50 Times Workers Said “Good Enough, I’m Going Home” And It Resulted In These Funny Fails
There’s a good reason why we have specialists like architects, contractors, designers, and engineers. They ensure that structures we live, work, and relax in are built safely, functionally, and decently looking. That said, not all professionals are created equal. As in most industries, some specialists are more or less skilled than others, and it inevitably shows in the end product. For your entertainment, we compiled a list of all types of fails and shoddy jobs from this Instagram account, done by the lesser competent side of design and construction workers. To see them for yourself, all you have to do is scroll down!
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While the construction and design fails on this list might seem funny, in real life, poor design, construction, and cheap materials can be very unsafe, costing thousands of lives. Throughout history, buildings have collapsed due to ignored warnings, construction, and design flaws that could’ve been avoided. These structures collapse because someone responsible overlooked something important—they’re almost never at random.
For example, the deadliest structure collapse in human history, which cost about 20,000 lives, occurred because of a cheap wooden construction that wasn’t able to withstand the number of people that crowded it. It was the Fidenae amphitheater in Italy, and it remains a historic example of why crowd loads and construction oversight matter.
The second, a more recent instance, is the Ponte das Barcas, a bridge that was located in Porto, Portugal. It collapsed in 1809 when thousands of civilians tried to escape from French troops through it.
Its design might be the reason why it collapsed, as it was made out of wooden boats connected together, so it could be easily disassembled and reassembled. It collapsed due to the weight of too many people, costing around 4,000 lives.
The third deadliest construction collapse, which took around 2,000 lives, was when the South Fork Dam gave way after days of relentless rain. Its owners have previously lowered the weight, used poor materials, and neglected to maintain it, which caused the dam to collapse and release about 20 million tons of water in minutes, flooding the valley where people lived.
It’s known as the Johnstown Flood—one of the deadliest civil engineering failures in U.S. history.
Similarly, around 2,000 people died in Italy when a huge wave over 250 meters high surged over the Vajont dam and crashed into the villages below due to a landslide in the water reservoir. It happened because the people responsible for it ignored the warnings of the unstable mountain and kept filling the reservoir. While the dam remained intact, it became a turning point in how engineers assess slope risk around reservoirs.
I haven’t done the research, but I strongly suspect this is an art piece.
The following deadly structure collapse happened in 1807 in Tokyo, Japan, when a festival crowd gathered on Eitai Bridge to watch fireworks. Since the bridge was made out of wood without crowd control in mind, it collapsed under the weight of festivalgoers. The incident caused nearly 1,500 people to drown. After that, the country introduced stronger bridge designs and began recognizing crowd control as part of safe urban planning.
"...and now you just weld the short pieces to the leg to connect them to the wood - easy peasy!" Whoever coined the word "idiotproof" had no idea about idiot creativity.
Just a bit more than 10 years ago, in 2013, in Bangladesh, a commercial building, Rana Plaza, collapsed and took 1,134 lives with it. The night before, engineers recommended evacuation as cracks were noticed in its walls. Despite this, over 3,000 workers were told to return to work the next morning. Within hours, the building gave way due to overloaded floors, illegal expansion, and substandard construction.
Another modern collapse that took 500 lives happened in 1995 in Seoul, South Korea. The building that gave way was the Sampoong Department Store.
Originally, it was an office tower, but later the owner insisted on changes that removed support columns to fit escalators. Later, he even built a fifth floor and rooftop full of air conditioning units, which pushed the structure past its limit, and it collapsed. This incident led to reforms in South Korea’s building codes.
While all these structures and their collapses forced people to learn from their mistakes and improve the way we build constructions, their cost was thousands of people’s lives. It was a hefty price to pay, but it taught specialists that ignoring red flags, skimping out on materials, or violating code isn’t worth it.
For more curiosities about design and construction that fortunately didn’t have a fatal ending, click on this previous article about unique buildings or repurposed architectural wonders.
I have married a new pavestone walkway with a driveway all the way around a house, and I am not an expert, but even I bothered to break a few bricks to fill the gap.
Looks like it might be a hotel room? There's a map on the back of the door that may show the way to go in case of fire.
If only they had something they could have put the stonework around. Hmmmm
I feel like a bead of caulk would have been easier, but those rubber gaskets always fail and this person seems to have stopped the leak
Well, not many people will see from this angle if it works from the inside then I will allow it.
Our neighbor had a company pave his driveway in brick. Looks great, love it! The problem was they only left about a 5 inch diameter opening to the water meter access, which is shared between our houses. Well the water company charged us a high fee because they couldn't access the meter and had to guess what our charges were. We talked to our neighbor and he was super nice about it and got the contractor out to fix it. The access was like 30 inches in diameter! How they thought covering like 80% of the thing and called it good is beyond me!
Meh. I've seen much worse. Particularly if this is intended as only a temporary stopgap.
"Harvey, you need to get off that couch and do something! The raccoons have built a SAUNA on our roof!"
That one is perfectly fine. Great way to upcicle those old tires. Looks thought out and carefully planned.
Should I be embarrassed that at least three of these remind me of my house, and car?
I was going to ask what's the Polish for redneck, but I just know someone will answer, it's just Polish. And having witnessed my sister in law lighting a cigarette with a blowtorch, I wouldn't be surprised.
Redneck doesn't mean stupid, it means hick.
Load More Replies...Why are a lot of these here? I mean, a lot of them are quirky but the whole list isn't fails.
Im sure there is a special place in hell for people who create these monstrosities
Should I be embarrassed that at least three of these remind me of my house, and car?
I was going to ask what's the Polish for redneck, but I just know someone will answer, it's just Polish. And having witnessed my sister in law lighting a cigarette with a blowtorch, I wouldn't be surprised.
Redneck doesn't mean stupid, it means hick.
Load More Replies...Why are a lot of these here? I mean, a lot of them are quirky but the whole list isn't fails.
Im sure there is a special place in hell for people who create these monstrosities
