Building at World Trade Center is a showcase of terrorproof technologies


Architects around the world are erecting skyscrapers that use a hollow
concrete core surrounded by bomb-resistant glass and other security
innovations. 

By Harry Bruinius | Correspondent of The Christian Science Monitor 
from the February 04, 2008 edition -
http://www.csmonitor.com/2008/0204/p20s01-ussc.html
 
New York

When a documentary crew wanted to film the emergency glow-strips that line
the expansive stairwells in 7 World Trade Center, Dara McQuillan called down
to the security desk and asked them to flick off the lights. Moments after
the stairwell went dark, however, a backup power system switched on and
ruined the shot. 

Mr. McQuillan, vice president of communications for the building, called
again, but when the security desk shut down the backup system, this time a
battery-powered generator flooded the stairs with light. The crew never got
its dramatic glow-in-the-dark shot. 

It has been hailed as the safest building in the world, its 52-stories of
glass elegance belying a concrete core built to be a bunker in the sky. It
is the first skyscraper to be completed at the World Trade Center site, and
as it approaches its second anniversary, its innovative architecture and
endlessly redundant security features - most of them designed from the
lessons of the Twin Towers catastrophic collapse - offer a template for
high-rise buildings in a post-9/11 world. 

"The biggest change in high-rise construction now is this sealed, hardened
core," says Dr. Herb Hauser, president of New York-based Midtown
Technologies, who worked with the architects of the skyscrapers that will
ring the new World Trade Center. "This means that the structure around the
core can go down, or be on fire, or be invested with a biological or
chemical problem, but the actual core itself will be protected." 

At least three skyscrapers under construction that will surpass the height
of the world's tallest building, Taipei 101 in Taiwan, are using the
concrete-core technique (as well as a number of others under proposal in
Russia and Korea). Indeed, the 1,776-foot high Freedom Tower, the anchor of
the World Trade Center site, will in many ways simply be a larger version of
the adjacent 7 WTC. The Chicago Spire, at 2,000 feet high, and Burj Dubai,
soon to be the tallest building in the world at a staggering 2,700 feet,
will also each have hollow concrete spines anchoring floors that will
cascade and twist around them. 

...

Making buildings with a concrete core isn't a new idea, but the cost of
constructing them in the past has been prohibitive. "The main drawback at
one time was that a steel frame was so much faster to build," says Mir Ali,
professor of architecture at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
"It took you approximately three to four days to build a steel-frame floor.
With concrete, it used to take 10 to 14 days a floor." 

But with advances in construction techniques - better and cheaper concrete,
more powerful pumps, easy-to-assemble slip and fly forms - crews can now put
up a concrete core as fast as a steel frame. Moreover, very tall steel-frame
buildings like the former World Trade Center towers and the Sears Tower
often shimmy and sway in the wind. The top floor of a concrete-core high
rise is as solid as a first-floor lobby. 

And yet, since such buildings are, in part, towering symbols of power and
strength, and therefore important symbolic targets, the question persists:
Will tenants want to work in them? Ellis Rubinstein, president of the New
York Academy of Sciences, the first organization to sign a lease at 7 WTC,
recalls a number of board members and employees who were wary of working in
a high rise at the site. "But the reverse was also quite true, actually.
There was a great deal of pride that we were standing for the revitalization
of the area," he says. 

In addition to 7 WTC and the Freedom Tower, Larry Silverstein, the
leaseholder of the site, is planning three more massive skyscrapers in the
area. "Larry's big gamble in building over 7 million square feet of office
space without tenants is that people will soon want more out of their
buildings," says McQuillan. 

Old Wall Street buildings, forming the "canyons" of 1930s-era high rises,
often choke off the signals for legions of BlackBerrys, and just aren't
built for the high-tech business needs of today. In 10 years, Mr.
Silverstein believes, Wall Street firms will head a few blocks west to
Greenwich Street, near the World Trade Center site, leaving the historic
business district to the luxury loft renovators. But first he must convince
them these state-of-the-art buildings are state-of-the-art safe. 

...

The sense of security architects tried to build into the hollow spine of 7
WTC, which has tenants on 30 of 42 available floors, starts with the
glow-strip lined stairs. Stadiumlike in size, the stairwells allow a space
where evacuees can rest or the wheelchair-bound can wait for assistance.
They are also pressurized to force out smoke, and engineers have
incorporated dual standpipes and extra water storage for the sprinkler
system. 

But beyond the concrete core, 7 WTC has a host of other security features.
The building's skin is made almost entirely of glass, and since the
foundation is designed like a diamond parallelogram, the structure gives off
a crystalline appearance - hardly the look of a concrete bunker in the sky. 

The glazing process incorporates new bomb-resistant technologies into the
glass that eliminate flying shards - and actually shield the structure from
an explosion, deflecting the energy of a blast. Windows are double-paned,
laminated, and layered with a new plastic polymer. The windows near the
lobby are reinforced with inner cables that would, like a rubber band,
absorb a blast and snap back. 

The lobby features another use of "new" glass. A 65-by-14-foot art
installation behind the reception desk doubles as a bomb shield for the
elevator lobby. The installation has two laminated glass walls. Each wall is
a series of vertical panes that tilt inward, like a giant hinge, and spring
back in the event of an explosion. Designed by James Carpenter and
conceptual artist Jenny Holzer, the display flashes illuminated poetry and
prose. 

"It's quite robust in its strength, although it's relatively delicate in
terms of its visual presence," says Mr. Carpenter, a sculptor and architect
at James Carpenter Design Associates here. 

Throughout 7 WTC, architects have tried to convey openness and optimism
rather than a fortress mentality. Even the first eight floors, which are
windowless and house a utility substation, are wrapped in a stainless-steel
screen that glows a faint blue after dusk. The wall contains light sensors
that create a drifting illumination whenever a pedestrian walks near it.
"We're always trying to harness two things," says Carpenter, "performance
and visual aesthetics." 

Indeed, as four larger towers begin to rise at Ground Zero, architects in a
post-9/11 world must balance safety with art, commerce, and community
interests. "There's no doubt in anyone's mind that as they're building these
towers," says Hauser, "somebody overseas is thinking about how to take them
down again." 

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