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NEWSPLUS
& ENTERTAINMENT & CINEMA
Fire, not explosives, caused collapse
of WTC Building
New
York: Investigators have finally determined that
fire caused Building 7 at the World Trade Center to
collapse on September 11, 2001. The fall of the 47-story
World Trade Center's Building 7 at 5:20 p.m. on Sept.
11, 2001, was primarily due to fires from the building
itself, NIST announced Friday, following an extensive,
three-year investigation. This was the first known
instance of fire causing the total collapse of a tall
building, the agency said. Dr. Shyam Sunder with the
National Institutes of Standards and Technology said
it was primarily due to fire. After a three year investigation,
he discovered debris from Tower 1 started fires on
at least 10 floors of Building 7. They burned out
of control for hours and caused what he termed a "fire
induced progressive collapse." The fires created a
thermal expansion in building support beams which
later buckled in the heat. Water to the building was
not available because of the situation involving the
Twin Towers. If water to the sprinklers hadn't been
cut off, Sunder said there's a chance Building 7 would
still be standing today. The trapezoid-shaped Building
7 was connected to the World Trade Center plaza by
an elevated walkway. The building was damaged and
set afire by debris - including enormous broadcast
antennae - from the collapse of the nearby North Tower.
"Video and photographic evidence combined with detailed
computer simulations show that neither explosives
nor fuel oil fires played a role in the collapse of
WTC 7," the Washington Times quoted Sunder, as saying.
The NIST investigation team also determined that other
elements of the building's construction - namely trusses,
girders and cantilever overhangs - did not play a
significant role in the collapse.
-Sept 6, 2008
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