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Structural and fire
experts are gratified but not surprised by the latest "interim"
findings of the National Institute of Standards and Technology
on the behavior of the World Trade Centers twin 110-story
towers after the buildings were attacked by terrorists on
Sept. 11, 2001. NIST has concluded, after completing most
of its in-depth, $16-million investigation, that the towers
would likely have withstood the heat of the jet-fuel-triggered
fires had the hijacked planes and the debris from impact not
knocked off the sprayed-on fireproofing.
Building design professionals are
also not surprised by NISTs "working hypothesis"
that the frames sprayed-on fireproofing was adequate
to maintain the structural integrity of the steel tubes in
an "ordinary" office fire that was not fought, but
left to burn out.
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"NIST confirmed what I, and
others, have been saying for the past three years," says
Edward M. DePaola, principal of structural engineer Severud
Associates, New York City, and a member of the first team
that investigated the disaster. "It was the fire, not
the structural damage or any perceived design deficiencies,
that caused the collapse," he says.
Shyam Sunder, Gaithersburg, Md.-based
NISTs lead WTC investigator, says the study, considered
the most in-depth probe ever of a building disaster, is important
because it provides documentation for what many knew all along.
Some sources think the entire exercise
was a waste of taxpayer money. Richard C. Schulte, a fire
protection engineer based in Evanston, Ill., has been strident
in his criticism against those, including New York City-based
Skyscraper Safety Campaign, who blame the 9/11 deaths on the
structural integrity of the twin towers and their original
designers and builders, rather than the terrorists (ENR 6/7
p. 48).
"NISTs preliminary conclusions
pretty much lay to rest the Skyscraper Safety Campaigns
allegations that the towers were improperly designed and constructed,"
says Schulte.
James Quintiere, a professor in
the Dept. of Fire Protection Engineering at the University
of Maryland, College Park, and an advisor to the Skyscraper
Safety Campaign, declined to comment on the preliminary conclusions
other than to...
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