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NIST World Trade Center Disaster Investigation

The NIST World Trade Center Disaster Investigation was a report that the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) conducted to establish the likely technical causes of the three building failures that occurred at the World Trade Center following the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.[2] The report was mandated as part of the National Construction Safety Team Act (NCST Act), which was signed into law on October 1, 2002 by President George W. Bush. NIST issued its final report on the collapse of the World Trade Center's twin towers in September 2005, and the agency issued its final report on 7 World Trade Center in November 2008.

NIST concluded that the collapse of each tower resulted from the combined effects of airplane impact damage, widespread fireproofing dislodgment, and the fires that ensued. The sequence of failures that NIST concluded initiated the collapse of both towers involved the heat-induced sagging of floor trusses pulling some of the exterior columns on one side of each tower inward until they buckled, after which instability rapidly spread and the upper sections then fell onto the floors below.[3] 7 World Trade Center, which was never directly hit by an airplane, collapsed as a result of thermal expansion of steel beams and girders that were heated by uncontrolled fires caused by the collapse of the North Tower and failure of the fire-resistive material.[4]

No clear authority and the absence of an effective protocol for how the building performance investigators should conduct and coordinate their investigation with the concurrent search and rescue efforts, as well as any criminal investigation

Difficulty obtaining documents essential to the investigation, including blueprints, design drawings, and maintenance records

Uncertainty as a result of the confidential nature of the BPAT study

Uncertainty as to the strategy for completing the investigation and applying the lessons learned

Investigation[edit]

NIST began its investigation on 21 August 2002. Prior to this date, volunteers from NIST, FEMA, ASCE and others collected steel members important to the investigation from the four steel recycling facilities during the recovery effort. They collected and cataloged 236 steel artifacts, including exterior columns, core columns, floor trusses and other similar structural members.[16] They were able to observe the metallurgical chemistry and structure and perform experiments on the recovered elements to measure their attributes such as mechanical properties under high temperatures.


NIST's Building and Fire Research Laboratory created a complex computer model to understand the collapse of the towers.[17] Specifically, they wanted to know if the collapse of a core column could cause the progressive collapse of the whole building. They also modeled the dispersion of the jet fuel and damage to the interior of the building that was not visible from photographic evidence and eyewitnesses. The model was used to understand the hypothesis of the collapse.

Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster: Final Report of the National Construction Safety Team on the Collapses of the World Trade Center Tower

(April 2005 and August 2008)

Draft Reports from the NIST World Trade Center Investigation - and public comments

(NIST IR 7563, November 2010)

Best Practice Guidelines for Structural Fire Resistance Design of Concrete and Steel Buildings

(NIST SP 1000-5, June 2004)

June 2004 Progress Report on the Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center

(NIST SP 1000-4, December 2003)

Public Update on the Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster

(NIST SP 1000-3, May 2003)

Progress Report on the Federal Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster

(NIST IR 6942 and NIST SP 1000-2, December 2002)

Progress Report on NIST Building and Fire Investigation into the World Trade Center Disaster

(NIST SP 1000-1, August 2002)

NIST Final Plan: National Building and Fire Safety Investigation of the World Trade Center Disaster

(NIST IR 6879, May 2002)

Initial Model for Fires in the World Trade Center Towers

9/11 Commission Report

9/11 Public Discourse Project

Final Reports from the NIST World Trade Center Disaster Investigation

NIST Releases Final WTC 7 Investigation Report