator shudders, then drops. The floor seems to vanish beneath the men’s work boots.

They scream as they plummet. A crash. Then stillness, save for clouds of disturbed dust.

It is early morning on May 19, 2021. And this site, where an old building is being transformed into a charter school, has just distinguished itself from the 40,000 other major construction projects in New York City by having its third worker fatality in less than three years.

In 2018, Marco Martínez, a teenager newly arrived from Ecuador, died after being crushed against a ceiling by a mechanical lift. A year later, Michael Daves, who was living in a men’s shelter and struggling with substance abuse, died after falling through a hole.

And now Yonin Pineda, a 29-year-old from Guatemala, lies unconscious and gravely injured. His diligent Mexican foreman, Mauricio Sánchez, 41, is sprawled dead beside him, his face mangled, his chest torn open, his blood staining broken concrete.

No other construction site in New York City has had this many separate fatal incidents since at least 2003, when the Department of Buildings began keeping electronic records. But despite the pattern of deaths, the consequences have been negligible.

The Men Lost To 20 Bruckner Boulevard

For years, the building at 20 Bruckner Boulevard was valued for its rooftop advertisement space.Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

The Buildings Department shut down the site for nearly two months after the second fatality, but the work geared up again, and another man died. While government inspectors have issued numerous violations in connection with the deaths, they have exacted just $28,864 in fines.

City investigators said their inquiry into the elevator collapse a year ago is continuing. But they did not speak to the lone survivor, Mr. Pineda, until this month, after questions from The New York Times.

As needle towers and super-tall buildings rise to puncture the metropolitan sky, the deaths cast in sharp relief the gulf between those who redefine the cityscape through sketches and contracts and those — mostly powerless and often unseen — who do the grunt work.

All three of the dead laborers lived on the city’s margins: Two were undocumented immigrants, one a homeless man. Only the last death received any local news coverage, and it was brief. None of the men had union representation.

Less than three weeks after the elevator collapse, with Mr. Sánchez yet to be buried in Mexico and Mr. Pineda still in the hospital, his body broken and jaw wired shut, the owner of 20 Bruckner Boulevard treated dozens of friends to a days-long celebration of his 50th birthday in the Dominican Republic. Among them were his development partner in the Bronx project and the founder of the charter school that had signed a long-term lease on the building.

The developers, their future tenant and select others gathered at an exclusive beachfront getaway at the edge of a lush forest, far from a Bronx work site distinguished by death.

$120 a Day

The building was once used as an ice storage plant by a brewer and owner of the New York Yankees. Credit…Percy Loomis Sperr, via New York Public Library

The cavernous structure at 20 Bruckner Boulevard has loomed over the Port Morris section of the Bronx since the Gilded Age, through the industrial neighborhood’s ups, downs and recent makeover as a community of high-rise apartments, artists’ lofts and hip restaurants.

For many years, the building served as an ice storage plant for the brewery empire of Jacob Ruppert, the onetime owner of the New York Yankees. Other businesses followed — a plumbing-supply company, a furniture store — before the building slipped into disuse.

Still, every successive owner knew how to capitalize on the prominent location: by using the rooftop for massive electronic advertisements that became touchstones for travelers along the nearby highways. Knickerbocker Beer. Kent Cigarettes. Newport Cigarettes. The History Channel. iHeartRadio. Uber.

By 2012, the owner of 20 Bruckner was Lewis Katz, a lawyer and philanthropist who had made his fortune in parking lots, billboards and professional sports teams. He was thinking of demolishing the long-vacant building, but Jorge Madruga, his partner in another real estate project, urged him to reconsider.

The building could be so much more than a platform for electronic signs, Mr. Madruga argued. Beautiful and sturdy, it featured iron-ore columns, terra cotta ceilings and enormous windows facing the glittering lights of Manhattan across the Harlem River. But before the men could finalize a partnership to reimagine the building, Mr. Katz died in a plane crash in 2014.

The project was then taken up by Mr. Katz’s son, Drew, the chief executive of Interstate Outdoor Advertising and a benefactor in his own right, supporting community groups and educational institutions, including a charter school network in Camden, N.J. He is also a generous campaign contributor, counts various celebrities among his friends — he is close to Senator Cory Booker of New Jersey — and has not been reticent about his substantial wealth.

The three-day celebration of his 2013 wedding to Rachel Snyder, a lawyer, at The Breakers in Palm Beach, Fla., made gossip-column headlines, and their sprawling penthouse in SoHo was featured in Architectural Digest before being sold in 2015 for $17 million. The couple then bought an even larger penthouse in TriBeCa for $22 million.

Mr. Katz’s business partner, Mr. Madruga, 52, is also wealthy, connected and a frequent donor to political campaigns. He left his native Cuba as a child during the Mariel boatlift, and as a young man pleaded guilty to participating in a Medicaid scam in Florida, for which he served six months of house arrest and paid nearly a half-million dollars in fines and restitution. He now owns Maddd Equities, a developer and builder of residential and commercial properties.

Drew Katz, left, took up the project after the death of his father, Lewis Katz, right.Credit…Patrick McMullan, via Getty Images
Jorge Madruga owns Maddd Equities and the general contractor at 20 Bruckner.Credit…Buck Ennis/Crain’s New York Business

In July 2016, the two men struck a deal: Mr. Madruga would be in charge of developing 20 Bruckner; Mr. Katz, meanwhile, “would serve as a passive investor uninvolved with the project’s operations or construction,” said his spokesman, James Yolles.

As the search for tenants began, teams of nonunion workers contended with the unpleasant task of gutting the neglected, pigeon-infested building. The construction industry in New York City relies on the labor of thousands of undocumented immigrants, performing jobs few others want, hoping to move up through sweat and toil. Immigrants like Yonin Pineda.

Dark-haired and solidly built, he was raised by parents who ran a small grocery in Pasaco, a modest town in southern Guatemala. The sixth of seven sons, he followed two brothers to the Bronx, traveling by bus, by foot and by van up through the Americas. It took six weeks.

Mr. Pineda cleaned offices before getting a job with a small construction company in Queens. He did demolition and installation work throughout his adopted city, then was assigned to the gut rehab of 20 Bruckner.

Yonin Pineda was severely injured last year when an elevator at 20 Bruckner plummeted to the ground. Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

The young laborer would leave the Bronx apartment he shared with his brothers and join the pre-dawn commute known to battalions of construction workers with scuffed boots and bleary eyes. He would take the 4 train south and arrive at work well before the 7 a.m. start.

Before anything else, he would meet up with his foreman, Mauricio Sánchez, for their coffee-cart ritual. Mr. Sánchez liked sugar doughnuts; Mr. Pineda preferred chocolate.

Mr. Sánchez often had to check in deliveries at noon, leaving him no time to buy lunch. But Mr. Pineda’s girlfriend would prepare enough food for both men. Her stewed beef with rice was the foreman’s favorite.

Mr. Pineda’s pay started out at $120 a day, gradually rising to $180, with no overtime — even if work went long or stretched into a Saturday. Payment initially came in the form of a check, he said, but later became cash in hand, every two weeks.

He and the other laborers had no idea who the new tenant would be. All they knew, really, was the work: clearing debris, taking down interior walls, power-washing the 19th-century brick, removing nearly every trace of the past.

It was hard labor. Dusty, dank and dangerous.

Mami, Come’

A laborer works on a scissor lift at 20 Bruckner Blvd.Credit…Emily Assiran

The device is called a scissor lift. When activated, it unfolds like an upturned accordion, allowing the operator to rise on a small platform to reach high, otherwise inaccessible places.

The lift being used at the 20 Bruckner construction site on Dec. 11, 2018, was squat and rectangular, with a yellow guardrail around its platform. Now it was time to pack up. A foreman for one of the subcontractors instructed a young worker named Marco Martínez to sweep the lift clean of debris.

Mr. Martínez was 18, big-eyed and small-framed, still more boy than man. He had been in the United States for less than four months and, in many ways, could not have been further from home.

He grew up in Gunag, a dirt-road hamlet tucked into the Andes Mountains of south-central Ecuador. The oldest of three children and the only son, he slept in the same room as his parents and sisters in their one-story concrete house.

Life depended on planting and harvesting potatoes from rented land. The family shared the backbreaking work with two bulls that pulled the plow and a horse that carried the bags bulging with tubers. Mr. Martínez stopped attending school when he was 12 and began tending the fields full time. He worked for a while at a meat-processing business in the nearby town of Paute, but the cost of commuting ate into the $10 he earned for a 12-hour shift.

“Without being able to even see him, we cried day and night here,” said Mr. Martínez’s mother, Digna Arias.
A funeral card honoring Mr. Martínez, who was 18 when he died after an accident at the Bruckner site.
In Ecuador, Mr. Martínez and his family depended on the potato harvest for their livelihood.Credit…Photographs by Daniele Volpe for The New York Times

He knew that his prospects in Gunag were limited. To realize his dream of owning land in his hometown, where the money sent back by emigrants had already raised property prices, he would have to follow so many others and go to New York.

The first set of smugglers vanished after collecting a sizable fee, his parents said. But the family tried again, paying the travel costs with a $20,000 loan intended for farming equipment and livestock.

In late August 2018, Mr. Martínez said goodbye to Gunag, where he enjoyed racing his dirt bike through the green hills. In an instant, he was living with an uncle in the jam-packed Corona section of Queens, a short walk to Flushing Meadows Corona Park, where the stainless-steel Unisphere reflected both the vastness and the smallness of the world.

Mr. Martínez found work as a waiter for a catering business owned by the uncle of a family friend, Lucio Barrera. The young man struck Mr. Barrera as determined and ambitious, eager to pay off his smuggling debt and begin saving money.

“He knew that if he worked hard, he’d be able to make something of his life,” Mr. Barrera said. “He was happy, very respectful. He was just a kid.”

He kept in daily contact with his family in Gunag, especially his mother, Digna Arias. He sent photos of himself, including one at the colossal World Trade Center transportation complex, and begged her to join him. He was lonely.

Mami, come, come, come,” Ms. Arias recalled her son saying. “You work so hard and put in so much effort, and for nothing, mami. There is money here.”

But the prospects for Ms. Arias to join her son were slim, and she hoped that they would soon be reunited in their village. “He wanted to return quickly, to have a little house, a little car and a little bit of land,” she said. “These were his dreams: to return.”

Mr. Martínez at the World Trade Center transportation complex, a photo he sent home to his family.

Through another family friend, Mr. Martínez found a nonunion job in the fall of 2018 as a “helper” for a structural steel contractor, making about $16 an hour — more than he would earn in a day in Gunag. Laborers on New York City construction sites are required to take a safety course, but the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration found no documentation that Mr. Martínez had received the training.

Less than three weeks after being hired, Mr. Martínez was told to clean the scissor lift. It was parked in a connected building, on the same lot, that served as a staging area for the 20 Bruckner project.

For unknown reasons, Mr. Martínez activated the lift while standing on its platform. According to an OSHA investigation, he initially raised it eight feet, but then, as he peered over the top rail, the lift rose another 13 feet, crushing him against a ceiling beam.

Mira! Mira!” people shouted. Look! Look!

The foreman rushed over and lowered the lift. Mr. Pineda, who by then had worked at the site for two years, recognized the injured laborer as the “boy” he had seen around for the last couple of weeks.

“We saw that there was blood,” Mr. Pineda said.

Mr. Martínez was taken by ambulance to nearby Lincoln Medical Center. That night, his mother grew worried when she did not receive his daily phone call.

He lingered for almost two weeks before his parents, who could not secure visas to the United States, made the decision to end his life support. His would be one of 13 construction-related fatalities in the city in 2018.

Mr. Martínez’s family has mourned him in their small Ecuadorean home. Credit…Daniele Volpe for The New York Times

OSHA said the company it identified as Mr. Martínez’s employer, Bowne Tech Construction Corp., had not immediately reported his injury or death to the federal agency as required. OSHA learned of the fatality on Jan. 4, more than three weeks after the accident, and eventually imposed $14,589 in penalties, which Bowne Tech paid. A lawyer for the company declined to comment.

Nor was the city Buildings Department immediately informed as required, according to Andrew Rudansky, a spokesman for the agency. The city did not find out about the death until May 2021 — two and a half years later — while investigating the elevator failure, Mr. Rudansky said.

A subsequent investigation resulted in violations for Mr. Madruga’s company, the general contractor, including failure to safeguard the construction site and failure to notify the department of the fatal incident, Mr. Rudansky said.

Mr. Madruga’s company, GDI Construction, is disputing the violations. A spokesman said that nothing had been concealed from the city agency, and noted that OSHA had not cited the company in connection with the death. A hearing on the Buildings Department violations, which carry penalties of up to $75,000, is scheduled for July.

A few days into 2019, the body of Marco Martínez arrived at the airport in the city of Guayaquil, a drive of several hours from his hometown.

Around midnight, a police car with lights flashing pulled into the small village, followed by a car serving as a hearse. Mourners filled the narrow street to press against the vehicle and pay their respects. As men prepared to remove the off-white coffin, women sang a sorrowful hymn into the darkness.

An 18-Foot Fall

A series of electronic ads topped the 20 Bruckner building, visible from nearby highways.Credit…C. Taylor Crothers/Getty Images

Work on the project continued. Then it was December again, five days before Christmas 2019, and another new laborer, Michael Daves, was on site, working for another nonunion contractor.

Mr. Daves, 58, had a shaved head and a gray-white goatee. After spending years in and out of prison and struggling with drugs, he was living in a men’s shelter facing the elevated train tracks along Jerome Avenue in the Bronx, trying to hold a job and stay straight.

The younger men in the shelter saw him as a calming presence who would gently intervene if a resident hassled a staff member. They called him Tru.

“If you needed him, he was there, if he had it,” said one resident, Mark Johnson, 37. He added, “A straight-up brother.”

Luis Marrero, another resident, recalled sharing a room with Mr. Daves and nearly a dozen others. He said that Tru had a hard time dealing with shelter life, and could not always resist the pull of drugs.

“He regretted using,” Mr. Marrero said.

Michael Daves lived in a shelter for homeless men where residents called him Tru.

On that cold Friday morning, Mr. Daves, who had taken the required safety training, was spraying a water hose to contain hazardous dust as his foreman guided a 36-inch saw through second-floor concrete.

The foreman instructed him to find a plank on the first floor to use as a guide for a straight cut. But instead of walking toward the stairs, investigators determined, Mr. Daves went in another direction.

He entered a small gated area marked “Danger” and “Controlled Access Zone.” Inside were some planks and a large hole in the floor, according to an OSHA investigation. He did not have permission to be in this restricted area, a spokesman for Mr. Madruga’s company said.

Mr. Daves fell through the hole and hit the concrete floor about 18 feet below. His foreman rushed downstairs to find him barely conscious and bleeding from the nose.

The laborer was taken by ambulance to Lincoln Medical Center. One of his supervisors later reported to OSHA that Mr. Daves had told the hospital staff he had taken heroin earlier in the day, an allegation The Times could not independently confirm.

Mr. Daves’s mother, Barbara Daves, of Newnan, Ga., said in an interview that he had maintained contact with his family and had been doing well in “trying to pull himself together.” She acknowledged that he had struggled with drugs, but said that he would not have endangered himself by using them on the job.

Her son, Ms. Daves said, was “not a fool.”

Lincoln Medical Center in the Bronx, where the men were taken after their injuries. Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

The Buildings Department eventually cited Mr. Madruga’s company, GDI Construction, for a dozen violations; six were sustained, four were dismissed and two are pending, including alleged failures to institute safety measures and to notify the agency of the incident. The company has paid $14,275 in fines.

OSHA, meanwhile, issued penalties of more than $61,000 to the subcontractor, RLG Kingsland Services, for violations centering on safe work conditions and safety training. The company has not paid; through its lawyer, it declined to comment.

Once again, OSHA said, the requirement that it be quickly notified of a work-related hospitalization was not met. It was not until four days later, on Christmas Eve, that a supervisor for the subcontractor left a voice mail message to report that Mr. Daves had been hospitalized.

“The caller stated that he was at a controlled area where he was not supposed to be at,” reads an OSHA summary of the call. “The caller stated that it is believed that he was hiding to do drugs.”

Five days later, another message was left on the OSHA hotline. This time it was an official from the city’s Office of the Chief Medical Examiner, calling to report “the work-related fatality of a gentleman”: Michael Daves.

A New Tenant

The building is slated to become the home of the DREAM charter school network. Credit…Emily Assiran

The death of Mr. Daves — one of 14 at construction sites in the city in 2019 — created costly problems for the developers. The Buildings Department shut down all work until the company, which said it fired the subcontractor that employed Mr. Daves, resolved the violations and the agency was satisfied that the site was safe.

In February 2020, two months after the death, the city partly rescinded its stop-work order (it would not be completely lifted until October), but only after the buildings commissioner directed Mr. Madruga’s company to hire a full-time construction superintendent to oversee safety operations. The company said it had already assigned a superintendent to the site — three months before Mr. Daves’s death.

By now, the ice-plant project had a clear purpose as the future home for DREAM, a well-established network of charter schools with deep roots in East Harlem and the Bronx and a strong bench of high-powered financiers and former athletes among its supporters. Mr. Katz had met the organization’s founder, Richard Berlin, years earlier and was impressed with the educator’s passion and dedication. More than 90 percent of DREAM’s students are Black or Hispanic, and at least half of its seats are reserved for children from nearby public-housing developments.

When another potential tenant for 20 Bruckner had dropped out, Mr. Katz encouraged Mr. Berlin to visit the building, the spokesman for Mr. Katz said. And by the spring of 2019, DREAM had signed a 45-year lease agreement.

The new school, designed by the renowned architect David Adjaye, would accommodate 1,300 students, from pre-K through high school.

But a lot of demolition and construction still needed to be done. That work would fall to laborers in hard hats, including Yonin Pineda and Mauricio Sánchez.

Stocky and with a dark trace of a mustache, Mr. Sánchez enjoyed his job as foreman. He had come to New York a dozen years earlier from Santa María Huazolotitlán, a town in the Mexican state of Oaxaca. Now he was living the uneasy life of the undocumented immigrant, sharing an apartment with other men in a squat brick building in the Corona section of Queens.

On the job site he was known as a serious supervisor who discouraged his crew members from speaking ill of colleagues. This rigorous sense of purpose had been instilled in Mr. Sánchez during his three years in the Mexican military, according to his brother Julian.

Quiet and disciplined, Mr. Sánchez rarely shared anything personal. His colleagues may not have known that he sent nearly $1,500 a month home to his widowed mother; that he paid much of the cost to cremate and return to Guatemala a friend who had died of a heart condition; that he liked to relax by strumming a guitar. He favored ballads about romance.

“He never talked about anything personal, only about work,” Mr. Pineda said. “Very dedicated.”

Coffee and doughnuts. Hard work. Lunch prepared by Mr. Pineda’s girlfriend. More work. This was his life.

A Third Death

Mr. Pineda would have a view of Yankee Stadium on his daily commute to the job site.Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

On the warm morning of May 19, 2021, Mr. Pineda took the 4 train south, past Yankee Stadium and then the Lincoln Medical Center, where two workers injured at the Bruckner job site had died.

This is Mr. Pineda’s account of what happened that day.

He started his shift on the fifth floor — the charter school’s future athletic center — taking the smaller of two elevators. The larger one, he said, had been under repair after a malfunction a few weeks earlier.

Mr. Pineda finished a task and was about to head back downstairs when Mr. Sánchez, his foreman, emerged from the small elevator to say they had a lot of work to do. The bosses wanted the debris cleaned up.

When two supervisors for GDI Construction walked out of the larger elevator a short while later, Mr. Pineda said, Mr. Sánchez asked them whether the device was now operational. Yes, Mr. Pineda recalled one of the supervisors saying. But you have to operate it manually.

Under Mr. Sánchez’s direction, Mr. Pineda guided a pallet jack holding two containers of construction debris into the elevator. After they closed the doors, Mr. Sánchez joked that the elevator might not make it all the way down. He activated the car’s descent. An ominous noise sounded from above. Suddenly they were hurtling 75 feet to the ground.

“I’m looking at Mauricio, and Mauricio is looking at me,” Mr. Pineda recalled. “We screamed.”

The overwhelming sense of helplessness, of imminent death, was brief. “Once I went down, I don’t remember what happened,” he said.

The life was crushed from Mr. Sánchez. He lay face down, bits of broken concrete in his dark hair, the cellphone he used to call family in Mexico jutting from a back pocket.

Mauricio Sanchez died last year when an elevator plummeted 75 feet to the ground.

Mr. Pineda was taken to Lincoln Medical Center, where he regained hazy consciousness the next day, unable to see or speak. His jaw was wired shut and he was breathing through a tube protruding from an incision in his throat.

The exact circumstances of this work-site fatality — one of nine in the city in 2021 — are in dispute.

Stu Schwartz, a lawyer for Alpha Elevator, said that the company had been in the process of upgrading the elevator. It had installed a temporary lightweight system meant to be used only by Alpha mechanics, he said, and he maintained that no Alpha employee was on site that day.

“Nobody should have been using it other than elevator personnel,” Mr. Schwartz said.

The Bronx District Attorney’s Office placed the blame on the accident’s two victims, reiterating that only Alpha employees were supposed to use the elevator.

“Despite being informed of this, the foreman, Mauricio Sánchez, used it along with a worker, Yonin Grijalva, to take debris from a higher floor. The wire holding the elevator broke under the additional weight, and the foreman and worker plummeted down the shaft with it,” said a spokeswoman, Patrice O’Shaughnessy, using Mr. Pineda’s maternal surname.

Jonathan Moran, a lawyer representing both Mr. Pineda and the Sánchez estate, said that the laborers were never told not to use the elevator, and that no caution signs or fencing signaled that it remained out of service — an assertion supported by an OSHA inspection performed after the incident. He said that the Bronx District Attorney’s Office had never interviewed Mr. Pineda, and described its inquiry as “superficial, one-sided and woefully inadequate.”

Last month, after The Times asked the district attorney’s office and the city’s Department of Investigation why their inquiry into the elevator collapse did not include talking to the sole survivor, they said that the investigation was ongoing. Days later, they interviewed Mr. Pineda.

OSHA eventually cited the laborers’ employer, KM Builders, for several violations related to work-site safety in general and the elevator collapse in particular, with penalties totaling $48,370. The company, through its lawyer, declined to comment. It has not paid the penalties.

Government agencies also cited Mr. Madruga’s company, GDI Construction, once again for multiple safety violations in connection with the death of a laborer on its construction site, this time with possible penalties of nearly $125,000.

And once again, the Buildings Department issued a full-stop work order at 20 Bruckner. Once again, it pressured GDI Construction to provide a safer job site, directing the company to hire both a full-time “safety compliance officer” and a “site safety manager.” The stop-work order was lifted three months later.

The spokesman for GDI Construction said the company had met and exceeded the city’s demands, with extra employees on site to ensure that all “safety-related details” were addressed. He added, “Construction inherently presents risks, and though safety measures, precautions and protocols were in place on this job site, these unfortunate accidents occurred.”

In a statement, Mr. Katz distanced himself from the incidents, saying that he had entrusted Mr. Madruga to oversee the details of the project. He added, “The three accidents are tragic and deeply saddening to my family and me.”

‘The Cost of Doing Business’

The Playa Grande beachfront in the Dominican Republic, where Drew Katz celebrated his 50th birthday.Credit…Tatiana Fernández for The New York Times

Less than three weeks after the third fatal incident at the job site, Mr. Katz held a 50th birthday party for himself on the north coast of the Dominican Republic, among the exclusive resorts along the Playa Grande beachfront.

Dozens of guests were treated to the days-long celebration, including his development partner, Mr. Madruga, and Mr. Berlin of the DREAM charter school. The men declined to comment on the gathering, which included golf, zip-lining, A.T.V. rides and baseball hats emblazoned with “DK50” to commemorate the host’s milestone birthday.

Mr. Pineda, meanwhile, remained hospitalized in the Bronx. His body was a study in blunt trauma, from the fractures in his eye sockets to the ligament tears in his feet. Broken nose, broken jaw, bloodied ear, sprained back, lacerated chest, damaged knee.

The body of his colleague, Mauricio Sánchez, was returned to his mother in their Mexican hometown, to be buried in a silver coffin. GDI Construction said that it covered some of the cost.

Still grappling with their loss, Mr. Sánchez’s relatives recalled how he proudly sent them photographs of his job site, and how, the day before the accident, he had told one of his brothers that work was going well.

“I ask for justice for the death of my son,” Mr. Sánchez’s mother, Rosa Julia Gallegos, said in a phone interview from Mexico.

Workers’ rights advocates in New York have successfully pushed to increase work-site training requirements and to regulate “body shops,” or labor brokers that supply low-wage workers. And they are working with legislators to pass Carlos’s Law — named after an immigrant buried alive at a Manhattan construction site in 2015. The bill broadens corporate liability in worker injuries and death, but only when criminal charges are filed, which rarely occurs.

Francisco Moya, a city councilman and former Democratic state legislator from Queens who helped write the original version of the bill, said the existing fines were too small to deter contractors from cutting corners on safety. “For them, that’s nothing,” he said. “It’s the cost of doing business.”

Construction-related deaths remain inordinately higher at nonunion work sites. In 2020, for example, OSHA conducted 11 investigations into construction-related fatalities in New York City. All were at nonunion sites.

Members of New Immigrant Community Empowerment, an advocacy group, honoring construction workers killed on the job.Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

Jordan Barab, a former deputy assistant secretary of labor for OSHA during the Obama administration, said that the fear of deportation and the desperate need for work can combine to leave undocumented workers particularly exposed.

“You have a perfect storm of unsafe conditions,” Mr. Barab said. “Not just the physical conditions, but conditions in which the workers are unaware of their rights or are unable to use their rights.”

The civil lawsuits filed by the families of the three dead laborers are pending. The developers and contractors have denied any negligence or wrongdoing.

There have also been workers’ compensation claims, and at least one settlement. Mr. Martínez’s parents in Ecuador said they used the money to pay off the loan for their son’s passage to the United States, and to build an addition to their modest home. But they remain haunted by their inability to acquire visas in time to visit their comatose son before he died.

“Without being able to even see him, we cried day and night here,” said his mother, Ms. Arias.

Construction continues at 20 Bruckner, with DREAM officials planning to take occupancy next year. The organization’s annual gala in the fall will feature the building’s owner, Mr. Katz, as its man of honor. Individual tickets start at $10,000.

And Mr. Pineda has yet to recover from the elevator collapse that broke his body and killed his foreman and coffee-cart friend. He remains out of work and is unable to eat solid food.

The laborer also continues to have vivid dreams of the job site, including one in which a puzzled Mauricio Sánchez keeps telling his colleagues that what they’re saying isn’t true:

He’s not dead.

In 2020, federal inspectors conducted 11 investigations into construction-related fatalities in New York City. All were at nonunion sites.Credit…Desiree Rios for The New York Times

Daniele Volpe, Annie Correal and José María León Cabrera contributed reporting. Susan C. Beachy contributed research.

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