Regina couple injured in deck collapse wants builder, developer to take responsibility
CBC
A raised deck overlooking a pond and golf course is what convinced Koroush Khandehroo, a 47-year-old professor at the University of Regina, and his wife, Mahshad Khaniki, to buy a new townhouse in northwest Regina in 2015.
For nearly five years, the couple considered the second-storey deck to be a peaceful oasis from which they could watch birds and golfers.
Then, on June 22, 2020, the deck collapsed underneath them and turned their lives upside down.
That morning, Khanderhoo had invited his wife to join him on the deck for a cup of coffee. She heard some strange noises and leaned over the railing to investigate. Khandehroo heard loud creaking.
"I wanted to warn my wife something is happening, but no time. In a second, we were falling down on the patio," he said.
The deck broke loose from the house, dropping down underneath them. The couple fell about three metres and landed on the stone patio, under a table, chairs and an outdoor umbrella base. Khandehroo was able to crawl free, but his wife, who was bleeding, was trapped.
Their neighbour, Cindy Knapman, said she heard a loud bang, along with screaming, and ran to help the couple. She and another neighbour called 911.
"Everybody was shaken up because it happened to them and it could have happened to us too," said Knapman. "We were all scared. We were really worried about them. It was quite a mess."
Khaniki was taken by ambulance to Pasqua Hospital and required several surgeries on a fractured heel and ankle. A doctor's report from July 29, 2020, said the long-term prognosis included stiffness and arthritis. Nearly a year later, a physical therapist assessment determined she would have "a permanent loss of motion and likely lifelong altered gait. Whether or not she develops arthritis is yet to be seen."
Khandehroo's neighbours immediately notified Pacesetter Homes, the large construction company and real estate developer that had erected the row of duplexes on Kestral Drive, overlooking Wascana Creek and the Joanne Goulet Golf Course.
Pacesetter contacted all of the residents who had rear decks along the golf course and told them "not to use their decks until further notice," according to emails from then-Vice President Curt Keil that were provided to CBC News.
He said, "[O]ur team feels terrible this happened."
Keil said the collapsed deck at 8829 Kestral Drive, which belonged to Khandehroo, was structurally sound but "the connection point between the deck and the home failed over time. We will be sharing our findings with the industry so this can mitigate risk of this happening to other Regina residents."
Knapman said the decks had not been properly attached to houses with lag screws or bolts, as required by the National Building Code.
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