There's now a thread there. I suspect this will get merged. What's the problem?
No problem at all. What's the link? I will start posting there instead.
There's now a thread there. I suspect this will get merged. What's the problem?
Did you not see the fire was being fought? Was that the case on 9/11? Were there any other events on 9/11 that would make this different?OK, here are some questions. A steel-framed high-rise building has been on fire for two hours. The fire is massive, but confined to the exterior. What are we seeing? Two hours later, is there any sagging, melting, deformation, or collapse? Everyone should be asking those questions, regardless of what the answer is.
Have the firefighters pulled out of the building? If they think the building is going to collapse, why are they still planning on putting on a massive fireworks show? Wouldn't they want to get everyone out of the streets as far away from the building as possible? If they don't think the building will collapse, why do they think this? Is it because steel-framed high-rise buildings don't collapse from fire?
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?t=302118No problem at all. What's the link? I will start posting there instead.
Did you not see the fire was being fought? Was that the case on 9/11? Were there any other events on 9/11 that would make this different?
Are you comparing the situation it the towers to this? Really?Did any firefighters die on 9/11? Where did they die? What floors were they on when the building collapsed? What were they doing there?
Did any firefighters die on 9/11? Where did they die? What floors were they on when the building collapsed? What were they doing there?
I'm not comparing anything. I was replying to someone who was.Are you comparing the situation it the towers to this? Really?![]()
So what? Do you think things don't blow up in fires?Multiple explosions in the past few minutes. They appear to be going off towards the bottom of the building.
I can't link directly due to the youth of my account, but according to the skyscrapercenter website, this is a concrete building, not a steel-framed building.
You replied to me.....I'm not comparing anything. I was replying to someone who was.
Structural Material
A steel tall building is defined as a building where the main vertical and lateral structural elements and floor systems are constructed from steel.
A concrete tall building is defined as one where the main vertical and lateral structural elements and floor systems are constructed from concrete.
A composite tall building utilizes a combination of both steel and concrete acting compositely in the main structural elements, thus including a steel building with a concrete core.
A mixed-structure tall building is any building that utilizes distinct steel and concrete systems above or below each other. There are two main types of mixed structural systems: A steel/concrete tall building indicates a steel structural system located above a concrete structural system, with the opposite true of a concrete/steel building.
Additional Notes:
1) If a tall building is of steel construction with a floor system of concrete planks on steel beams, it is considered a steel tall building.
2) If a tall building is of steel construction with a floor system of a concrete slab on steel beams, it is considered a steel tall building.
3) If a tall building has steel columns plus a floor system of concrete beams, it is considered a composite tall building.
See All Definitions

You didn't happen to look at what the structural material listed was did you........
And it's a structural concrete building.From the looks of the building, the fire is on one edge rather than one side so I can see why it isn't threatening to collapse.
The light show has started.
OK, here are some questions. A steel-framed high-rise building has been on fire for two hours. The fire is massive, but confined to the exterior. What are we seeing? Two hours later, is there any sagging, melting, deformation, or collapse? Everyone should be asking those questions, regardless of what the answer is.
Have the firefighters pulled out of the building?
If they think the building is going to collapse, why are they still planning on putting on a massive fireworks show?
Wouldn't they want to get everyone out of the streets as far away from the building as possible?
If they don't think the building will collapse, why do they think this? Is it because steel-framed high-rise buildings don't collapse from fire?