By Jason Hall Photo: Getty Images The architect responsible for designing the Miami-Dade County condominium that collapsed last month was previously suspended for designing other structures that toppled. Documents from the Florida State Board of Architecture obtained by the Real Deal, a South Florida real estate news outlet, said that sign pylons were "an integral part of the structure" of a Miami commercial building that collapsed during a 1965 hurricane built by William Friedman, the same architect who designed the the Champlain Towers South condominium. The documents stated that pylons were "insufficient and grossly inadequate" in withstanding the high wind pressure brought on by hurricanes -- which are frequent to the region -- and not in accordance with building code for the location or "to accept standards of architectural practice" in the board's decision to suspend Friedman.