Re: Commissioned Report on Indiana Fair Tragedy
I've worked on several stages where either the promoter or roof supplier had an on-site weather guy with a radar feed from a commercial service (Barrons, IIRC, delivered by XM) and weather instruments. Most of the time, though, the anemometer isn't at the peak of the roof. Based on what's in the report I think more than 1 anemometer might be in order, too.
In one of these situations a storm blew up so fast that the 2 minute delay from NOAA to the commercial supplier to end user was sufficient that the storm was visible and obvious by the time it showed up on the computer. And it hit about a minute later. Significant damage to roof, although it stayed upright. This was a 'popcorn' storm that can just happen and be gone in 15 or 20 minutes. The instrumentation and radar can't do much when a storm takes under 5 minutes to build and hit.
If you're reading the Thornton Tomasetti report, pay attention to some key elements: the contractor appears to have not requested new engineering review from James Thomas for the 2011 roof loading or the guying configuration (that was very different from 2010) and the engineering done for James Thomas in 2010 is repudiated by Thornton's calculations. TT also found issues with the design of the "fin plate" lifting components as well as defective or failed welds.
While this is only 1 report, and Thomas and Mid America will have their own experts in court, it doesn't look good for either of them. The state fair committee gets their shellacking from the report by Witt Associates regarding their emergency planning as well as some pointed questioning by TT about the Fair not requiring current engineering documents and an on-site roof engineer to supervise the build and superior loading of the roof.
I used the word "appears" above. I picked that word because neither Mid America or James Thomas Engineering cooperated in the Thornton Tomasetti investigation, choosing to claim "trade secret" status for much of their involvement. I find Thomas' use of this interesting because some of the documents and base engineering info for components of the structure are available on the Thomas web site.
Time will tell. The only thing "for sure" is that temporary demountable structures will come under much greater scrutiny and regulation. The costs will go up accordingly and there will be further pressure on sound, lighting and video to lower their prices. It will suck.