Tower of Babel
When Ambition Surpasses Structural Integrity; The news from 235 East 42nd Street is a chilling reminder of a truth every architect and engineer learns in their first year of study: Failure is not an option. Yet, as the steel columns buckle and the floors sag at the former Pfizer headquarters, it appears that in the rush to solve a housing crisis, this fundamental principle has been forgotten. The structural failure of two support columns on the 21st and 22nd floors of New York City’s largest office-to-residential conversion is not a "freak accident." It is a symptom of a systemic breakdown where political urgency collided with structural reality. The building, designed to house 1,600 families, is now a "frozen zone," a stark monument to the danger of prioritizing speed over safety. The Fallacy of "Only Two" The narrative that only two columns failed is a dangerous minimization. In structural engineering, a column does not buckle in isolation. It fails beca...