> @LionelHutz To me, that column without lower level balconies is ending with the 11th floor balcony right above the windows with lights on
That just goes to show that different people will see what they think they already know, when presented with unclear imagery. To me, frame 3 (the one I posted in my comparison pic), and also 18, clearly show the strip of separated windows below the 12th floor balcony going up one floor above the lights. Frame 0 (although full of artifacts) and 1 also appear to show something where floor 13 should be, at the right hand half of the collapse area.
The 13th floor should be present over the double pillar, and the right side, but not over the left side (there was no floor 13 there). I'm struggling to see in your version what the visible structure on the left side on that floor is.
I also put the (not under dispute afaik) floors on the right side in so we can see how much the building has dropped. In my interpretation the camera has actually triggered pretty much at the start, the floors still align well, only floor 13 is missing, and it looks like (with the eye of faith at least) you can see that collapse in frames 0-2.
> @Santos81 Most of the “lights” in the x10/11 stacks are reflections from glass that is no longer in place. The two bright flashes from the X10 stack are reflections from a fire alarm signal on the exterior landings of stairwell 1. There are a couple of exceptions but it’s a very macabre subject I don’t feel is appropriate to discuss in detail.
We're looking up from ground level, what are those windows reflecting? Surely we'd be looking at the sky reflected? The 'lights' in 911, 1011 and 1111 look like real lights. But yes, if they're real lights that means people turned them on and didn't get out in time - nicer not to think about that. I don't think it's particularly relevant to the engineering 'what happened' side.
Do you know what floors those fire alarm signals were on? That would clear up which floor is which.
@Demented/@Optical - there is definitely bad news involved in that roof/PH floor.
Here is my attempt to make a plausible 'roof first' story. But I'm still not convinced - it just seems a huge coincidence that two separate bits of the structure would be in a bad way at the same time.
- The day before, roofing contractors get up there and cause some roof level overloading (bad roof anchor drilling sites hitting some rebar, or putting heavy stuff on the roof of 13, or something)
- The penthouse roof slab starts to puncture with the roof columns at K/L/M 9.1. It doesn't collapse, because it's still supported by the walls, which aren't structural but they're still well built enough to take a single slab load. This causes the 'creaking' (slab top rebar ductilely failing in tension around the puncture? load redistribution noises) heard be 1211 the previous night. Nobody notices because the deflection is small and the slab is hidden under roofing material
- Failure continues and the next night the walls and roof columns fail. Initial stages cause 'construction noises' (as per 111) as load changes in the structure. The PH roof crushes floor 13's facade (spraying glass from the balcony windows and dust down in front of 111) and falls down onto floor 12's roof.
- Some or all of the roof parapet falls onto the planters in front of 111, this could be the 'loud crash like a wall falling'
- This extra load causes the pool deck to fail and we know the story from there
Alternatively, the failure causes a redistribution of load which affects M9.1 and causes the M9.1-M11.1 beam to detach from M9.1. This then puts the plaza slab into overstress and starts the plaza failure, without anything falling. In this version the failure of the PH roof 'sounds like a wall falling' (because it is), and that noise is transmitted through the columns so is loud in 111. This also wakes up 611 but she was asleep so didn't register it consciously.
I still favour a plaza-first failure, but if you think that frames 0-2 of the collapse show floor 13 collapsing first, perhaps a partial failure of M9.1 from the loss of support from the pool deck is what causes the roof slab to let go.