The building had a weird design because it was built on top of a electrical substation from like the 1950s. So the building had to straddle this thing with its foundations, which resulted in the building having several failure critical columns. As far as I remember the fire didn't actually melt the column, but made one of the critical steel columns expand enough that it shifted and dropped the beam it was supporting which lead to progressive failure of the structure.
The building had a weird design because it was built on top of a electrical substation from like the 1950s. So the building had to straddle this thing with its foundations, which resulted in the building having several failure critical columns. As far as I remember the fire didn't actually melt the column, but made one of the critical steel columns expand enough that it shifted and dropped the beam it was supporting which lead to progressive failure of the structure.