The so called load redistribution is the key concept here.
NIST listed three phenomena that lead to buckling of columns 80 and 81:
- load redistribution
- increasing unsupported length
- damage columns by falling debris
See NCSTAR 1A, p. 22.
The so called load redistribution is the key concept here.
Have a look at the roof of 7WTC. Do you think a single column supported the EPH?
You don't see how the TT#1 and TT#2 could have been and probably WERE involved in collapse of the EPH and the collapse of TT#3 was involved in the WPH?
I know you can't see it so it didn't happen... right?
Emphasis is on LEARN and I have put it in DarkRed to see if it makes you realise what you just wrote.I've stated that I feel the AFTER incident reports appear to avoid assigning any responsibility to engineering "features" which failed to perform as expected. The engineering work done years before may have been adequate, legal in that it met or exceeded minimum regulatory requirements.... but the point is that once the ◊◊◊◊ hit the fan we now know that both regulatory and engineering "professionals" failed to protect the public and property. We're supposed to learn how to make safer structures from these events.
Sander you are an architect. What are the primary design considerations for buildings in the event of fire? What is a primary consideration if the building is steel framed? Do you as an architect refuse to use steel frames?9/11 was supposed to produce recommendations to mitigate such disasters in the future. Fine. Did you see anything about the nature of field connections or use of long span bar joists or building over a power station or forbidding the storage of fuel in next to a power station?...
Shame Sander denigrating those two. They should be the top two priorities. Most of those ~3000 people died because they could not "egress" those buildings. Despite all your misfocussed attention the buildings stood long enough for many more to get out despite a scale of attack that was outside reasonable expectations for the 1970s and despite your earnest use of 20/20 hindsight to assessing blame. The problem was first a lack of protected egress. Then failed fire fighting - vulnerable to single point failure.What were the recs? Improved fire protection? Properly encased emergency egress...
Don't be ridiculous. You cannot prevent those who design tall buildings from learning the lessons.That's it? Those are the sum total of the lessons learned????
Sander the sad aspect of these posts is that you get so tantalisingly close to seeing the real priorities.
...
The reasonable prudent professional designing a high rise will look first to providing secure egress for the people in the event of fire and major damage. To multiple redundancy of fire fighting measures primarily to ensure time for escape of the occupants. He may look at progressive collapse resistance but the priority will remain protect the people #1 protect the building a distant #2. Despite anyone's efforts to reverse those priorities.
No, that is not what I asked. I asked why the hole opened up at the location of col 79 FIRST. The hole into which the EPH drops does not open up all at once and swallow the structure whole. It opens at a corner, widens and the EPH tilts into it. It starts at the location of col 79 , not at the location of 73/76 which are directly resting on TT1. IF TT1 failed FIRST then the effect at the rooftop would be seen at the location of 73/76 FIRST. Although I have asked about this several times you simply refuse to address it.Have a look at the roof of 7WTC. Do you think a single column supported the EPH?
You don't see how the TT#1 and TT#2 could have been and probably WERE involved in collapse of the EPH and the collapse of TT#3 was involved in the WPH?
I know you can't see it so it didn't happen... right?
No, that is not what I asked. I asked why the hole opened up at the location of col 79 FIRST. The hole into which the EPH drops does not open up all at once and swallow the structure whole. It opens at a corner, widens and the EPH tilts into it. It starts at the location of col 79 , not at the location of 73/76 which are directly resting on TT1. IF TT1 failed FIRST then the effect at the rooftop would be seen at the location of 73/76 FIRST. Although I have asked about this several times you simply refuse to address it.
Nope did not say that. I was saying,,,, read the paragraph directly above.
I am giving you every chance to convince me that you are correct. You have not deigned to address my problems with your TT1 first failure theory.
If you look at the diagram the EPH is over the entire East side load transfer region and col 79 is almost in east and north of center of the EPH. The EPH seems to have its roof fold in approximately where the N-S line of the bream connection 79-80 and 81. Hard to tell though.
One column (point) failure (79) would not produce the motion seen. One line would.
So you agree?
So two things then, explain why hole at roof starts to open at location of col 79, and show that TT1 was under attack by fire. Those two factors need to be addressed in order to convince anyone that your hypothesis may be correct.
Another issue was, TT1 and TT2 were not located in the same space as the generators or electrical vaults. They were in a ventilation and A/C area that was separated by masonry walls with little combustible material available.
And? How long after did the building collapse?There were 2 explosions I recall.
And? How long after did the building collapse?
I'm not confused at all. I'm asking for your evidence of conditions that were right to cause the failure where you suggest.The explosions were not THE cause of the collapse, but they were contributory to the progression of weakening and failures.
Are you confused by the fact that there was a PROGRESSION of failures, each of which occurred when a sub system's capacity was exceeded...
The progression cascaded and went "runway" as cascading system failures do... when the reserve capacity of the system was consumed... and then the next stress increase tipped the system passed stability into instability and on to global collapse.
Solving this mystery explaining collapse requires we INFER some things. I don't think there is a lot of hard evidence to work with. :
Yes and those plans are used by all concernedWe have:
structural plans
architectural plans
Again used by all concernedvids of building movements
pics of the building
Including those of trained fire fighters who reported no fires on lower floors nor a smell of fuel leaking.anecdotal witness reports
FEMA, NISTexpert assessments (Cantor, ASCE, Chief of FDNY etc.)
I connected the dots which stood out to me. I can't prove anything. Nor can NIST. Nor can you! (or Ozzie)
I connected the dots which stood out to me. I can't prove anything. Nor can NIST. Nor can you! (or Ozzie)
I understand but, you are the one that is alleging criminal behavior. Wouldn't you want a little more to go on before you go to that point?![]()
I did not allege criminal behavior. I suggested some questionable decisions were made by planners, developers, Con Ed, engineers, the Mayor's office and so forth which seem to play a contributory role in the collapse.
None of this was brought out. NIST coulda... perhaps shoulda.
That I find odd.
I did not allege criminal behavior. I suggested some questionable decisions were made by planners, developers, Con Ed, engineers, the Mayor's office and so forth which seem to play a contributory role in the collapse.
None of this was brought out. NIST coulda... perhaps shoulda.
That I find odd.
Counting the number of angels dancing on the head of a pin.BUT we will never know and why should it interest anyone?