RIGA, Latvia — As Latvian rescue workers searched Friday for bodies in the rubble of a supermarket collapse that killed dozens, speculation about the cause turned to possible construction flaws in the award-winning complex, where builders were putting in a garden and playground on the grass- and gravel-covered roof.

The death toll from the Thursday evening rush-hour roof collapse at the Maxima supermarket in Latvia’s capital had risen to at least 50, including three firefighters, police said. Spokesman Toms Sadovskis said the death toll is expected to go even higher, and that two of the dead were still unidentified.

Police opened a criminal investigation into the cause of the tragedy at the building — once vaunted as a place where high-rise residents could step out of their homes, stroll along a shady garden and pick up a couple of items for dinner.

Riga Mayor Nils Usakovs told reporters that large bags of earth and sand on a weak spot on the roof could have caused the collapse. It had rained for days, leading to speculation that the soil had become soaked and weighed down.

Deputy Mayor Andris Ameriks said that several reinforced steel beams fell over at once, which might indicate that engineers failed to properly calculate load pressure on the roof. He blamed budget cuts for a lack of construction controls.

“In recent years due to the economic crisis many institutions, including construction oversight, …were closed in Latvia in order to save money,” Ameriks told Latvian television.

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An enormous crater-like hole gaped in the supermarket’s roof, while building materials were still stacked on the remaining sections.

“They loaded so much material on that roof over the past two weeks that I simply don’t understand,” said Nina Kameneva, a retiree who lives on the seventh floor of an apartment building overlooking the supermarket.

She said she and her husband were in the kitchen when the first collapse occurred at approximately 4:45 p.m. on Thursday — producing a jolt so powerful it shook their building.

She said they both rushed out onto their balcony, from where they saw survivors trying to scramble out of the store through a cloud of dust.

“It felt like an earthquake,” Kameneva said.

It was the largest tragedy for the Baltic state since it regained independence from the Soviet Union in 1991. Latvia’s government declared three days of mourning starting Saturday.

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At least 35 people were injured, 28 of them hospitalized, including 10 firefighters struck just as they entered the unstable building, emergency medical officials said.

The store was filled with shoppers when an enormous section of the roof caved in. Two hours later, while rescue workers searched for survivors, a second and larger section of roof caved in, trapping and killing firefighters.

Rescue workers kept up their round-the-clock search for possible survivors as darkness fell, periodically turning off all equipment and asking the relatives of missing people to call so they could pinpoint ringing phones.

Rescue agency spokeswoman Viktorija Sembele said the search was proceeding slowly, since both the rubble and the remaining sections of the roof were fragile and could collapse further.

About 500 square meters (5,300 square feet) of the roof collapsed, the rescue service estimated, destroying large sections of the store’s high walls and nearly all its front windows.

Several large construction cranes gingerly hauled metal slabs and other debris from the central hole, while bulldozers cleared paths into the store.

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The project, which won a silver medal from the Latvian Builders Association as best building of 2011, was built on swampy ground in a densely populated area between the airport and Riga’s downtown.

It was completed in November 2011. The Lithuanian-owned Maxima was reportedly renting the space. The Maxima Group, which also owns a chain of pharmacies, has 500 stores in eastern Europe, and is one of the largest employers in the Baltics.

The Baltic News Service quoted two company executives as saying that the retailer planned to pay compensation to employees and shoppers involved in the disaster, including costs of treatment and funeral services.

Latvia’s economy underwent a steep decline, with output collapsing some 23 percent over 2008-2010. Unemployment reached 25 percent and the country had to borrow billions of dollars to prevent a bankruptcy.


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