The National Institute of Standards and Technology spent more than six years and around twenty million dollars investigating the collapses of World Trade Center 1, 2, and 7. The resulting reports run to thousands of pages, dozens of supporting documents, and detailed structural simulations. Almost no one online citing them has read them.
That gap between the actual findings and the version circulating in comment sections is the subject of this piece. The reports deserve more than a meme.
The mechanism NIST identified for WTC 1 and 2
For the Twin Towers, NIST concluded that the aircraft impacts dislodged fireproofing from steel structural elements over multiple floors, leaving them exposed to sustained jet-fuel-ignited fires. Over roughly an hour for the south tower and an hour and forty minutes for the north, the fires heated floor trusses and core columns until thermal expansion and weakening caused floors to sag, pulling exterior columns inward.
Once enough perimeter columns buckled, the upper section of the building lost support and began to descend. The impact loads from that descending mass exceeded the capacity of the floors below, producing a progressive collapse. NIST emphasized that this was not a controlled demolition scenario. The initiating mechanism was specifically the combination of impact damage and prolonged fire exposure on stripped steel, a sequence the original design did not anticipate.
WTC 7 was a different problem
Building 7, which fell later that afternoon, became a focal point of online skepticism because it was not struck by a plane. NIST’s separate investigation concluded that uncontrolled fires fed by office contents, burning for around seven hours, caused thermal expansion of floor beams on the thirteenth floor. That expansion pushed a critical girder off its seat at column 79.
The loss of that connection initiated cascading floor failures inside the building, which removed lateral support from column 79 and triggered buckling. Once that interior column failed, the rest of the structure lost its load path and collapsed. NIST explicitly identified this as the first known instance of a tall building collapse caused primarily by fire, which is part of why the investigation took so long. The mechanism was novel, not impossible.
What NIST did not investigate, and why critics seize on it
NIST did not test for residues of explosives or thermite. The agency stated that its analysis showed no evidence requiring such testing and that the collapse mechanisms were consistent with the available data. Critics treat this as suspicious. Engineers generally do not, because forensic investigations work from observed evidence to mechanism, not from speculative hypotheses backward.
The reports also acknowledge limits. Some assumptions in the simulations were necessarily estimated. NIST published its models so others could critique them, and peer-reviewed engineering literature has largely supported the conclusions while debating specific parameters.
Bottom line
The NIST findings are technical, uncomfortable, and not designed for a thirty-second video. They describe a sequence of failures consistent with extreme but explainable physics. Disagreement is fair, but disagreement should start with the actual document, not its caricature.
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