When I was back at Clemson, I was on a radio show where a caller made the, "The fires weren't hot enough" argument and I used the thermal expansion and hooke's law to prove that a temperature change of 500 degrees centigrade would result in a 174 psi stress over the entire beam.
The caller challenged me saying that steel failed at 36,000psi and that little stress couldn't hurt anything. I then proceeded to demonstrate that a distributed load of 174psi over 210 feet on an 8 inch beam was the equivalent of 3,000,000 pounds of load at one point on the beam. The caller hung up.
Not to mention, that same 36ksi steel, when heated to about 1000 degrees Fahrenheit (that's close to your 500 Centigrade), becomes roughly 18ksi steel, which doesn't help at all. You have these steel structural members that are loaded at 24ksi failing because of the heat, just due to their design loads, not even considering the stresses and other forces caused by expansion. When they fail, the load they carried has to transfer to other areas where the steel is still intact, but these are now subjected to those new loads in addition to their design loads, and the new loads are being applied in ways and directions that those members weren't designed to handle.