Leaked FEMA/ASCE Draft Report On WTC Collapse 562
securitas writes "The New York Times obtained a copy of the World Trade Center draft report by the Federal Emergency Management Agency and the American Society of Civil Engineers about the engineering failures that caused the towers to collapse. Among the findings: 'Fireproofing, sprinkler systems and the water supply for hoses were all disabled and the fires generated heat equivalent to the energy output of a nuclear power plant' reports the NYT (Yahoo link). Amazingly, if it wasn't for the fire (or another secondary catastrophic force), the towers would have remained standing."
Amazingly (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Interesting)
However, now that a 'proof of concept' attack has been performed, it will be interesting to see what engineering tricks can be used to keep a tower standing when a barely sub-nuclear blaze is allowed to burn inside it for an hour or two.
Re:Amazingly (Score:5, Informative)
The looked at factors like the blast having blown the fire protective coating off the steel and the way the building was designed with the majority of the load being carried by the steel skeleton on the perimeter of the buildings, as opposed to columns within. The achilles heel was reported to be the steel trusses running under the floors connecting the outer steel to the core.
The heat from the fire caused these trusses to weaken and fail, leaving the outer steel frame without the stabilizing and load-transfering benefit. By the time the first floor had begun to collapse, there was so much inertia in the falling portion of the structure that it was inevitable that the each floor below would fail under the crushing pressure.
They interviewed the cheif structural engineer and he said that they had designed the structure to withstand an impact from the largest airliner of the day, the 707... flying at low speed and lost in the fog. They didn't anticipate a modern widebody, loaded with enough fuel for a coast-to-coast flight crashing into the buildings at full speed.
He said that even if they took all that into account, he doesn't think there could have been any way to design the buildings to withstand that. The fact that the structures stood as long as they did is actually a testament to the good overall design (so the program said, anyway).
Re:Amazingly (Score:2)
Re:Amazingly (Score:5, Insightful)
would it be ok if we try to prevent it from happening again first? like maybe by going after people who plan terrorist attacks against us... would that be ok?
I got beat up in school once - my dad told me I shouldn't harp on it for too long - I should just get over it. I remember thinking "wtf! Does he realize I have to go back to school tomorrow?" It's kinda hard to get over it when they're still out there.
Re:Amazingly (Score:5, Insightful)
Isn't there any difference at all between the two sides? Can't you think of anything??
Here is a hint:
We (America) do our best to kill only those who would harm us. We do that by spending millions of dollars on precision-guided weapons. We do it by being careful who we shoot.
Terrorists on the other hand seek out innocent bystanders. They kill children too young to know what's going on. They brutally massacre crowds of people at parties. And They do it on purpose.
If you honestly don't see the difference - then I humbly submit that you are a moron.
Re:Amazingly (Score:5, Insightful)
I was in the Army. I bet that means I've been closer than you have.
Ever heard stories of vietnam, how you systematically looted, raped, murdered and destroyed whole villages?
Looting, rape, and murder happened. Do you think this is the way we wage war? Do you think american generals sit in rooms and plan to hurt civilians? They do not. The people we are fighting however do make plans to kill civilians. Once again, this is the difference between they and us.
These things happen, yes, even today. Do you want to know the number of children who will die tomorrow because of US clusterbombs?
Why wait until tomorrow. Please post a link to a story about children being killed by US cluster bombs today, or yesterday. If you cannot find such a story I will continue to believe that you are wrong.
Range attack is a very cowardly and shrewd way to fight an enemy.
Is that more or less cowardly than hiding in a cave brainwashing religious zealots into believing that if they spill the blood of innocents (even people who agree with their cause) they can be rewarded with sex in the afterlife.
Believing [snip] "We" are better than "them".
So let me get this straight - you condemn me for thinking We are better than Them then turn around and say "you're too stupid or incapable to make a better political agenda" illustrating that you think you are better than me. What a hypocrite!
What I would suggest for you is to travel to europe and live there for a couple of years.
Surprise! I lived in Germany for two years, Korea for 1 year, and Saudi Arabia for 6 mo. I've been all over the world. What, you haven't? Well then let me assure you, Europeans and Arabs are far more arrogant than Americans. That's been my experience.
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Interesting)
And that "arrogance" displayed by europeans (and arabs) is the normal "arrogance" displayed when one comes from a country with virtually no history (at least, when compared to the thousands of years of history one finds in Europe and the middle-east), totally clueless, and begins criticizing everything in sight. I wonder how a Berlin suburbanite whining about everybody carrying guns on a rack in the back-windows of their pickup trucks in (put your favorite hickstate here) would be catalogued ("arrogant" would surely be a choice pick).
The first time I went to Europe, I was totally aghast at the sight of an older woman, in an airport, who was ready to die because there was no coca-cola available at 10 in the morning...
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Amazingly (Score:4, Insightful)
Reports like this may lead to better fire systems in tall buildings, better alloys and all around safer buildings. Because the next tall building disaster could be in London, Paris, KL, Osaka, Shanghi or Mexico City. It's not an America exclusive danger.
It's not about lingering on the event, or saying enough about it, because it would be wrong to forget events like 9-11, Hiroshima, Dresden, the Death Camps, and the list goes on and on, because if we forget, the horrible things will happen again.
It can happen in the US, it could happen anywhere, tall buildings, wealth and crazy people willing to kill anyone isn't just and American thing.
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Interesting)
Let's bet that future design guidelines, if not advocating such a design, will definitely promote a wider distribution of emergency gear throughout the building.
* * *
When one looks at the structural design of the Twin Towers (one could build an argument about them NOT being a skyscraper by the mere fact that the outer walls were load-bearing - a definition of a skyscraper is that the walls are not load-bearing), with it's thick walls and a center core (no intermediate columns), one wonder why the express elevator (that whisked people to the two "sky lobbies") could not have been situated, say, on each corner (or in the middle of the outer-wall, to preserve the sacrosanct "corner offices"), for a panoramic view when going up, à la Hyatt-Regency/Bonaventure hotels.
Such a configuration would definitely have withstood the blaze much better than the central-core-with-all-the-vitals; for it is certain that designers would have ran the standpipes along the exterior elevator shafts, if only because of the blazingly obvious reduntancy it offered.
It would have taken more than one direct aircraft hit to sever all standpipe systems.
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Interesting)
Acually (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Insightful)
:Peter
Re:Amazingly (Score:3, Insightful)
After the planes slammed into the towers, the fireballs that burst over Lower Manhattan consumed perhaps a third of the 10,000 gallons of fuel on board each plane, for example, but did little structural damage themselves, the report says. Like a giant well of lighter fluid, though, the remaining fuel burned within minutes, setting ablaze furniture, computers, paper files and the planes' cargo over multiple floors and igniting the catastrophic inferno that brought the towers down.
The jet fuel did NOT directly cause the collapse of the towers. It was gone "within minutes," all burned away. So all you people saying that the jet fuel caused the collapse because it was impossible to put out and burned at a very high temperature are wrong, according to this report. They say it was an ordinary blaze, ignited by the fuel but left to burn on its own.
Re:Amazingly (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Amazingly (Score:2)
Re:Not So Amazingly (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Amazingly (Score:3)
Yes, the fuel *did* matter - it's the reason the fire got started in an instant rather than spreading slowly.
Without the fuel a fire doesn't start that fast. (Score:3, Informative)
The existence of the jet fuel, in the few seconds for which it existed in the fire, assured that the fire would be unstoppable and most definately not of the ordinary nature that one could expect a firefighting system to be able to stop.
It's not "Fuel fire -> ordinary fire -> collapse, as you claim. It's "Fuel fire-> really huge gigantic fire in an instant with every flammable material available in flame all at once, which would not normally happen in a normal fire -> collapse.
UK Horizon program (Score:3, Interesting)
I wasn't sure whether to entirely believe the program or not, but it seemed fairly plausible. However I came away asking only one question: "So what would have been better?"
Re:UK Horizon program (Score:2)
So, sadly, the drywall would have been useless even if it stayed.
Re:UK Horizon program (Score:2)
Re:UK Horizon program (Score:3, Informative)
However, I find interesting the fact that the lack of asbestos coating for the structural steel above the, what was it, 60th floor is being ignored. That was the insulation that was supposed to reduce the heat impact on the structural elements in just such a fire for ~8-10 hours. And application of which was stopped midway through construction, after NYC passed their "no asbestos" laws.
Re:UK Horizon program (Score:2)
Yes; however, the core itself (and hence the stairwells) was protected by lots of ultra-lightweight fire resistant tiles; these were very weak and got blown away by the explosion; had they held in place, even in the case of the direct impact onto the core, at least one stairwell may have remained usable.
According to Horizon, anyway
Wasn't this recently on the TV (Score:4, Informative)
IIRC the person that designed it has an office that overlooks Ground Zero...
Re:Wasn't this recently on the TV (Score:3, Informative)
So, it wasn't the designer. The original poster didn't *remember correctly*... hardly an example of 'spreading disinformation', IMHO. (BTW- IMHO means In My Humble Opinion) (PS- BTW means By The Way) (PS means... oh forget it, I just realized I'm trying to enlighten an AC).
Re:Wasn't this recently on the TV (Score:3, Informative)
Architects draw a pretty picture and then ask the engineer, "will this fall over?"
Fuzzy thinking... (Score:2, Insightful)
That follows similar logic like...
if it wasn't for the iceberg, the Titanic wouldn't have sunk...or... If it wasn't for the fact that the Hindenberg used hydrogen instead of helium the Hindenberg might not have erupted in flame...or...if it wasn't for Microsoft, there would be nothing but Unix.
Re:Fuzzy thinking... (Score:3, Informative)
Yes, obviously the Hydrogen burned... but that was not what did it in.
It was the coating on the outer shell, made chiefly of the yet-undiscovered ingredients for dry rocket fuel.
Re:Fuzzy thinking... (Score:2)
discovery channel special (Score:4, Informative)
They explained that most of the WTC towers' strenth was in the outer steel "shell" and the brackets connecting the floor to that were found in the wreckage badly warped. They think the floors collapsed and there was nothing to keep the 4 outer walls from buckling without the floors.
The most amazing part was in the beginning when they were lifting a huge piece of steel off of a tractor trailer truck. It was as long as the trailer, 4 feet wide, and a foot thick. A bit grabber backhoe thing couldn't even lift it, it sort of slid it off the truck. They made the point that this piece of metal falling just a foot to the ground, shook the ground and the camera 30 feet away. Then they said there was 5,000,000 or some large tonnage falling to the ground at 120mph at the time of the collapse. quite amazing
Re:discovery channel special (Score:5, Interesting)
Actually, I was unfortunately at ground zero on that horrific day. I was in a hallway in a nearby building about maybe only a block away at the most and it shook like a big earthquake with loud explosions as those beams you described fell. It sounded like a bunch of cannons going off that then turned into a loud hum as 5,000,000 of those suckers fell. Some of the beams and parts of the wall stayed together in very large chunks that sounded like bombs going off when they fell. I really thought that the building I was in was actually collapsing on top of me because it was so loud and the vibrations were so intense. I also thought one of the wings actually did fall of and was crushed from the sound of the large chunks of the wall falling. It turns out the beams that fell were over a block away but I really did think it was gone for at least a few hours until I could get outside. Another thing you may find interesting is one of the long steel beams fell on an adjacent building and it actually bent in a 45 degree angle from the intense force. It looked like a wet noodle just hangling all warped. THe beam was at least 3 to 4 feet thick. Absolutely astounding indeed!
Re:discovery channel special (Score:2)
Hell yeah. (Score:3, Informative)
They detected WTC 270 miles away!
http://www.volcanolive.com/wtc.html
Both planes hitting, and again, both collapses.
Sprinklers undersized (Score:4, Insightful)
I think most of us in the construction industry (architecture) were concerned about this as events were unfolding, even before the first tower collapsed. But the saddest part was finding out later that concessions had been made during design/construction in the sizing and configuration of sprinkler systems including the abscense of a rooftop water supply.
Who knows if it really would have helped, but having to second guess now is hardly comforting. As in most things, those that focus on stupid quantitative evaluations of design (cost per square foot for example) are doomed to come up short when all the chips are really down.
any tower can with-stand an impact of an airliner (Score:2, Interesting)
On this site there was an Interview done with an engineer who had some knowledge on the World Trade Center. He stated that the airplanes could have not brought them down seeing that buildings of a lesser, equal, or greater size get the same sort of impact daily with the force of winds.
It is said that the airplanes caused an impact of equal or lesser force than what it would experience from day-to-day wind.
Re:any tower can with-stand an impact of an airlin (Score:5, Insightful)
He stated that the airplanes could have not brought them down seeing that buildings of a lesser, equal, or greater size get the same sort of impact daily with the force of winds.
Well, this may be true, but when you consider that the airplanes *did* down the two buildings, one must realise that there is something flawed about that statement. I would accept that most skyscrapers are pummeled with the strength of an airplane crash daily, except that the force is spread across the entire structure, or at least one entire face, of the building. Consider what it might feel like if you were walking down the street and suddenly the entire energy of the ~50mph wind gusts that you normally can easily withstand were channeled at a 1cm^2 section of your chest, or even your skull. Wouldn't that at least completely knock the wind out of you? I haven't the time to properly do the math myself right now, but it may work out that such an energy release over such a small space would be enough force to pierce skin and possibly break bones.
And that is what made the difference, aside from the fire and explosions that are discussed elsewhere in the thread.
Re:any tower can with-stand an impact of an airlin (Score:2)
Imagine a magnifier that had the same surface area as your exposed skin, focusing that energy on you, it would quickly burn you to the bone.
A more easily quantifiable analogy for your argument.
Re:any tower can with-stand an impact of an airlin (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:any tower can with-stand an impact of an airlin (Score:2, Insightful)
Keep in mind that when calculations are done to measure the force of wind on a building, it is measured as the wind force distributed against the ENTIRE surface of the building.
The airplanes caused an equivalent force to a much smaller area on the side of the building. Thus, this smaller area experienced an impulse far greater than it would normally feel from wind. Compare apples to apples, people. Please.
Common sense: If in fact you really think that wind force did equal plane force on the WTC's over the same area, then tell me this: how come those windows aren't caving in and a huge hole ripped due to wind? They did cave in under force of the plane.
PBS (Score:2)
I don't recall if it is supposed ot be NOVA or Frontline, and will have to wait a few days for the promo to show up on the websites. The are still in the march schedul
Asbestos (Score:4, Informative)
The jet fuel burned at an excess of 2000 degrees,
so it's likely the towers still would have collapsed, but some extra time would have allowed further evacuation efforts.
Didnt the article say (Score:2)
Re:Asbestos (Score:5, Informative)
Face it, no building could have survived a planeload of burning jet fuel that was busy eating its way through the building, with dozens of floors above adding weight to the weakening structure. And for all those people bemoaning the lack of a rooftop water supply for the sprinklers: consider the fact that the fire trucks at airports are not loaded with water, but with foam. You need foam, not water, to effectively put out burning jet fuel. Otherwise, the water would evaporate into steam before it had a chance to extinguish the flames.
Really, it's amazing that they stood as long as they did. Of course, knowing the limitless bounds of greed, people are still going to try to find someone to sue. "I want a bazillion dollars because the contractor didn't design the building to resist the destructive impact of a 767 and a plane-load of burning fuel!" Sheesh.
:Peter
Re:Asbestos (Score:2)
You're aware that people are suing both United and American for failing to adequately protect the passengers on the four doomed flights, aren't you? Like you said, "limitless bounds of greed."
Re:Asbestos (Score:5, Informative)
Except that if you consider that the first tower to come down was the second hit, and that it was hit below the 70th floor, it becomes quite clear that the asbestos that was there did little to help.
I don't think you can make a rational statement one way or the other, since we are dealing with two different crashes which probably cut different beams and spilled fuel in different patterns. Also, the beams on the 70th floor were bearing a lot more weight. So, they required less heat before they lost their cohesion.
As for all the people slinging accusations of greed, I agree that's bollox.
The WTC was designed to withstand an 8.0 earthquake. It handled the impact of the planes just fine. This hardly seems like the work of companies that were cutting corners. That the slurry wall holding back the Hudson river held is simply amazing considering it contained the epicenter of a minor earthquake. If that had broken, we would be looking at a huge lake there today. No recovery efforts would have been possible until a new slurry wall was built, and that would have taken months.
That said, I do have to question the use of "trusses". On the Discovery Channel they quoted a fireman who said that they always say "don't trust the truss" because they have a tendancy to melt quickly. Perhaps there should be a review of what types of trusses can be used in all new construction. Would it have been possible to build the WTC's wide-open design with heavier cross beams instead of trusses?
As bad as all this is, I'm sure we can learn from it. What will buildings of the future use for fire suppression? How about active cooling systems for structural components? Perhaps insulation can be coated with a material that is resistant to blast waves so that the material will be retained. From now on, architects will be thinking more about explosions and huge incendiary bombs. Perhaps they will improve design, thus resulting in safer buildings for everyone.
Cite please (Score:2)
Re:Cite please (Score:2)
Link.
As I state elsewhere in this thread, I was mistaken about the EPA's role in this, that it was ultimately The City of New York that choose not to use asbestos above fl. 64.
Is it relevant? Well, it might have kept the towers standing a bit longer. Some more people might have escaped during that time. Of course, we'll never know 100%. But it makes sense to me.
Re:Cite please (Score:2)
Re:Cite please (Score:2)
But I think you are mistaken in your implied argument that the building not having fireproofing is a non-issue.
You're not going to convince many people that no asbestos is safer when there is an inferno.
Re:Asbestos (Score:2)
Vilifying the EPA is pointless; asbestos is a separate issue.
No vilifying. In fact, I was originally mistaken in that it was not EPA that banned the asbestos, it was the city of New York. But the asbestos would have likely slowed the failure of the structure, and perhaps more lives could have been saved. The original plans for a catastophic fire would have given an estimated four hours to failure.
I was asked to provide a source elsewhere in this thread substatiating my first post. Try this link. [foxnews.com] It explains that fireproofing was not applied abouve the 64th floor.
putting out fires (Score:4, Informative)
The report seems not to say anything about the fact that the WTC was a steel construction and thus rather unprotected against fire as opposed to ferroconcrete which is safer but would have needed the buildings to be smaller. This is the cause why there are not similar high buildings in Europe where regulations demand ferroconcrete.
Re:putting out fires (Score:2, Informative)
True, however a sprinkler system would have reduced the temperatures reached inside the building, quite possibly enough to have saved more people. Also a sprinkler system would've reduced the number and intensity of secondary fires; office furniture and the like.
Smaller buildings using 'feroconcrete' may well be safer, but this is irrelevant to the WTC terrorist attack, the towers weren't smaller or built using this concrete.
Working sprinklers would've made a difference. Your comment on halon is well received; probably halon would be more effective, assuming the delivery system was operating.
Overall I see this report as optimistic, better protected fire escapes, better fireproofing and more redundancy in the fire fighting capability may have saved, not only more people, but the buildings themselves. Applying the knowledge gained, will result in even studier building.
Re:putting out fires (Score:3, Funny)
Re:not to be morbid, but... (Score:2)
Why would anyone die of suffocation from Halon? That seems to be a very common myth... Halon doesn't do its thing by keeping oxygen away from the fire (and humans)--it works by reacting with free radicals in the flame and stopping the chain reaction of a flame. The concentration of Halon needed to extinguish a fire is low enough that there's still plenty of oxygen to breathe. Of course, the byproducts of Halon's reaction with the fire are rather nasty and toxic, but the consensus seems to be that they're no worse than the products of burning plastics and whatnot. I.e., it's better to put out the fire and make a bit of HBr in the process than to let the fire burn for an extended period of time (Halon puts out a fire pretty much instantly. I've heard it can even stop an explosion in progress).
Re:putting out fires (Score:2)
Re:putting out fires (Score:3, Insightful)
The report says there were appr. 10000gallons of fuel in the plane of which two third flew into the building. With an energy density of 34 MJ/L this is a total energy of about 900 GJ just from the kerosine. The specific heat capacity of water is 4200 J/kgK, so it was enough to vaporize 2.6 million litres of water, a cube with side lenghts of 140 meters. Plus the secondary fire of the furniture.
This event was just too much for any security system. It was only a matter of time.
Re:putting out fires (Score:3, Informative)
Lesson Learned... (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Lesson Learned... (Score:2)
TLC/Discovery Special -- Question ... (Score:5, Interesting)
Each had unique viewpoints. The designing mechanical engineer is haunted to the core over this. Most of his sentances trailed off as he was reliving what happened.
The forensic scientist identified the fact that the fireproofing material was blown off from the original impact. This hastened the collapse. He also commented that the support structures for the floors were the first things to fail.
My question is did anyone really think they were going to fall? Remembering back to the day no one in the media raised the question. None of my friends or family I was talking to that day even thought of it as a remote possibility.
This raises a very interesting question about our expectations vs. reality. After the shuttle disaster I think this stands as one of the most shocking slaps in the face to us concerning technology.
Of course the buildings weren't going to survive, but our faith in technology made us think that day that the buildings collapsing wasn't a possibility.
Re:TLC/Discovery Special -- Question ... (Score:2)
Yeah, that was disturbingly apparent. The poor bastard looked like Death in those interviews. I remember wondering the first time I saw it if we'd be hearing about his suicide in the near future-- he obviously (and wrongly, IMHO) feels incredibly responsible for nearly 3,000 deaths.
~Philly
747 into a Joint Session of Congress + President (Score:2)
Tom Clancy beat you to that one.
I think it was "Executive Orders"
Re:TLC/Discovery Special -- Question ... (Score:3, Interesting)
Not exactly. The O-ring seals had never been tested at as cold of weather as it was on the day of the Discovery disaster. Engineers tried to point this out. They also tried to point out that the temperature was well below that of the approved specs. The problem was political. A former president was there for the launch (Nixon if I remember correctly), and NASA was not about to disappoint him. Upper level people ignored the engineers warnings about the O-rings and the launch took place.
The O-rings then failed because of the low temperature, and the shuttle exploded.
WTC & Respect (Score:5, Insightful)
Think for a few moments before posting.
A little courtesy and respect is appreciated.
Re:WTC & Respect (OT) (Score:3, Interesting)
Didn't stop Cameron making up details (and lots of them) for "Titanic"; how long does something have to be in the past before no one cares I wonder. Probably a question Yassir Arafat is asking himself about now...
TWW
Still not funny (Score:3, Insightful)
For many of us, South Park notwithstanding, still feel every day the loss of friends & lovers & family to that disease. Furthermore many of us watch yet more friends, family & lovers continue to fight for their lives, every day.
That many somehow believe that the epidemic is over or that they are somehow safe from it is only more disheartening and even more tragic.
So unless you've lost ones close to you to HIV, or to the events of September 11, 2001, please don't take it upon yourself try and tell the rest of us what we should find "funny" or not.
Re:WTC & Respect (Score:3, Insightful)
World? Try New York. There are different standards in every city and vary a bit from country to country.
Fireproofing was insufficient (Score:2)
Apparently this type of construction is despised by firefighters because when they're inside a building during a fire the floors are likely to collapse at any moment.
Empire State Building (Score:5, Informative)
The following excerpt is from "Empire: A Tale of Obsession, Betrayal, and the Battle for an American Icon", copyright © 2001, available from John Wiley & Sons. It describes the impact of the B25 that hit the Empire State Building in 1945.
"Army Lieutenant Colonel William Smith Jr., a 27-year-old veteran of 34 bombing missions over Germany, had been flying a twin-engine B-25 bomber from Bedford, Massachusetts, to New York's LaGuardia Airport, and had secured permission to continue to Newark, New Jersey.
The fog was blinding. When he dropped down out of the clouds, he found himself approaching a forest of skyscrapers. In a panic, he banked away from the Grand Central Building, then from another tower on Fifth Avenue, only to find himself bearing down on the biggest one of all.
In desperation, he pulled up hard, twisting. The 10-ton (9-tonne) bomber plowed into the office of War Relief Services of the National Catholic Welfare Conference on the 78th and 79th floors, 913 feet (278 meters) off the street, tearing a gaping hole in the Empire State Building's north side."
The full article describing the impact in 1945 can be found here: Empire State Building Collision [architectureweek.com].
Not so amazing, really (Score:4, Informative)
In fact, it probably wouldn't have mattered what fire suppression system the building used...jet fuel is basically kerosene and it is much lighter than water. You can't effectively extinguish a kerosene fire with water. That's why you see aviation firefighers using something called aqueous film-forming foam. It floats on the kerosene.
Maybe to the layman the fact that the buildings survived the impact was amazing, but in fact it was simply a matter of good, purposeful design. Unfortunately, it's asking an awful lot to expect structural steel to survive the kind of intense temperature that is generated by an aviation fuel fire, particularly when the fuel supply is effectively limitless.
-h-
Re:Not so amazing, really (Score:3, Informative)
Personally, I think the engineers and architects who built those buildings should be awarded and applauded. The buildings were made on budget and schedule. Only 3000-4000 people died, when they could easily hold close to 100,000 between the two of them. Neither building fell over and crashed other buildings, they pretty much imploded, which is remarkable. And despite the huge trauma, they stood for nearly an hour. It's amazing if you ask me.
This security second guessing crap is what's going to cause the next recession and put a minor stop to modern engineering. Money and time are really the difference between academia and engineering. Do you have any idea what it will cost to start engineering all of our buildings to withstand the worst? The WTC was over engineered as it was and we're talking about making it able to withstand twice what it was speced to. If it's possible and there are steel makers that don't think it is, I'm guessing we're talking about a 10x hit to the costs. That's crazy. The same thing can be said about all the security checks everywhere else. It'll work for a year or two and then the bills will start adding up and people will be astounded.
Pfft. "engineering failures" (Score:5, Insightful)
Some corrections (Score:2)
The Twin Towers had large emergency water tanks as high as the 110th floor. But they were damaged in the explosion, and water dumped uselessly down the stairwells and elevator shafts. Even if the firefighters had reached the fire floor, they wouldn't have had water. We're probably going to see more redundancy required in high-rise standpipe systems because of this. Extra pipes and one-way check valves are needed, but that's not a big deal.
It's not impossible to put out a fire that big with water, if you start early. Aircraft hangars and aircraft carriers have deluge systems that can do the job. We may see systems like that required in skyscrapers. A big problem is making sure they don't go off because of a smoky wastebasket or something.
Engineering analysis (Score:5, Insightful)
16 days after Sept 11th, I received this in an email from my father, (who happens to be a Mechanical Engineer):
Attached was a .PDF file, "ME 346 - Engineering Analysis of Tragedy at WTC." [uiuc.edu]
The engineers did their job. They did it well. World Trade Center 1 & 2 were good buildings -- I stood on top of one just over 10 years ago. I can hardly believe I never will again.
Osama bin Laden and his cronies are the ones -- the ONLY ones -- responsible for this outrage. Please, let's try to remember that.
To sum up.... (Score:3, Interesting)
The worst-case disaster scenario for those towers was a 707 accidentally blundering into one, not a bunch of crazy religious-zealot, martyr-wannabe motherfuckers purposely plowing a much larger, fully-fueled aircraft into it at full speed.
If anyone who lost someone in the collapse even thinks of trying to sue anyone involved in the design or construction of the twin towers, they ought to be drawn and quartered. Sure, they could build a building that could stand up to worse than the WTC got, but proofing it against everything would cost a mint and leave a few phone booths' worth of usable space per floor. Don't forget that there wouldn't be any windows. The rent would be so expensive that nobody would be able to afford to put an office in it.
IMHO, when you step back and look at the big picture, you simply cannot fault the design of the buildings for the fact that they catastrophically failed in the face of an unprecedented, unimagined, deliberate action that was well beyond the scope of their design.
~Philly
Re:hmmmmmm..... (Score:3, Funny)
There was a pilot flying a small single engine charter plane, with a couple of very important executives on board. He was coming into Seattle airport through thick fog with less than 10m visibility when his instruments went out. So he began circling around looking for a landmark.
After an hour or so, he starts running pretty low on fuel and the passengers are getting very nervous.
Finally, a small opening in the fog appears and he sees a tall building with one guy working alone on the fifth floor. The pilot banks the plane around, rolls down the window and shouts to the guy
"Hey, where am I?"
To this, the solitary office worker replies
"You're in a plane."
The pilot rolls up the window, executes a 275 degree turn and proceeds to execute a perfect blind landing on the runway of the airport 5 miles away. Just as the plane stops, so does the engine as the fuel has run out.
The passengers are amazed and one asks how he did it.
"Simple" replies the pilot,
"I asked the guy in that building a simple question. The answer he gave me was 100 percent correct but absolutely useless, therefore it must have been
Microsoft's support office. Knowing that, it was easy to find my way to the airport."
Re:hmmmmmm..... (Score:2)
Re:The Price Is Right... (Score:2)
Huh? What are you talking about?
Re:The Price Is Right... (Score:2)
Not the cost of being competitive (Score:4, Informative)
Pity that:
Re:A "part" of it destroyed???? (Score:3, Funny)
Built in a rush before WWII.
In a swamp.
On pilings.
W/O word getting out.
To this day.
Riiiiight. It's where they hide "The Greys".
Re:The cost of being competitive (Score:5, Insightful)
My friend, you appear to have a huge chip on your shoulder that is clouding your judgement. People died because madmen hijacked two jetliners and deliberately slammed them into skyscrapers full of thousands of innocent human beings. Corporate greed and stockholders had nothing to do with it, and it is callous, irresponsible, and shallow of you to even suggest such a thing to further your obvious hatred of corporate America.
Re:The cost of being competitive (Score:2)
Re:The cost of being competitive (Score:2)
Yeah it's just a typo but I'll point it out here so someone else doesn't start flaming.
Now to the point in hand. I see your point and agree with it to a certain extent. I wasn't saying that their actions were justified I was merely pointing out how it can be seen how they were driven to such extremes. I suspect the fact that most of the terrorists come from Saudi Arabia is due to the fact they are the ones who have the funding to carry out the activities, from what I know there is a much stronger sense of nationalism(can't think of a better term) between Arab nations than others in the world. Evil and powerhungry people exist everywhere but it's my belief that forgien policy decisions by the US (i.e. backing Israel and basing most forgien policy decisions on how to maximize American profits regardless of the affected countries) are what gave these terrorists the neccessary popular support to justify terrorist attacks against the US. Also regardless of who caused it I'm sure you can't argue that there wasn't wide-spread famine in Afgahnistan, you can be sure that they wouldn't feel kindly to the weight loss industry in the US for example. Whether the US's forgeign actions (both corporate and government) are right is not the whole point, it is that those actions are what gave these terrorists an excuse to attack and they will continue to do so unless changes are made. It might be necessary for the US to start leading by example and spreading the wealth because they can't expect the rest of the world to suddenly forget the predjudices they have against the US. On an interesting side note for a while now the US's police action or whatever they are calling it in Afghanistan has now claimed more civilian lives than Sept. 11, although I don't know if those numbers include the non-soldiers from Al-Queda.
Re:The cost of being competitive (Score:2)
Four Ways Corporate America Is Indeed Involved (Score:2)
1. Corporate America was the reason for these dubiously large towers' existence in the first place as well as the only entity who at the time could have funded their construction; as one would expect, the vast majority of the dead workers were direct participants in Corporate America.
2. The reasoning behind the terrorists activity is a hatred of the spread of economic colonialism and Corporate America at the expense of what Corporate America labels "more primitive" traditional or religious lifestyles.
3. Cutthroat competitiveness in the airline industry (i.e. Corporate America) is the reason for the lax security which allowed hijackers to board the planes which hit the buildings. The consumer demanded faster security, takeoffs, and landings at airports and the consumer got them. Market demand, my friend.
4. Corporate America has lobbied the government and the INS heavily over the past decade to loosen immigration restrictions and slow-downs, especially from the east, from which many tech workers have come. Apparently, some of them were terrorists.
Anti-capitalist is not an insult. At least I don't take it as one.
You seem to have a chip on your shoulder as well.
Re:Four Ways Corporate America Is Indeed Involved (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Corporate America built the towers and staffed them. SO? Buildings are built and staffed all over the globe by billions of people every day. What is your point?
2. Since when does corporate America "label" anybody anything at all? Did Cantor-Fitzgerald "label" those poor Muslims something they didn't like? As last I recall, the only people that like to "label" anything these days are spinmeisters, talking heads, and religious zealots. Either way, that has no bearing whatsoever on the involvement of corp. America in causing the towers to be attacked. Proclaiming otherwise is like saying a rape victim caused her rape because she was female (i.e. an obvious target).
3. Market demand indeed. The one failing of capitalism that I routinely hate is that it sometimes bears a striking resemblance to a parent and child. If the child (i.e. consumer) wants something from the parent (i.e. the market), the child doesn't want to be told "no", and does not understand why some things are better that way. Consumers want to have their cake and eat it, too, and many businesses (and governments) do not have the gonads to deny them what is clearly not in their best interests.
That being said, airline passengers KNEW the ramifications of the security lapses, or if they didn't they should've taken the time to find out as all the reports are in the public domain. I place a very high value on my own skin as I am quite attached to it, and I don't take such matters lightly. Airlines had tried levying increased fees for increased security, and passengers voted with their wallets. It's sad, but in many ways they got what they asked for. They had a choice, and the majority chose wrong. Learning lessons can be painful sometimes -- just ask any child.
4. Corporate America has lobbied heavily? While this is true, it pales in comparison to what the past presidential administration lobbied for. Democrats would even like to see illegal immigrants allowed to vote, for crying out loud -- alongside convicted felons and the mentally insane. Please note I'm NOT a Republican, as I have no taste for their spinelessness. I'm Libertarian, but back to the chase...
"Anti-capitalist" can be taken how you like, insult or not. But to be against capitalism is to be blind to the very forces that make your daily life possible. The car you drive, the phone you use, the business you work at, the computer you work on, the Internet itself -- all of it has been created for, by, or as a result of corporations and capitalism. It is not perfect, but it is the best thing humans have come up with so far. All other forms of government have either failed (Communism, Socialism) have encroached on personal liberties (Monarchy), or brutally supress their own people and dissidents (Despotism, Religous Oligarchy). When someone comes up with a system of government that rewards hard work AND takes care of those that choose NOT to work as hard, I'll reconsider, but until then, Capitalism is (IMHO) the best thing going.
Re:The cost of being competitive (Score:2)
If you're looking for blame, heartlessness, greed, and a lack of pity or remorse, you have to look no further than a man in a camouflage jacket with an AK-47, running around somewhere in the hills of Afghanistan, Pakistan, or Iraq. He's the one who's happy about this.
Re:Future (Score:2, Insightful)
As regards the WTC, the solution is not building safety, it is dealing with what causes someone to have so much hatred that they spend 6 years planning such a terrible attack. Well constructed buildings do not survive nuclear explosions, and that is what will happen next if the world does not open it eyes just a little further, and consider the self a little less.
Re:Future (Score:3, Interesting)
Redundancy
Redundancy is the key to preventing these types of events in the future.
One extreme example would have been 4 mini WTCs would have required 4 airplanes for massive enough damage to destroy all four buildings before people could safely escape.
Less extreme examples include, multiple water pipes or tanks on each floor. Multiple stairway/elevator shafts, distributed to the corners of the building, rather than the center. Multiple tall television antenea around lower manhattan, so that my television wouldn't have had no reception for the weeks following 9/11/01. Multiple, flexible walkways connecting the two bridges at various levels, including the roof level.
Overall, the NYT says that the WTC withstood some amazing forces prior to collapse. They were built to withstand an earthquake. I was standing on Broadway and Fulton when the second plane struck tower 1. The explosion from ~70 stories up knocked out glass windows around me on broadway, 4 blocks away. This is despite the fact that the millenium hotel was blocking the line-of-sight to tower 1. The forces still knocked out all of the windows, through and around another building.
One interesting part of the article is that tower 1 showed signs of collapse within minutes of being struck (as analyzed from film). They also mentioned that the top part of the building angled first one direction and another prior to collapse. In this case, it is good that the inner structure collapsed, because if it hadn't, the top stories might have tipped to one side and fell into another, non-evacuated building. As it happened, the top collapsed downward and that part of the building had been (thankfully) evacuated (except for the firemen).
Re:The question is (Score:2)
It would be a real shame in either case. Art deco rules!
Testing skyscraper designs isn't a trivial problem (Score:2)
After all, how do you crash test a sky scraper?
END COMMUNICATION
Re:Rebuild (Score:2)
As for planes crashing into buildings, that won't happen again. Even the UAL flight that crashed in Pennsylvania is an example of this; if passengers know that they are doomed, they won't go down without a fight. Unfortunately, though, we now have to start looking out for other things, like WMDs.
Re:Rebuild (Score:2)
The main propulsion system of every vehicle is a weapon. Military and civil defense planners need to learn this lesson.
It's an *easy* decision: the Twin Towers should be rebuilt. In Riyadh.Re:Rebuild (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:tree huggers must shoulder some blame (Score:2)
Prolonged, uncontrolled fire & structural dama (Score:4, Interesting)
And now a quick Google search reveals this: Engineers Suspect Diesel Fuel in Collapse of 7 World Trade Center [wirednewyork.com].
~Philly