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A. Astaneh’s 6th Annual WTC Memorial Lecture
The World Trade Center: A Remembrance and the Release of Results of a 5-Year Structural Engineering Investigation
Abolhassan Astaneh-Asl, Ph.D., P.E
Professor, Dept. of Civil and Environmental Engineering, UC
Berkeley
Tuesday, September 11 2007 at 12 noon - 1 pm in Sibley
Auditorium,
UC Berkeley Campus
*Abstract*
One week after the 9/11/2001 tragedy, started reconnaissance and
investigation of the collapsed World Trade Center towers in New York supported
by the National Science Foundation. Later, in May of 2002, I testified before
the Committee on Science of the House of Representatives on my findings and
received drawings of the WTC from the Committee to continue my studies of the
WTC structure. Since then, I have led a team of more than 11 highly qualified
volunteer researchers and engineers and have completed the analyses of the
impact of various airplanes on the World Trade Center towers in order to learn
lessons from this tragedy that can be used to prevent such catastrophic
collapses and to save lives.
Since the 9/11, each year, I have given a Memorial Lecture on the WTC,
remembering the victims and first responders who so heroically gave their lives
to save others, and then providing an update on engineering aspects of the
collapse and reconstruction of the WTC buildings. This year, I am devoting most
of the Memorial Lecture to release, for the first time, the results of our five-
years studies of the structural aspects of the WTC design and the collapse. Our
5-year analysis primarily focused on finding an answer to the question of: “What
would have happened if instead of the unusual and relatively light bearing wall
structural system with no framing, used in the WTC towers, a more traditional
system of structural framing used in almost any other structure, was used? Very
few people are aware of the fact that the WTC towers did not need to follow any
design code and did not need to obtain the construction permit from the City.
The structural system used in the towers was an unusual system of “Steel
Exterior Bearing Walls and Interior Compression Columns” with no framing system
in between. There is no record of use of such a system before or after the
design and construction of the World Trade Center. The issue of structural
design of the WTC and its effects on the fate of these towers on that tragic day
has not been studied or reported by other studies of the WTC. The results
presented here will show what would have happened if the towers were designed
following the code and using the structural systems used in almost any other
building structure instead of the unique system used in the collapsed WTC
towers.
Honorary Sponsor: The Skyscraper Safety Campaign (www.skyscrapersafety.org)
Date: Tuesday September 11th, 2007
Time: 12:00 - 1:00 pm
Place: Sibley Auditorium, UC Berkeley Campus
Last Updated: September 11, 2007 - 1:49pm
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