-Why, as other countries build soaring skyscrapers with vastly improved safety features, does America still lacks national guidelines five long years after 9/11?
I agree - that bothers me too. However, based on other posts of yours, it would seem you'd rather the authorities in charge spent time investigating every conspiratorial wild goose chase in order to put there unanswered questions to rest.
-Interesting that the same guy, Eugene Corley, who covered up what happened at the Oklahoma City attack was chosen as the lead investigator for the initial ASCE "investigation."
I don't believe there was a cover up there other than of what pissed off mcveigh to begin with.
EUGENE CORLEY: Once the transfer girder fails, there's no longer any support over most of its length, and almost half of the building collapses immediately. Whether McVeigh knew what he was doing or whether it was luck, he parked it in the place that it would do the most damage to the building.
-Oh, those crazy terrorists. Always getting so lucky!
I think that's just a silly comment. If you were trying to do the most damage to a building, wouldn't you think of taking out the support structures? It wasn't like it was some needle in a haystack.
Why were no structural engineering codes changed in response to the Oklahoma City bombing?
I couldn't tell you for sure, but it seems like the Risk V Benefit equation was offered as a real world consideration. Btw,
Corley's team recommended changes as a result of their investigation:
"In the wake of the 1995 disaster, Corley's team recommended that back-up systems to prevent progressive collapse become mandatory. But the codes were never changed.
On to 9/11 and the WTC:
NARRATOR: In truth, Corley was given scant time and resources to come up with anything but a preliminary conclusion, and a tragedy of this magnitude certainly warranted more than that.
-Why?
Stupidity, incompetence, boneheaded priorities, or covering up for the people who designed and/or built the Towers maybe? I'm not sure.
NARRATOR: So, in 2002, Congress charged the National Institute of Standards and Technology to conduct the most detailed building analysis ever undertaken.
-Why wasn't NIST's study started until most of the WTC-1 & WTC-2 and all of the WTC-7 evidence was destroyed?
Our government bureaucracy sucks and is not infallable? Plus, maybe my possible answers from above. It's clear that NIST would have liked to have had more physical evidence to study, because:
SHYAM SUNDER: For most investigations, you usually have a building to investigate. So we had to recreate, in great detail, what happened on 9/11, and that's why the need for a painstaking reconstruction of the entire process.
-Exactly. Why not for the WTC tower investigations? Why was NIST forced to rely on video and photographic evidence instead of the physical rubble?
The buildings had suffered a total collapse. Unlike the Murrah building, for example, no structure(extremely little) was standing. Even if the NIST was called in on 9/11, they wouldn't have had buildings to investigate.
The NIST was called in after ASCE because of empassioned calls from the victims families
to ensure the safety of buildings and to find out who they should lay blame with for the buildings' collapses.
NARRATOR: Another suspect was the fireproofing that covered the trusses and other steel members. It was clearly blown off by the airplane impacts, leaving the steel exposed to the fires.
-How much was fireproofing was "clearly blown off by the airplane impacts"? What is the scientific basis for that statement?
It didn't say "how much", but knowing the bonding characteristics of that kind of sprayed on fireproofing, one could easily calculate a conservative estimate. It was the kind that could be rubbed off if maintenance workers brushed against it, not the best kind available today as a result of NIST recommendations. I'd imagine some of the pre-collapse video showed where some fireproofing had been blown off.
Unless you can show that the fireproofing
couldn't be expected to get blown off by the plane impacts, I don't think you've got reason to doubt this point.
NARRATOR: Above the impact zone, in the south tower, one damaged staircase remained passable. Brian Clark and a few colleagues somehow managed to find it.
BRIAN CLARK: So we started down that stairway, and we only went three floors. There was a group of seven of us, myself and six others. We met two people that had come up from the 80th floor, a heavy-set woman and a, by comparison, a rather frail male. She said, "You've got to go, you've got to go up. You can't go down, there's too much smoke and flame below."
-How did these guys manage to save themselves by climbing through fires that supposedly reached 1800 degrees?
Straw argument. They didn't. One staircase was passable because the entire floor was not engaged with fire. However, the people that continued up the stairwell may very well have died as a direct result of fire.
NARRATOR: Designing big buildings so everyone can exit at the same time will increase building costs. More and wider stairwells, better fireproofing to protect against collapse, and specially-designed elevators for firemen or evacuees will not come cheap. And many experts believe these recommendations are an expensive over-reaction to one very bad day.
-Yes, of course. One very bad day. Why worry about changing our codes over one bad day? Why worry about performing a first class forensic investigation of the physical evidence over one bad day? Sure, 9/11 changes everything geopolitically and in terms of our domestic civil rights, but it was just one bad day! Right?
Your comment is a bit tangential. The NARRATOR said "many experts" and it was in response to a quote by
SHYAM SUNDER of NIST of all people:
SHYAM SUNDER: Based on these findings, we also have made recommendations for a tall building to be able to evacuate fully in an emergency.
Anyway, I wish you would have seen the show. Maybe you can catch a repeat and benefit from the visuals.