NIST actually provide some decent info on the office contents, although they don't provide weight. However good weight estimates can be obtained from load calculators used by commercial moving companies.
For the purposes of this little experiment, I have used the 3D model of the layout of the 96th floor of WTC1 as appears on page 95 of NISTNCSTAR1.
I count a total of 204 office cubicles. According to NIST these cubicles were fairly standard across the building, typically 8ft x 8ft, bordered on all four sides by panels, with a small opening.
Photos provided by NIST show at least one side in some cases reached to about shoulder height. Desks were typically wood of a typical large corner-orientated office design. The photos I've seen indicate these cubicles were generally pretty cluttered.
In addition, on the 96th floor I count 27 "small" enclosed offices (1.5 - 2x cubicle size). These appear to be enclosed by more substantial floor to ceiling internal walls.
I count 10 "medium" enclosed offices (3 - 4x cubicle size). And I count 4 "large" enclosed offices (6-8x cubicle size).
Now, for the cubicles, assuming all divides are an equal waist height (photos suggest some divisions were higher) and assuming the 8ft square figure with a 3ft opening in each cubicle, based on the layout of the floor I get a total of 3,852ft of dividing screens.
Anyone care to make a stab at how heavy these are? Just for clarity these do appear to be semi permanent rather than the light weight movable ones you also get in offices.
If we assume of height of about 1.2m (~4ft) and thickness of 3inches.
Now, what would these be made of? We've got a total volume here of 107m3.
If it's particle board, for example, we're talking 17 - 48 tonnes. If it's high density fibre board we're talking 53 - 155 tonnes.
Assuming the "cubicle - 200lbs" weight we were given is meant to be the divides, we're meant to believe these divides only weigh about 20 tonnes, and that for 25% more cubicles.
(If anyone does know what such divides are normally made of, it would be a help).
Using several commercial moving weight calculators and basic furnishing for one cubicle, I get typically around 400kg just for furniture. This doesn't include contents, computers, or anything like that. And I want to reiterate this is BASIC furnishings. Now my meagre basic home office files weigh in at 25kg, and I would estimate the average office (at least the ones I've ever been in) has at least 3 times as much, with a more paper-heavy job (accountant, for example) having as much as 10x as much paper work stored in their personal workspace. I think anything from 75 - 250kg worth of files per cubicle would be reasonable. Half way is 160kg. My computer (just monitor and case) weighs 30kg.
As you can see it begins to add up quickly. And I haven't addressed our 41 larger offices, which have heavier floor to ceiling internal walls (doors?), much more furniture and so on.
I look at the figures presented previously, and I'm highly skeptical.
I mean, 1,000 conference chairs weighing 20 tons? That's about 20kg a chair. Yet you claim this is excessively heavy "made of concrete". Now I doubt there'd be 1,000 conference chairs on every floor, but I'd guarantee you they weigh a LOT more than 20kg. My lame little swivel chair at home (horrible thing, by the way) weighs 10kg. I cannot physically pick up a decent conference chair on my own. I'd imagine they weight a good 50kg at least.
To illustrate my point, no account is made for stationary storage. When I was working at the Auckland offices of GlaxoSmithKline (about 100 staff) I helped with moving one of our several paper storage areas. Based on 80gsm photocopy paper, they had over half a tonne just of plain white copy paper (50 boxes of 5 reams), just in this one storage area. That's not including all of the other paper they had there, or the boxes of paper stored by photocopiers, or the other bulk storage areas (at least one, possibly three).
Now a couple of tonnes of white copy paper might not seem like much, but this is just one example of weights that haven't been factored in. What about kitchen facilities? Bathrooms? We received 20kg of mail a day, for a company with 100 employees. Multiply that by the 25,000 people who worked in each tower and you've got 5 tonnes of just MAIL.
How many ballpoint pens? How many staplers? How many tins of coffee and cans of soft drink? There's literally thousands of things here that have been totally ignored, and added together that amount to tonnes and tonnes of live weight.
-Gumboot