ElMondoHummus
0.25 short of being half-witted
I dont really know what you guys are discussing in this thread, but keep in mind these buildings in Brazil are not steel frame structures like the skyscrapers in the US. They are all reinforced concrete.
Yes, I noticed that myself when looking at the Brazil buildings on the NIST list, and a couple of others I tripped over along the way.
Truthers compare structures without regard to construction materials or building design. For most of them steel = concrete and traditional steel grid frames = monolithic reinforced concrete. They just don't care because either a) They are just plain ignorant or b) They hope that other people won't notice the difference (ie: they hope that other people are just plain ignorant).
Yes, most definitely. But it goes farther than that: Design also has a lot to do with things, from what I understand. Astaneh-Asl has hinted at this, saying that a "more traditional design" (whatever he means by that) probably would've survived. Although that was an early statement of his; I wonder if he's modified it since studying the event more... anyway, yes, there's a danger in gross comparisons to that degree. I don't mind doing so for fire sizes, like I did above, because it's a decent general measure, but at the same time I'm the first to admit that there are other factors in play besides area when you start to consider how a fire affects a building. Intensity has to be one of them; the sufficiency of the fireproofing must be another. The devil is in the details, and there's a huge difference between noting relative fire sizes but nothing more (like I did), and just comparing a number of buildings in order to make the claim "they didn't collapse, so why did this one?" when there are multitudes of factors in play besides fire size to consider.
