By
ELLEN GOLDBAUM
Contributing Editor
In the aftermath of
the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center, structural engineers are
grappling with a question that a month ago would have been completely
unthinkable: Can buildings be designed to withstand catastrophic blasts
inflicted by terrorists?
Ten days after the
terrorist attacks on the twin towers, structural engineers from UB and
its Multidis-ciplinary Center for Earthquake Engineering Research (MCEER)
traveled to ground zero as part of a project funded by the National Science
Foundation.
Visiting the site
as part of an MCEER reconnaissance visit, they spent two days beginning
the task of formulating ideas about how to design such structures and
to search for clues on how to do so in buildings that were damaged, but
still are standing.
Their work is continuing
as one of several MCEER projects funded by a $100,000 grant from the NSF.
The NSF awarded eight grants to fund post-disaster assessments.
The project involving
the UB/MCEER engineers is the only one that includes examining structural
performance of buildings from an earthquake-engineering perspective.
The team consists
of George C. Lee, MCEER director and Samuel P. Capen Professor of Engineering;
Michel Bruneau, MCEER deputy director and professor of civil engineering,
and Andrei Reinhorn and Andrew Whittaker, both professors of civil engineering
and MCEER investigators.
"Our objective in
visiting ground zero was to go and look at the buildings surrounding the
World Trade Center, those buildings that still are standing but that sustained
damage," said Bruneau.
"Our immediate hope
is that we can develop a better understanding as to why those buildings
remain standing, while our long-term goal is to see whether earthquake-engineering
technologies can be married to existing technologies to achieve enhanced
performance of buildings in the event of terrorist attacks," he added.
Photographs taken
by the investigators demonstrate in startling detail the monumental damage
inflicted on the WTC towers and buildings in the vicinity.
One building a block
away from the towers remains standing, but was badly damaged when it was
hit by a column from one of the collapsing WTC towers.
"This building is
many meters away from 2 World Trade Center, and yet we see a column there
that used to be part of that building," explained Whittaker. "The column
became a missile that shot across the road, through the window and through
the floor."
The visit to the area
also revealed some surprises, according to the engineers. For example,
the floor-framing systems in one of the adjacent buildings was quite rugged,
allowing floors that were pierced by tons of falling debris to remain
intact.
"Highly redundant
ductile-framing systems may provide a simple, but robust strategy for
blast resistance," he added. Other strategies may include providing alternate
paths for gravity loads in the event that a load-bearing column fails.
"We also need a better
understanding of the mechanism of collapse," said Whittaker. "We need
to find out what causes a building to collapse and how you can predict
it."
Reinhorn noted that
"earthquake shaking has led to the collapse of many buildings in the past.
It induces dynamic response and extremely high stresses and deformations
in structural components. Solutions developed for earthquake-resistant
design may be directly applicable to blast engineering and terrorist-resistant
design. Part of our mission now at UB is to transfer these solutions and
to develop new ones where none exist at present."
The NSF funding will
support several graduate students on the project.
"Just as the top research
universities of California have assisted that state in developing guidelines
and technologies for reducing losses from future earthquakes, the MCEER
and UB team stands ready to serve in an identical role for the State of
New York in the wake of the terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center,"
said Whittaker.
By 2004, UB's Department
of Civil, Structural and Environmental Engineering will be home to the
most versatile, high-performance structural engineering laboratory in
the world as a result of grants totaling nearly $20 million from the NSF
and New York State. While the lab is being constructed primarily for the
earthquake-engineering research, the high-flow hydraulic system, high-performance
actuators and reaction walls and floors are perfectly suited for blast-engineering
research, Whittaker said.
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