Gilbane Under Scrutiny for Safety Issues at Mega-Luxury Hotel and Beyond

GoLocalProv Business Team

Gilbane Under Scrutiny for Safety Issues at Mega-Luxury Hotel and Beyond

New New York Aman Hotel, site of multiple safety violations PHOTO: promotion of Hotel
Gilbane was the lead contractor for one of the most expensive luxury hotels ever built in New York City — a room in the hotel built by Soviet-born billionaire Vladislav Doronin costs in the thousands.

The Aman Hotel New York opened to massive hype.

“For the Very Rich, $3,200 a Night is a ‘Prototypical’ New York Experience” was the headline in the New York Times.

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“It’s oh-so-understated, and at $3,200 a night for the cheapest room, oh-so-expensive. And it’s a chain hotel,” wrote the Times.

The Aman hotel chain is owned by Vladislav Doronin, the Russian developer who has sparked controversies in the United States and in Europe.

But the posh price point stands in contrast to the safety violations at the property and the death of a worker.

The death has shined the light on Gilbane's safety record.

 

Gilbane Under Scrutiny 

Officially, headquartered in Providence, Gilbane — a $6 billion construction and property company — is one of America's leading construction firms. In recent years, the company has moved much of its executive office to Boston.

According to the news site Documented, issues at the Aman site had prompted at least 34 New York Department of Buildings summonses for safety violations. The identity of a deceased worker who died on the site of the Aman remains publicly unknown. But last year, Gilbane Inc., a company involved in hiring his direct employer—a subcontractor known as Labor Innovations—was among the most accident-prone builders in the city reports Curbed.

Documented reported, "For the February 2021 construction death, the Department of Buildings (DOB) inspector issued a summons to Gilbane Building Company for failing to institute adequate safety measures and slapped it with a $12,500 fine. Concurrently, the Occupational Safety and Health Administration (OSHA), a federal agency, imposed three penalties, that added up to $28,671, to Gilbane/Ant Yapi Joint Venture. The subcontractor Labor Innovations, which directly recruited the worker, was fined $38,228 for the construction death incident."

"Gilbane Inc was named in at least seven court cases and 34 other incidents of construction-related injuries in New York and across the United States in 2021. Still, the three companies associated with Gilbane Inc. have largely managed to evade the consequences of their failures," reported Documented.

GoLocal attempted to reach Gilbane about the reports in Documented and Curbed, and the company did not respond.

 

Gilbane has been fined more than $1.2 million by federal agencies since 2015 PHOTO: file
Issues Far Beyond New York for Gilbane - Fined More Than $1.2M in Last Seven Years

Since 2015, Gilbane has been fined nine times by federal agencies for workplace safety, environmental, and false claim violations, totaling $1,265,121.

This data was compiled by Violation Tracker and does not include any state enforcement actions.

According to another recent enforcement action against Gilbane, the U.S. Department of Labor’s Occupational Safety and Health Administration initiated an inspection on July 27, 2021, at the site of a new Amazon facility in Philadelphia after an excavation wall collapsed trapping a worker. General contractor Gilbane Building Co. hired Mayfield Site Contractors Inc. to excavate soil and construct a retaining wall near a vertical shear cut excavation measuring approximately 200 feet in length and between 15 to 25 feet high. Four laborers working for Mayfield were manually leveling a bed of stone behind and on top of the retaining wall blocks in front of the 20-foot shear wall, when the shear excavated wall collapsed on one employee and resulted in fatal crushing injuries.

OSHA found Mayfield Site Contractors Inc. and Gilbane Building Co. did not adequately protect employees from the excavated wall when they were working in front of it. Both Mayfield Site Contractors Inc. and Gilbane Building Co. have filed letters of contest.

Quote: “Mayfield Site Contractors and Gilbane Building Co. did not provide the proper protection for the workers, resulting in a senseless loss of life,” said Theresa Downs, OSHA Area Director in Philadelphia. “When employers fail to meet OSHA standards, we will hold them accountable.”

Combined, the two companies were fined nearly $190,000. The lion's share of the penalty was assigned to Mayfield.

 

The company says, "BECAUSE WE ARE ALL ONE FAMILY"
Safety Policies

According to Gilbane's website, safety is a priority. "The safety actions of Gilbane Building Company employees and co-workers are driven from choice, not just from formal compliance. Like family, we look out for each other each day – at home, in the office and on our construction projects, we are committed to ensuring that everyone returns home safely each night."

"Through Gilbane Building Company’s progressive safety programs and techniques, we continuously raise the bar by applying innovative processes, checks and balances and the latest technology. Combined with our award-winning training programs, we empower our employees and project partners to embrace a true safety culture based on people, not statistics. Our focus on safety benefits your project through reduced insurance and bonding costs," the company adds.


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