The Most Dangerous Building in Manhattan
Ringkasan
TLDRIn 1978, structural engineer Bill LeMessurier discovered a critical flaw in the Citicorp Center, which could collapse under winds of 110 km/h, endangering thousands. Faced with a choice between silence and action, he chose to inform Citicorp's chairman and initiated emergency repairs, including the installation of a tuned mass damper to stabilize the building. Despite the risk of public panic, the repairs were completed successfully, and the incident led to changes in building codes and became a pivotal case in engineering ethics, highlighting the responsibility engineers have to address potential risks.
Takeaways
- 🏙️ Citicorp Center had a critical flaw discovered in 1978.
- ⚠️ Winds of 110 km/h could cause the building to collapse.
- 🛠️ Bill LeMessurier chose to act rather than stay silent.
- 🔧 Emergency repairs included a tuned mass damper for stabilization.
- 📜 Project Serene was the confidential repair plan.
- 🚨 Thousands of lives were at risk if the flaw was not addressed.
- 📈 Building codes were updated after the incident.
- 🌍 The case is taught globally as a lesson in engineering ethics.
- 💡 Engineers have a responsibility to address structural risks.
- 🏗️ The Citicorp Center remains a significant skyscraper today.
Garis waktu
- 00:00:00 - 00:05:00
In the summer of 1978, structural engineer Bill LeMessurier discovered a critical flaw in the Citicorp Center, which could lead to its collapse in high winds, endangering thousands of lives in Manhattan. Faced with a choice between silence and action, he grappled with the implications of revealing the truth about the building's structural integrity.
- 00:05:00 - 00:10:00
Citicorp's construction involved a complex negotiation with the church, leading to a unique design where the skyscraper was built around it. The engineering challenge was to support the building's weight while ensuring stability against high winds, prompting LeMessurier to innovate with a design that included diagonal braces and stilts.
- 00:10:00 - 00:15:00
LeMessurier's design utilized chevron braces to manage gravity and wind loads, a unique approach that required careful calculations. However, the unconventional placement of stilts at the midpoints of the building's faces raised concerns about stability, leading to further engineering challenges.
- 00:15:00 - 00:20:00
The chevron bracing system effectively addressed wind and gravity loads but introduced a new issue: the building's increased sway. To counteract this, LeMessurier implemented a tuned mass damper, a novel solution that significantly reduced oscillations and improved comfort for occupants.
- 00:20:00 - 00:25:00
Despite the building's successful opening and initial acclaim, a critical oversight regarding the connections of the chevron braces was discovered. The switch from welded to bolted connections raised alarms about the building's ability to withstand high winds, particularly quartering winds, which had not been adequately considered in the original calculations.
- 00:25:00 - 00:33:39
As hurricane season approached, LeMessurier faced a moral dilemma: to disclose the potential danger or remain silent. Ultimately, he chose to act, initiating emergency repairs under the radar while developing a comprehensive evacuation plan, ensuring the safety of thousands in the event of a disaster.
Peta Pikiran
Video Tanya Jawab
What was the fatal flaw in the Citicorp Center?
The building could collapse under winds of just 110 km/h.
Who discovered the flaw in the Citicorp Center?
Structural engineer Bill LeMessurier.
What did LeMessurier do after discovering the flaw?
He informed Citicorp's chairman and initiated emergency repairs.
What is a tuned mass damper?
A device used to reduce the amplitude of mechanical vibrations, implemented in the Citicorp Center to stabilize it.
How did the public react to the news of the building's flaw?
Citicorp decided not to inform the public to avoid mass panic.
What were the consequences of the flaw if it had not been addressed?
The building could have collapsed, risking thousands of lives.
What was Project Serene?
The confidential repair plan to fix the structural issues of the Citicorp Center.
How did the incident affect building codes?
New York updated building codes to require quartering wind calculations.
What legacy did the Citicorp Center leave in engineering?
It became a case study in engineering ethics and the importance of addressing structural risks.
What happened to the Citicorp Center after the repairs?
It was renamed 601 Lexington and continues to stand as a significant skyscraper.
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- 00:00:00This is Citicorp Center.
- 00:00:02In the summer of 1978,
- 00:00:03it had been open for less than a year
- 00:00:05when its structural engineer, Bill LeMessurier,
- 00:00:07made a terrifying discovery.
- 00:00:10His cutting edge skyscraper, an engineering marvel
- 00:00:13had a fatal flaw.
- 00:00:14Winds of just 110 kilometers per hour
- 00:00:17could cause it to collapse in the middle of Manhattan,
- 00:00:21potentially killing thousands.
- 00:00:23Over 200,000 people lived and worked
- 00:00:25in the surrounding area,
- 00:00:27and hurricane season was only weeks away.
- 00:00:30Here I am, the only man in the world who knew this.
- 00:00:34This thing is in real trouble.
- 00:00:37LeMessurier faced a stark choice.
- 00:00:39He could stay silent and hope for the best,
- 00:00:42or he could try to fix it
- 00:00:44and risk professional ruin and mass panic.
- 00:00:47But Citicorp Center had a 100% probability
- 00:00:50of total collapse by the end of the century.
- 00:00:53How could he save New York from a near certain disaster?
- 00:00:56And how was this allowed in the first place?
- 00:01:00Veritasium producer and engineer, Henry van Dyck,
- 00:01:02traveled to New York to investigate further.
- 00:01:05So in the 1960s, the financial giant, Citicorp,
- 00:01:08was trying to build a new headquarters in Manhattan.
- 00:01:10So just down the street from their original headquarters
- 00:01:13was this entire city block, which was up for sale.
- 00:01:16Well, everything except for this church, Saint Peter's.
- 00:01:19So Citicorp came to the pastor, Ralph Peterson,
- 00:01:21and asked, "What's it gonna take for you guys to leave?"
- 00:01:24And he came back and said, "We're not leaving.
- 00:01:26Anything that Citicorp builds
- 00:01:28has to involve the church as part of it."
- 00:01:30What the pastor wanted was for the church
- 00:01:32to have its own separate identity.
- 00:01:34So eventually they agreed on two things.
- 00:01:36One was to replace this old crumbling gothic church
- 00:01:39with a brand new one, which you see in front of you.
- 00:01:42And the second thing was that the church
- 00:01:43had to be physically distinct from the new tower.
- 00:01:46In other words, it had to be completely independent.
- 00:01:49And again, most importantly, two thirds of the space
- 00:01:54above the church had to be free and clear, had to be open.
- 00:02:00Citicorp then hired architect Hugh Stubbins
- 00:02:02to design the tower and the church
- 00:02:04and Bill LeMessurier as the structural engineer,
- 00:02:08Stubbins explained the constraints they faced.
- 00:02:10The church needed to be in the exact same spot
- 00:02:12and they needed to build the tower around it.
- 00:02:15If they were to maximize the floor area, they would have to
- 00:02:17notch out one corner of the tower for the church.
- 00:02:20LeMessurier agreed that could work,
- 00:02:22but why not notch two, three, or even all four corners,
- 00:02:27essentially constructing the skyscraper on stilts.
- 00:02:31So it's probably the first time in history
- 00:02:33that an engineer has come to an architect and said,
- 00:02:35"Let's make our job harder for us."
- 00:02:38The stilts would serve two main purposes.
- 00:02:40First, they would need to support at least half
- 00:02:43of the building's gravity load.
- 00:02:44The rest would be held up by a larger central column.
- 00:02:48Second, they would need to withstand the load
- 00:02:50due to high winds.
- 00:02:52But unlike an ordinary structure,
- 00:02:54the stilts wouldn't be at the corners.
- 00:02:56They would be at the center of each face.
- 00:02:59Imagine a chair, and instead of the columns
- 00:03:03or the supports on each corner of the chair,
- 00:03:07it's at the midpoint of each side.
- 00:03:10Obviously, it's not an ideal situation.
- 00:03:13It doesn't seem very stable.
- 00:03:14Exactly. So it created an engineering problem.
- 00:03:19As LeMessurier considered the problem,
- 00:03:21he suddenly had a flash of inspiration.
- 00:03:24He grabbed a napkin and sketched out an idea.
- 00:03:26He drew six layers
- 00:03:28of diagonal braces up each face of the tower.
- 00:03:31These chevrons would transfer the forces to the middle
- 00:03:34of each face and down to the stilts.
- 00:03:38Now we have to see the gravity loads, right?
- 00:03:40But now here's the trick.
- 00:03:41The gravity loads are coming down the column.
- 00:03:44When they get to the brace,
- 00:03:46they need to find their way into the brace.
- 00:03:49Okay. So what you do
- 00:03:50is you take out that column right there.
- 00:03:52There is no way that load can jump over
- 00:03:55and go to that column.
- 00:03:57And now they're coming down into the braces.
- 00:03:58They get down to the bottom here,
- 00:04:00and now they continue to go down.
- 00:04:02You take that column out,
- 00:04:03it has nowhere to go except into the brace.
- 00:04:06By removing the columns at the top
- 00:04:08and middle of each chevron,
- 00:04:10every tier acted as a separate unit.
- 00:04:12They were only connected to the braces
- 00:04:14and through the central core.
- 00:04:16So every eight stories, half of the gravity load
- 00:04:19would be forced through the chevrons
- 00:04:21to the midface columns, leading down to the stilts.
- 00:04:24Can you tell me how big of a new idea was this?
- 00:04:28Yeah, well, this particular system was entirely unique,
- 00:04:32driven by the placement of the columns,
- 00:04:35driven by the conditions of the building.
- 00:04:37As satisfied the chevrons could transfer the gravity load,
- 00:04:40LeMessurier turned his attention to the second problem,
- 00:04:43the wind.
- 00:04:45When wind hits the left side of a normal building
- 00:04:47with corner columns, the entire frame deforms like this.
- 00:04:51So to reduce this deformation,
- 00:04:53we could strengthen these joints, but there's a better way
- 00:04:57because beams and columns are much stronger in compression
- 00:05:00or tension than they are with bending loads.
- 00:05:02So if we add diagonal bracing,
- 00:05:04they can carry this horizontal load.
- 00:05:07The beams sort of act like springs,
- 00:05:09and when they're compressed, they push on the joints.
- 00:05:12When they're stretched, they pull inwards.
- 00:05:14With braces like these,
- 00:05:16the wind load compresses this diagonal
- 00:05:18and stretches this one.
- 00:05:19The left column pulls down in tension
- 00:05:21and the right column pushes up in compression.
- 00:05:24Where the braces meet,
- 00:05:25they both push the bottom beam to the right.
- 00:05:28This stretches the left side and compresses the right one.
- 00:05:32But this floor is the top of the next chevron,
- 00:05:34so this lower section is carrying the force
- 00:05:37from the layer above it
- 00:05:38and the normal wind load from the side.
- 00:05:40And this keeps happening at every chevron
- 00:05:43so the wind load builds up as you go down the building.
- 00:05:46But Citicorp can't have corner columns like this
- 00:05:48because of the gravity load.
- 00:05:49So in the wind, this entire triangle
- 00:05:52wants to rotate like this
- 00:05:54and to prevent that from happening,
- 00:05:55this chevron pulls down going into tension
- 00:05:58and the far chevron pushes up in compression.
- 00:06:01The top and bottom beams
- 00:06:02are again forced into compression and tension.
- 00:06:04The wind load ends up wrapping around the entire building.
- 00:06:08So every chevron works to transfer the wind load
- 00:06:10to the section below.
- 00:06:13When we think about skyscrapers,
- 00:06:14like how big of a deal is wind?
- 00:06:15If we made a skyscraper here, you know,
- 00:06:17out of all these different things, you push with your phone,
- 00:06:20you get a certain amount of force,
- 00:06:21but then you push on my phone as well
- 00:06:23with a certain amount of force,
- 00:06:24but your phone is also pushing on my phone.
- 00:06:26And so that's the shear in the building,
- 00:06:28what we call the building shear.
- 00:06:30It increases as you go down the building.
- 00:06:32You know, at the 10th floor,
- 00:06:33you may have a smaller force than at the 60th floor,
- 00:06:36but the total force of the 10th floor
- 00:06:38is like carrying everything above it.
- 00:06:40So it's much bigger than what's going on on the 60th floor.
- 00:06:44So these chevrons were key to LeMessurier's design,
- 00:06:47but the braces were massive, almost 40 meters long end to end.
- 00:06:51So even if you could fabricate a steel brace that long,
- 00:06:55there would be no way to get it through Manhattan.
- 00:06:57So instead it was sent in pieces
- 00:07:00to be welded together on site.
- 00:07:03The chevron bracing solved the wind and gravity load issues,
- 00:07:07but it also created a different problem.
- 00:07:11Because of the chevron bracing system,
- 00:07:14they were able to save a lot of money and weight.
- 00:07:18It was a lighter construct than most other buildings
- 00:07:22in New York, I think it was 22 pounds a square foot,
- 00:07:25which is very light.
- 00:07:27Unfortunately, that made the building swayable,
- 00:07:31it could move in the wind.
- 00:07:32That wasn't necessarily a structural problem, it was just,
- 00:07:36it could have been uncomfortable for the patrons.
- 00:07:41The way they could solve this was just
- 00:07:42let's add more structural steel and make it a lot stiffer.
- 00:07:45But the solution that LeMessurier came up with
- 00:07:47was far more elegant.
- 00:07:50He adopted something that had been regularly used
- 00:07:52in bridges, power lines and ships,
- 00:07:54but never before in a building: a tuned mass damper or TMD.
- 00:08:00So we're here at Stark Laboratories,
- 00:08:02and I'm not with Iron Man,
- 00:08:03but instead the Columbia Space Initiative,
- 00:08:06the student team here on campus who has helped us build
- 00:08:08this incredible tuned mass damper kind of system.
- 00:08:12We'll use this cart to represent a building.
- 00:08:15By pulling it back and releasing it,
- 00:08:17we can excite its resonant frequency,
- 00:08:19And then we'll put on a little pendulum, aluminum rod,
- 00:08:23and a mass at the bottom.
- 00:08:26As the building sways,
- 00:08:27it transfers some of its kinetic energy to the pendulum,
- 00:08:30which starts to swing.
- 00:08:32Then some of its energy is dissipated through friction
- 00:08:35at the hinge.
- 00:08:36The pendulum and the building oscillate
- 00:08:38out of phase from each other.
- 00:08:39So every time the building pulls the pendulum
- 00:08:42in a different direction, more energy is lost,
- 00:08:45significantly damping the sway of the tower.
- 00:08:48But this system needs to be carefully tuned
- 00:08:51so it has the same frequency as the building itself
- 00:08:53and the right amount of friction.
- 00:08:57So first, the mass needs to be at least one to 5%
- 00:09:00of the building's weight to be effective.
- 00:09:02And we tune the frequency of the TMD
- 00:09:04by adjusting the length of the pendulum.
- 00:09:06I assume engineers do math around this thing,
- 00:09:09but we're just doing it by feel.
- 00:09:10(both laugh)
- 00:09:12Second, by loosening or tightening the bolt,
- 00:09:14we can tune the amount of damping.
- 00:09:16We need to dissipate more energy from friction at the hinge
- 00:09:19to stop the swaying faster.
- 00:09:21We just tighten the top bolt,
- 00:09:23make the whole system a little bit,
- 00:09:25you know, add a little bit more resistance,
- 00:09:26and we'll see if we can dampen it now further.
- 00:09:32Woohoo. Much different. Yeah.
- 00:09:33Yeah, that looked great. That was so quick.
- 00:09:36Yeah, that was.
- 00:09:37It is cool when an experiment works.
- 00:09:39Does not always happen.
- 00:09:42There are many different types of TMDs,
- 00:09:44like pendulums, liquid columns, and a large mass on springs.
- 00:09:49LeMessurier used this last one in Citicorp.
- 00:09:52What you see is a mass of concrete,
- 00:09:54which is 29 feet square and about eight feet thick
- 00:09:58and weighs 400 tons.
- 00:10:01It was installed on the top floor
- 00:10:03and it's affectionately known as that great block of cheese.
- 00:10:07As Citicorp sways to one side,
- 00:10:10the block starts to move in the same direction.
- 00:10:13Some energy is dissipated through separate viscous dampers.
- 00:10:17Citicorp's oscillations are damped
- 00:10:18through those energy losses as the block oscillates
- 00:10:21out of phase to the building's motion.
- 00:10:24LeMessurier expected the damper to reduce the amplitude
- 00:10:26of swaying by roughly 50%,
- 00:10:29and he saved around $4 million
- 00:10:31by not needing an additional 2,800 tons of structural steel.
- 00:10:36With both the chevron bracing
- 00:10:38to channel forces to the stilts
- 00:10:39and the tuned mass damper to reduce sway,
- 00:10:42LeMessurier was convinced
- 00:10:43the building was structurally sound.
- 00:10:46On Citicorp Center's opening day in 1977,
- 00:10:49it was the 11th tallest building in the world.
- 00:10:52It was described by the press
- 00:10:53as an acrobatic act of architecture.
- 00:10:56Later, the American Institute of Architects
- 00:10:59even gave it an honor award, calling it a tour de force
- 00:11:02as a stylish silhouette in the skyline,
- 00:11:05and, for the pedestrian, a hovering cantilevered hulk.
- 00:11:09So then, it's going swimmingly for years, right?
- 00:11:13Well, it's going swimmingly for about a year.
- 00:11:18The first hint of trouble came in May, 1978.
- 00:11:20LeMessurier was talking with another client
- 00:11:23about welding similar chevron braces.
- 00:11:26The architect and the steel fabricator said,
- 00:11:28"Tell me, how did those welded braces work out?"
- 00:11:32Seems like overkill, they thought.
- 00:11:34And LeMessurier says, "Yeah, they were fine.
- 00:11:36Let me call my guys in New York and I'll check."
- 00:11:39So he put the call into his office in New York
- 00:11:42and they say, "Oh, Bill, didn't you know?
- 00:11:45We bolted those connections."
- 00:11:47The contractor had suggested saving
- 00:11:49a quarter of a million dollars by using bolts
- 00:11:52to attach the braces instead of welds.
- 00:11:54And LeMessurier's firm had agreed.
- 00:11:57There is nothing that says a bolt is inherently
- 00:11:59worse or better than a weld.
- 00:12:01You use them in different circumstances
- 00:12:03for different reasons,
- 00:12:04but it's a little surprising to find out,
- 00:12:07I thought the connections in this tour de force,
- 00:12:09one of a kind skyscraper, you know,
- 00:12:11that's on the cutting edge of structural engineering,
- 00:12:13was connected one way,
- 00:12:15but apparently it's connected another way.
- 00:12:17But if the braces are going like this,
- 00:12:20where are they gonna go?
- 00:12:21You know, you only need the weld
- 00:12:23when the braces are going like this.
- 00:12:25Since the gravity load
- 00:12:26was always compressing the braces, some of the chevrons
- 00:12:29only went into tension under very high winds.
- 00:12:32And even then, it wasn't a lot of tension.
- 00:12:35LeMessurier trusted that his team
- 00:12:36did the right calculations, and the substitution was fine,
- 00:12:40logical, even.
- 00:12:41(phone ringing)
- 00:12:43But around a month later,
- 00:12:44LeMessurier got a phone call from a student
- 00:12:45who wanted to ask some questions about the Citicorp Center.
- 00:12:48And his teacher said to him,
- 00:12:50"That engineer didn't know what he's doing
- 00:12:52and nobody should put the columns in the middle.
- 00:12:54They should put 'em in the corners. That's silly."
- 00:12:57And I told the student, I said,
- 00:12:59"Well, you're a professor's full of it.
- 00:13:01He doesn't understand the problem we had to solve."
- 00:13:04LeMessurier went through the calculations
- 00:13:06with the student
- 00:13:07to reassure him the stilts were in the right place.
- 00:13:09But the interesting thing is, is in that moment,
- 00:13:12he's thinking about wind loads from all directions.
- 00:13:17You know, late spring, early summer of 1978,
- 00:13:20Bill LeMessurier is working on the back of a Hilton Hotel
- 00:13:23that, in plan, forms a triangle, not a rectangle.
- 00:13:27Now you got a triangle. What's your orthogonal direction?
- 00:13:31You just have to give up and say,
- 00:13:33"We're gonna analyze it from every direction."
- 00:13:35That's going on the moment that Bill LeMessurier
- 00:13:38gets this phone call.
- 00:13:40Then I called him back and pointed it out to him
- 00:13:42that there's some peculiar things about this building.
- 00:13:44The worst loading case was not the diagonal,
- 00:13:47but it was the ordinary wind that everybody thinks about.
- 00:13:49The wind pushes straight on the building.
- 00:13:51That was the critical case.
- 00:13:52He said, you know what,
- 00:13:53I've been getting all these calls from all these people.
- 00:13:56I'm gonna sit down and explain this thing.
- 00:13:59He decided to double check
- 00:14:00what happens to the building if wind is hitting
- 00:14:02a corner of the building, not straight on one of the faces.
- 00:14:06These are also known as quartering winds.
- 00:14:09So he split the wind into its perpendicular components.
- 00:14:12So the west side and north side are hit by the force
- 00:14:15divided by the square root of two.
- 00:14:17He computed the forces for each, as we did before,
- 00:14:20and summed up the result,
- 00:14:21but then he noticed something strange.
- 00:14:24Then now we look at the diagonals,
- 00:14:27the stresses in half of them vanish,
- 00:14:30and in the other half, double.
- 00:14:32Since the force on each side
- 00:14:34was F over the square root of two,
- 00:14:36these beams get double that.
- 00:14:38Compared to LeMessurier calculations
- 00:14:40for the perpendicular wind load,
- 00:14:41the forces here were 40% higher.
- 00:14:45So 1.4 by itself is not enough to wreck havoc.
- 00:14:50Okay? It may be, but it may not be.
- 00:14:53Okay. So then the question is,
- 00:14:54well, what happens?
- 00:14:57This increase in forces wouldn't have mattered
- 00:14:59in the original design
- 00:15:00since the chevrons were fully welded together.
- 00:15:03But that wasn't the case anymore.
- 00:15:05LeMessurier remembered his earlier phone call.
- 00:15:08The welds holding the chevrons together
- 00:15:10were swapped for bolts.
- 00:15:12How did his team calculate the number of bolts per joint?
- 00:15:16Did they consider quartering winds?
- 00:15:18It would be a miracle if they ever thought that through,
- 00:15:22to think about the diagonal wind.
- 00:15:23It just wasn't in the nature of anybody.
- 00:15:26So I had a bit of a worry.
- 00:15:29I didn't panic right away,
- 00:15:31but I decided to go down to New York to my office.
- 00:15:34LeMessurier requested the building diagrams
- 00:15:36and poured over all of the connections.
- 00:15:38He looked at how his firm calculated the number of bolts.
- 00:15:42There was no question, they had taken straight on wind,
- 00:15:44not the diagonal wind.
- 00:15:46Although wind speed is highest
- 00:15:47at the top of the tower,
- 00:15:48the wind shear builds up as you go lower.
- 00:15:51Looking at this brace around halfway down the tower,
- 00:15:54the perpendicular wind load is 454 tons.
- 00:15:58Because of the skipped columns,
- 00:16:00all of these braces carry the same gravity load,
- 00:16:03just 340 tons, from the eight stories above.
- 00:16:07The gravity load builds up in the center column,
- 00:16:09not in the braces,
- 00:16:11which means there are 114 tons of tension in this brace.
- 00:16:16If each bolt can withstand around 28 tons,
- 00:16:19that would require four bolts.
- 00:16:21The original calculations said just four bolts were enough.
- 00:16:25So that was all they used.
- 00:16:28But when he added quartering winds,
- 00:16:30LeMessurier's calculations showed there were some braces
- 00:16:32that needed far more bolts.
- 00:16:34At this particular part of the building,
- 00:16:37which I can show you on my calculations is right about here,
- 00:16:42and Bill LeMessurier talked about the 30th floor,
- 00:16:44and I always wondered why was it the 30th floor?
- 00:16:47The 40% increase from quartering winds
- 00:16:49means that this brace has a wind load of 635 tons.
- 00:16:53The tension in the brace is now 295 tons,
- 00:16:57over double the original calculation.
- 00:17:00So these braces actually need around 10 bolts, not four.
- 00:17:04But then it turned out they had done something else.
- 00:17:07LeMessurier's firm considered the braces
- 00:17:09to be minor structural elements.
- 00:17:11They didn't use the right factor of safety
- 00:17:12to calculate the number of bolts.
- 00:17:14They should have overestimated the tension in the brace
- 00:17:17by underestimating the gravity load.
- 00:17:19With only 75% of the gravity load,
- 00:17:22the tension in the beam is now 380 tons.
- 00:17:25So they really needed 14 bolts, but they used only four.
- 00:17:30I thought this thing is in real trouble.
- 00:17:34Imagine, you know,
- 00:17:35what Bill LeMessurier was thinking at that moment.
- 00:17:37You see that number and you're like,
- 00:17:40"Oh my God, this is serious. It's really serious."
- 00:17:43LeMessurier was starting to panic.
- 00:17:46He didn't wanna rush to conclusions,
- 00:17:48so he flew to Canada to check his calculations
- 00:17:50with Alan Davenport at the Boundary Layer Wind Tunnel.
- 00:17:53After running more tests,
- 00:17:54they found that it was even worse than LeMessurier thought.
- 00:17:59The estimated 40% increase in stress
- 00:18:01was technically correct,
- 00:18:03but LeMessurier made his calculations
- 00:18:04assuming the building wasn't moving.
- 00:18:06This is called static conditions.
- 00:18:09But the wind tunnel gave LeMessurier a dynamic analysis,
- 00:18:12how the forces change when the building is moving around.
- 00:18:15To LeMessurier's horror, the wind tunnel analysis
- 00:18:18showed that the stresses could increase
- 00:18:20up to 60% more than originally anticipated.
- 00:18:25LeMessurier squirreled himself away in Maine
- 00:18:27and worked through the data from the wind tunnel again,
- 00:18:29joint by joint on every floor.
- 00:18:32The weakest joints were at the building's 30th floor.
- 00:18:34If those failed, the entire building would fall.
- 00:18:39But what were the chances that a storm strong enough
- 00:18:41to topple the building would pass through New York City?
- 00:18:45LeMessurier dug through the historical weather reports.
- 00:18:49On average, a storm strong enough to tear the building apart
- 00:18:52occurred every 67 years.
- 00:18:54But only if the tuned mass damper was working.
- 00:18:57If a storm knocked out power,
- 00:18:59then even 110 kilometer per hour winds
- 00:19:02blowing for just five minutes would collapse the building.
- 00:19:06In any given year,
- 00:19:07the chance of a storm that size happening was one in 16.
- 00:19:11Just one year before Citicorp was completed,
- 00:19:14wind gusts of 110 kilometers per hour
- 00:19:17roared through New York City
- 00:19:18as Hurricane Belle passed through.
- 00:19:22What do you think this moment was like for LeMessurier,
- 00:19:24when he ran these calculations, like-
- 00:19:26Oh, it must have been devastating.
- 00:19:28I mean, it just must have been, I can't imagine the fear.
- 00:19:32I can't imagine the feelings.
- 00:19:33I mean, like, it just must have been truly
- 00:19:39a moment he never thought he would live through.
- 00:19:42That storm was gonna fall down in my lifetime.
- 00:19:45And since this was July,
- 00:19:48it could fall down the summer of 1978.
- 00:19:51LeMessurier needed to decide and decide fast.
- 00:19:54But revealing this mistake could mean lawsuits,
- 00:19:57bankruptcy and professional ruin.
- 00:19:59He could stay silent,
- 00:20:00only Davenport knew and he wouldn't reveal anything,
- 00:20:03or he could entirely disappear.
- 00:20:05In a later interview he admitted, "I did say to myself,
- 00:20:08I could drive down the Maine Turnpike
- 00:20:10at a hundred miles an hour
- 00:20:11and deliberately drive into a bridge abutment.
- 00:20:14That would be the end and all of this would go away.
- 00:20:17I thought about that."
- 00:20:20But there was a 1 in 16 chance of collapse that very fall.
- 00:20:25With thousands of lives at risk,
- 00:20:27there was never any other choice but to act.
- 00:20:31After speaking to a few lawyers
- 00:20:33and other engineering experts,
- 00:20:34LeMessurier told the architect, Stubbins, and together
- 00:20:37they informed Citicorp's chairman, Walter Wriston.
- 00:20:41Within hours of that meeting,
- 00:20:42LeMessurier acquired emergency generators
- 00:20:44for the tuned mass damper.
- 00:20:45The TMD was originally designed to stabilize
- 00:20:48any swaying for comfort, but now it became the crutch
- 00:20:51that the tower leaned on.
- 00:20:53LeMessurier pinned all his hopes on it.
- 00:20:55He called the confidential repair plan Project Pandora,
- 00:20:59but that sounded ominous,
- 00:21:01so he came up with the Special Engineering Review
- 00:21:04of Events Nobody Envisioned, or Project Serene for short.
- 00:21:10Each night, welders would enter the building
- 00:21:12after everyone left, rip off the sheet rock
- 00:21:14around the chevron beams,
- 00:21:15and then weld two five-centimeter thick,
- 00:21:18two-meter long steel plates on each joint.
- 00:21:21Like Band-Aids, literally Band-Aids,
- 00:21:23on both sides of these joints.
- 00:21:25After, they'd replaced the wall
- 00:21:26and clean everything up before the office workers
- 00:21:29came back the next morning,
- 00:21:31They needed to weld over 200 joints
- 00:21:34and LeMessurier ranked them by importance,
- 00:21:36starting with the ones on the 30th floor.
- 00:21:38But the repairs wouldn't be completed
- 00:21:40before hurricane season.
- 00:21:41So Citicorp worked with the Red Cross
- 00:21:43to develop a 10 block evacuation plan.
- 00:21:46Like, how many people were at risk in the building
- 00:21:49and if it fell, would it affect other buildings?
- 00:21:51Like, were there chances of it
- 00:21:52leading to something more disastrous?
- 00:21:54Absolutely, this would have toppled
- 00:21:57and it would've toppled into another building,
- 00:22:00which would've toppled into another building,
- 00:22:02which would've continued a horrific process.
- 00:22:06So it was untold what the ultimate effects could have been.
- 00:22:11I mean, like, just the evacuation plans
- 00:22:12were how many people?
- 00:22:14Thousands, the building itself housed thousands
- 00:22:17and then the residents and the businesses
- 00:22:20surrounding the building, it was into the thousands.
- 00:22:23Despite the risk,
- 00:22:25they decided not to tell the public
- 00:22:26or even the office workers in the building.
- 00:22:29No one wanted a mass panic.
- 00:22:31Instead, they fitted strain gauges
- 00:22:33on important structural members.
- 00:22:35The gauges monitored the skyscrapers every bend and twist
- 00:22:38from a comm center eight blocks away.
- 00:22:41At least that would give them a little bit of warning.
- 00:22:44But this plan required new telephone lines,
- 00:22:46and the phone company wouldn't get around to doing this
- 00:22:48for months.
- 00:22:50So Citicorp's chairman immediately called AT&T's president
- 00:22:53and the lines were installed the next morning.
- 00:22:55Now you might not be able to install
- 00:22:57emergency telephone lines at a whim,
- 00:22:59but you can still stay connected no matter what.
- 00:23:01(phone ringing)
- 00:23:05It's probably not that important.
- 00:23:06Henry, can you hear me? Hello!
- 00:23:10Team Veritasium travels all over the globe for our videos
- 00:23:12We traveled here to New York to visit the Citicorp Center,
- 00:23:15and there's one really annoying problem.
- 00:23:17It's hard to stay connected with the rest of the team
- 00:23:19while we're on site.
- 00:23:20We either have to pay ridiculous roaming charges,
- 00:23:22find a local SIM card and hope it actually works,
- 00:23:25or search around for public Wi-Fi
- 00:23:26that might not be the most secure.
- 00:23:28That's not something we wanna be dealing with
- 00:23:29while making a video.
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- 00:24:15And now back to Project Serene.
- 00:24:16(phone ringing)
- 00:24:19(sighs) I mean, should probably take this.
- 00:24:22(phone beeps)
- 00:24:23But even though LeMessurier
- 00:24:25tried to keep Project Serene under wraps,
- 00:24:26people started asking questions.
- 00:24:29On August 8th, Citicorp released a statement
- 00:24:31about the repairs.
- 00:24:33Now, we had to cook up a line of bull, I'll tell you.
- 00:24:36And white lies at this point are entirely moral.
- 00:24:39(class laughs) You don't wanna spread terror
- 00:24:42in the community to people that don't need to be terrorized.
- 00:24:46We were terrorized, no question about that.
- 00:24:48Several newspapers reported on it,
- 00:24:50but they didn't have the details.
- 00:24:52Then LeMessurier got a message.
- 00:24:54The New York Times was trying to reach him.
- 00:24:57If he didn't respond, they would know something was up.
- 00:25:02So I mixed a martini for myself
- 00:25:04and it's one minute past six.
- 00:25:06I dialed The New York Times.
- 00:25:08I pick it up the phone, they pick up the phone,
- 00:25:11it's a tape recorder saying,
- 00:25:13The New York Times has gone on strike as of six o'clock.
- 00:25:17(class laughs)
- 00:25:18Not only did The New York Times go on strike,
- 00:25:21but all the newspapers in New York went on strike
- 00:25:24until October.
- 00:25:26So we had a press blackout
- 00:25:28and that was the greatest thing that ever happened.
- 00:25:30(class laughs)
- 00:25:32The press was off their back
- 00:25:34and the weather was beautiful.
- 00:25:36The repair work continued smoothly.
- 00:25:39But late August brought the news everyone had been dreading.
- 00:25:42Hurricane Ella starts brewing in the Caribbean.
- 00:25:47And this is the one storm that they're nervous about.
- 00:25:52The repairs were halfway done by now.
- 00:25:55I think it was a one in 200 year storm
- 00:25:58that it could withstand,
- 00:26:00but LeMessurier wasn't taking chances
- 00:26:02'cause he didn't know the intensity of the storm.
- 00:26:04And this was a strong storm.
- 00:26:06So there was, there was a chance.
- 00:26:08There was absolutely a chance
- 00:26:09and they had to prepare for that chance.
- 00:26:14By Friday, September 1st,
- 00:26:15Ella was making her way toward New York,
- 00:26:17with winds reaching 200 kilometers per hour.
- 00:26:20City officials braced to start the evacuation.
- 00:26:23Police would go door to door to get everyone out
- 00:26:25within a 10 block radius.
- 00:26:28For 24 tense hours, Ella stalled around North Carolina.
- 00:26:33Like LeMessurier said, we were sweating blood.
- 00:26:37But sometime in the night,
- 00:26:38Hurricane Ella veered off into the sea at the last minute.
- 00:26:41It intensified and hit Canada
- 00:26:43with peak winds of 225 kilometers per hour.
- 00:26:48But Citicorp was safe.
- 00:26:52LeMessurier described that next morning in New York
- 00:26:55as the most beautiful day that the world's ever seen.
- 00:26:59They completed the repairs in October,
- 00:27:01just six weeks after LeMessurier told Citicorp.
- 00:27:04Now the building, according to LeMessurier,
- 00:27:07can withstand a one in 1000 storm.
- 00:27:10The repairs cost between $4 and $5 million,
- 00:27:13but LeMessurier argued that Citicorp approved
- 00:27:15an earlier building design that cost $5 to $6 million more,
- 00:27:19so they were willing to spend that much
- 00:27:20on the skyscraper anyway.
- 00:27:24And for almost two decades,
- 00:27:26the secret was confined to a small inner circle.
- 00:27:29But in 1995, "The New Yorker"
- 00:27:32finally brought Project Serene into the light.
- 00:27:35Far from being vilified,
- 00:27:36LeMessurier was praised
- 00:27:38for owning up to his mistake
- 00:27:39and fixing the issue as soon as possible.
- 00:27:42After the article, New York updated the building code
- 00:27:45to require quartering wind calculations.
- 00:27:47And since that first damper in Citicorp,
- 00:27:49TMDs have spread across the globe.
- 00:27:52allowing architects to push skyscrapers taller and slimmer.
- 00:27:55It's in the first tall building in the world
- 00:27:58ever built with mechanical help to make the structure work.
- 00:28:02That's remarkable.
- 00:28:03Incidentally, that has been now copied
- 00:28:05a hundred times in Japan, this is ubiquitous,
- 00:28:08and when I go to Japan, I'm treated like a tin god
- 00:28:10'cause I'm the father of the tuned mass damper.
- 00:28:12I said, "Really?"
- 00:28:14Of the 20 tallest buildings in the world,
- 00:28:16six include the tuned mass damper,
- 00:28:18and they're especially critical in typhoon or earthquake-prone regions.
- 00:28:22For example, Taipei 101 has a massive 660 ton pendulum
- 00:28:27that stabilizes the building. It can withstand up to 200 kilometer per hour winds
- 00:28:32and earthquakes with magnitudes over 6.8.
- 00:28:35But the legacy of this building
- 00:28:37is still steeped in controversy.
- 00:28:39First, who was the mysterious student that started it all?
- 00:28:43I think it was spring of 1978. There's a student at Princeton, an undergraduate student
- 00:28:51by the name of Diane Hartley, and she's studying structural engineering.
- 00:28:56It was time for her to consider a senior thesis,
- 00:28:59and then they decided that a study
- 00:29:02of the new Citicorp Tower would be wonderful.
- 00:29:05It's a remarkable thesis.
- 00:29:06It contains a lot of the original engineering calculations
- 00:29:09by the engineers.
- 00:29:10She's looking through the documentation,
- 00:29:14where did they consider quartering winds?
- 00:29:17And she's not seeing it "I must be wrong," she says.
- 00:29:19She's just an undergraduate student
- 00:29:22and you guys are award-winning structural engineers.
- 00:29:26The engineer explains to Diane Hartley,
- 00:29:29quartering winds are not a factor in this building.
- 00:29:33So she's satisfied. She graduates, that's it.
- 00:29:36Doesn't think about it again.
- 00:29:39But a year after "The New Yorker" article,
- 00:29:41the BBC released a documentary on the crisis.
- 00:29:44And so she, she was holding her baby
- 00:29:47and she turned on the television, and lo and behold,
- 00:29:51she heard them reference a conversation with a student,
- 00:29:56an engineering student from New Jersey
- 00:29:58reaching out to LeMessurier.
- 00:30:00And she said, "I almost dropped my baby."
- 00:30:03And then so she just assumed for years afterwards,
- 00:30:06she assumed that it wasn't me
- 00:30:08because I didn't speak to LeMessurier.
- 00:30:10But then in 2003, her thesis advisor told Diane
- 00:30:13that he checked all the other New Jersey engineering
- 00:30:16and architecture programs, and no one else
- 00:30:18was working on a project about Citicorp in 1978.
- 00:30:22She was the only one.
- 00:30:24She never spoke to LeMessurier personally.
- 00:30:26She never claimed to speak to LeMessurier personally.
- 00:30:29The assumption was that either LeMessurier was mistaken
- 00:30:33and that it was Diane Hartley who made the call,
- 00:30:36it was a female, or more likely
- 00:30:38that LeMessurier was basically tipped off
- 00:30:42by his New York engineers.
- 00:30:44Then, in 2011,
- 00:30:45a man named Lee DeCarolis came forward.
- 00:30:48And the phone call, as we understand it,
- 00:30:50came from a student
- 00:30:51at the New Jersey Institute of Technology.
- 00:30:53His name is Lee DeCarolis.
- 00:30:55He's not asking for money,
- 00:30:56he's not asking for fame or glory.
- 00:30:58He's just saying, "This is interesting.
- 00:31:00And I'm the guy who made this call."
- 00:31:03And he said, "Yeah,
- 00:31:05I had a conversation with Bill LeMessurier."
- 00:31:06And he pretty much lined up
- 00:31:07with what LeMessurier himself said.
- 00:31:09Sadly, LeMessurier passed away in 2007
- 00:31:12before he could confirm the student's identity.
- 00:31:16Believe it or not, 40 years later, there's still,
- 00:31:19I learned, a lot of raw feeling still on this.
- 00:31:23People aren't anxious to talk about this,
- 00:31:25especially people that were involved in it,
- 00:31:28even people that weren't involved in it
- 00:31:29but were tangentially involved in it.
- 00:31:33We reached out to a LeMessurier Associates
- 00:31:35and they refused to respond to our request.
- 00:31:36You think that the namesake for their company stood up
- 00:31:41and did the right thing,
- 00:31:42but I don't think they wanna be associated with mistakes.
- 00:31:45Their project description for Citicorp
- 00:31:47doesn't even mention the repairs.
- 00:31:49The building was sold to Boston Properties in 2001,
- 00:31:51who renamed it 601 Lexington.
- 00:31:55They also didn't respond to our request for comment
- 00:31:57and refused to let us film inside the building.
- 00:32:00Further questions arose in 2021, with a new study
- 00:32:04from the National Institute of Standards and Technology.
- 00:32:07They wanted to see if quartering winds were more demanding
- 00:32:09for a building like Citicorp,
- 00:32:11Although they did conclude
- 00:32:12that the pressure from perpendicular winds was greater,
- 00:32:15their analysis didn't include any internal structure
- 00:32:18specific to Citicorp.
- 00:32:19As for LeMessurier, the engineering field
- 00:32:21still regards his actions as upstanding.
- 00:32:23And the Citicorp case is taught all over the world
- 00:32:25as a case of good engineering ethics.
- 00:32:27In fact, in my own engineering ethics course,
- 00:32:29I learned about the Citicorp building.
- 00:32:31And every structural engineer experiences this.
- 00:32:33When you actually feel the weight of the responsibility,
- 00:32:37you're saying, "Based on my engineering,
- 00:32:39that building is gonna stand up."
- 00:32:40Nobody else worries about it.
- 00:32:42And so if you think about the emotional pressure
- 00:32:44that Bill LeMessurier was under
- 00:32:46and then needing to come back and do something about it
- 00:32:48and to mobilize and to hold that during this entire process,
- 00:32:52it's truly a remarkable story.
- 00:32:55I mean, I can't imagine it. I can't imagine it.
- 00:32:59I said, look, if you got a license from the state
- 00:33:01and a certification from university first,
- 00:33:04then now you're gonna use that license
- 00:33:06to hold yourself out as a professional,
- 00:33:08you have a responsibility beyond yourself.
- 00:33:11If you see something that is a social risk,
- 00:33:14good heavens, this thing would kill thousands,
- 00:33:16you must do something, you must do something.
- Citicorp Center
- Bill LeMessurier
- structural engineering
- tuned mass damper
- Project Serene
- building codes
- engineering ethics
- New York City
- hurricane risk
- skyscraper design