Fact:Many conspiracy theorists point to FEMA's preliminary report, which said there was relatively light damage to WTC 7 prior to its collapse. With the benefit of more time and resources, NIST researchers now support the working hypothesis that WTC 7 was far more compromised by falling debris than the FEMA report indicated. "The most important thing we found was that there was, in fact, physical damage to the south face of building 7," NIST's Sunder tells PM. "On about a third of the face to the center and to the bottom—approximately 10 stories—about 25 percent of the depth of the building was scooped out." NIST also discovered previously undocumented damage to WTC 7's upper stories and its southwest corner.
NIST investigators believe a combination of intense fire and severe structural damage contributed to the collapse, though assigning the exact proportion requires more research. But NIST's analysis suggests the fall of WTC 7 was an example of "progressive collapse," a process in which the failure of parts of a structure ultimately creates strains that cause the entire building to come down. Videos of the fall of WTC 7 show cracks, or "kinks," in the building's facade just before the two penthouses disappeared into the structure, one after the other. The entire building fell in on itself, with the slumping east side of the structure pulling down the west side in a diagonal collapse.
According to NIST, there was one primary reason for the building's failure: In an unusual design, the columns near the visible kinks were carrying exceptionally large loads, roughly 2000 sq. ft. of floor area for each floor. "What our preliminary analysis has shown is that if you take out just one column on one of the lower floors," Sunder notes, "it could cause a vertical progression of collapse so that the entire section comes down."
There are two other possible contributing factors still
under investigation: First, trusses on the fifth and seventh floors were
designed to transfer loads from one set of columns to another. With columns on
the south face apparently damaged, high stresses would likely have been
communicated to columns on the building's other faces, thereby exceeding their
load-bearing capacities.
Second, a fifth-floor fire burned for up to 7 hours.
"There was no firefighting in WTC 7," Sunder says. Investigators
believe the fire was fed by tanks of diesel fuel that many tenants used to run
emergency generators. Most tanks throughout the building were fairly small, but
a generator on the fifth floor was connected to a large tank in the basement
via a pressurized line. Says Sunder: "Our current working hypothesis is
that this pressurized line was supplying fuel [to the fire] for a long period
of time."
WTC 7 might have withstood the physical damage it received,
or the fire that burned for hours, but those combined factors—along with the
building's unusual construction—were enough to set off the chain-reaction
collapse.
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