A major office-to-residential conversion in Midtown Manhattan faces scrutiny after two steel columns buckled inside the former Pfizer headquarters, triggering evacuations and halting work on part of the site. The incident occurred on the 21st floor of a structure that is being transformed into apartments as part of one of the country’s largest adaptive reuse efforts. Temporary supports are installed while officials investigate the cause, which has not been publicly determined.

The redevelopment plan combines two office buildings dating from 1909 and the 1960s to produce roughly 1,600 apartments. It involves adding multiple new stories—around a dozen-plus—on top of the older building and altering the other building’s structure and interior layouts for residential use. Structural engineering experts say these projects require careful assessment of how older buildings will carry new and changing loads, as well as complex design work to open floors for light and reconfigure office layouts.

The developer’s representatives have not responded to some requests for comment. However, the founder has suggested added weight from widening upper floors likely contributed to the damage. While experts say failures are uncommon under U.S. building codes and inspections, the event could prompt broader reviews of similar conversions across New York, where officials have pushed adaptive reuse to address housing shortages.