Trending Topics

Kansas City Hyatt skywalk collapse recalled 44 years later

First responders saved more than 200 people during one of the worst engineering disasters in U.S. history

By Chris Ochsner
The Kansas City Star

KANSAS CITY, Mo. — The scenes of devastation were horrendous when the skywalks of Kansas City’s Hyatt Regency Hotel came crashing down on the crowd below on July 17, 1981.

Oversights in the construction of the two skywalks that were suspended in the hotel atrium caused them to detach from their moorings and crash onto the crowd gathered there for the Friday night tea dance.

These scenes captured by photographers from The Kansas City Star and its sister paper The Kansas City Times show the desperate and heroic efforts by rescue crews and ordinary citizens to save the unfortunate victims of the disaster.

Many of the photographs show the rescue efforts among the piles of debris but one photo stands out for its touching moment of humanity.

When Sol and Rosette Koenigsberg were carried out of the wreckage to be triaged for their injuries in the street in front of the hotel, they were placed next to each other on stretchers.

Sol’s back and one of his legs were broken in the collapse. Rosette sustained minor injuries. While they lay in the stretchers waiting for treatment. The couple reached out for each other and held hands. A photographer for the newspapers’ saw the Koenigsbergs and captured the comforting touch amidst the chaos of the rescue operations.

The efforts of the rescue crews were not in vain. 216 of the injured survived the collapse, but in the end, 114 people lost their lives. The Hyatt skywalk collapse remains one of the worst engineering disasters in U.S. history.

Having trouble seeing the video? Watch it here.

Trending
Firefighters, dispatchers and other first responders are speaking more openly about PTSD, burnout and stigma as states and agencies expand peer support, counseling and confidential mental health programs
The fast-moving Manhattan blaze spread through a six-story building’s lone staircase and displaced about 100 residents
Portland police say a vehicle loaded with pipe bombs and propane tanks partially detonated, narrowly avoiding mass injuries at the Multnomah Athletic Club
Lake Valley Fire Protection District Fire Engineer Neil Schnaible suffered a heart attack and fell, striking his head

©2025 The Kansas City Star. Visit kansascity.com. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.