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Title: Paul Laffoley,member of design team of WTC, comments on 9/11
Source: [None]
URL Source: http://media.putfile.com/Paul-Laffoley-WTC
Published: Apr 20, 2007
Author: Paul Laffoley Interview
Post Date: 2007-04-20 22:20:16 by honway
Ping List: *9-11*     Subscribe to *9-11*
Keywords: None
Views: 446256
Comments: 38

Click below for an excerpt from the Paul Laffoley interview.

http://media.putfile.com/Paul-Laffoley-WTC

Bio on Paul Laffoley

http://www.laffoleyarchive.com/laffoley_writings/bio_laffoley.html

LAFFOLEY ARCHIVE: Paul Laffoley Biographical Info CONDENSED BIOGRAPHY:

Laffoley attended Brown University, graduating in 1962 with honors in Classics, Philosophy, and Art History.

In 1963, he attended the Harvard Graduate School of Design, and apprenticed with the sculptor Mirko Basaldella before being dismissed from the institution. He was dismissed for "conceptual deviance", after the majority of his designs were given a grade that designates the project not as good or bad, but as 'currently technologically or physically impossible'.

Thereafter, he moved to New York to apprentice with the visionary architect Friedrich Kiesler. He was also hired for the design team of the World Trade Center, but was soon after fired by the chief architect, Minoru Yamasaki, for his unconventional ideas. He had apparently always been quite an 'unconventional' person. By Laffoley's account, he spoke his first word ("Constantinople") at the age of six months, and then lapsed into 4 years of silence, having been diagnosed with slight Autism. Laffoley has written that, in his senior year at Brown, he was given eight electric-shock treatments. As a child he attended the progressive Mary Lee Burbank School in Belmont, Massachusetts, where his draftsman's talent was ridiculed by his Abstract Expressionist teachers. Subscribe to *9-11*

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Begin Trace Mode for Comment # 21.

#4. To: honway, Christine, Robin, Aristeides, Red Jones, Diana, Kamala, All (#0)

Sounds like a distracting piece of disinformation to me.

The building was perfect for controlled demolition, but that doesn't imply daddy or junior bin Laden. The dancing art students were Mossad.

(BAC is quiet on this one; take note.)


SKYDRIFTER  posted on  2007-04-21   12:48:59 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#5. To: SKYDRIFTER (#4)

disinformation

to all of you...paul laffoley is sincere...i'm the guy who interviewed him and he is my friend...

he is an extremely accomplished and visionary architect and artist who used to hang out with guys like buckminster fuller and WAS ON THE ORIGINAL WTC DESIGN TEAM UNDER MINORU YAMASAKI...he is considered an absolute polymath and genius by any who encounter him...i had no idea he had worked on the original wtc design team in the early 1960's until i interviewed him in february...i also had no intention of talking about 911 or anything like that...the program was focused on art, imagination and creativity...hah...but this little gem came out when we were talking about his background...

but i'll tell you this...he is for real and knows a great deal about the construction on the wtc comlpex...and we will be talking more about it in the near future...

o)<

mike

dragger2k  posted on  2007-04-25   18:49:22 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#7. To: dragger2k, honway, InsideJob (#5)

ping to dragger2k's post

christine  posted on  2007-04-25   18:55:35 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#8. To: christine (#7)

I'm going to take all of this with a large grain of salt.

Critter  posted on  2007-04-25   18:56:37 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#12. To: Critter, SKYDRIFTER (#8)

Laffoley said that buildings in the early 1960s and 1970s in New York were built to be brought down by controlled demolition.

you don't think this is plausible?

christine  posted on  2007-04-25   19:23:23 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#20. To: christine, dragger2k (#12)

Laffoley said that buildings in the early 1960s and 1970s in New York were built to be brought down by controlled demolition.

you don't think this is plausible?

http://www.istructe.org/thestructuralengineer/HC/Abstract.asp?PID=4626

Report: Design for Demolition

Why design for demolition?

In the past, structural engineers have paid scant attention to the problems associated with the eventual demolition of their structures. The likely reasons for this are, perhaps, firstly, that the lifespans of traditional buildings have been so long and uncertain that the problem of demolition has had little immediacy at the design stage. Secondly, the client who commissions the construction of a building is often not the client who commissions its demolition; economic considerations are thus sharply separated. Thirdly, techniques for the demolition of traditional gravity structures are reasonably straightforward, requiring little or no engineering input.

P. Waldron and D.I. Blockley

honway  posted on  2007-04-25   20:40:26 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


#21. To: All (#20)

http://www.newscientist.com/article.ns?id=dn1281

Classic demolition

The collapse of the WTC towers looked like a classic controlled demolition, said Mike Taylor of the National Association of Demolition Contractors in Doylestown, Pennsylvania.

"If there's any good thing about this it's that the towers tended not to weaken to one side," said Taylor. "They could have tipped onto other buildings or into the river across the West Side highway."

The collapse of the WTC towers mirrored the strategy used by demolition experts. In controlled demolitions, explosives are placed not just on the lowest three floors but also on several consecutive floors about a third of the way up the building.

The explosions at the higher floors enable the collapse to gain downward momentum as gravity pulls the full weight of unsupported higher floors down into lower floors in a snowballing effect.

On Tuesday, the impacts of aeroplanes on the higher floors replaced the explosives. The collapse of the higher floors caused the floors below to be crushed. "It cascaded down like an implosion," says Taylor.

The lack of collapse in higher stories was one reason why the 454 kilogram bomb detonated in the underground garage of the World Trade Center in 1993 failed to destroy the building.

honway  posted on  2007-04-25   20:48:56 ET  Reply   Untrace   Trace   Private Reply  


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