A rescue team used shovels, air bags and riggings to free a construction worker who was trapped in a trench for three hours Monday at a downtown Minneapolis building site.
Heavier hydraulic equipment could not be used because backfill could have caused a second collapse, said Minneapolis Fire Department Deputy Chief Todd White.
"It had to be done by hand," he said. "It was a long, meticulous rescue to dig him out."
The man, who works for a Kraus-Anderson subcontractor, was talking, alert and in stable condition when he was lifted out in a stretcher basket around 11 a.m. and taken to HCMC, White said.
A wall at the below-ground site where a 17-story, 204-unit mixed-use building is going up at the corner of Washington and Park avenues gave way just after 8 a.m. The worker, who was alone in the area, was trapped in sand up to his knees. One of his legs was caught in the shoring that also collapsed, White said.
More than 16 members of technical rescue teams from the Minneapolis and St. Paul fire departments worked to free the man, whose name was not released.
Paramedics and doctors were with the man during the rescue. White said rescuers were initially worried that his leg would have to be amputated, but that was not necessary.
"This is a feather in a technical rescuer's hat," said White, who added that the man is expected to be fine.