CTV Building — Non-Ductile Columns That Pancaked Six Storeys and Killed 115
Summary
At 12:51 p.m. on 22 February 2011, a magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck Christchurch, New Zealand, and the six-storey Canterbury Television (CTV) building at 249 Madras Street collapsed in seconds, killing 115 people — about 60 percent of the entire earthquake's death toll of 185. The Royal Commission of Inquiry into Building Failure Caused by the Canterbury Earthquakes and the parallel Department of Building and Housing (DBH) technical investigation reached the same conclusion: the ground shaking was severe, but the building came down because its own structure was under-designed. Its reinforced-concrete columns were non-ductile, starved of confinement steel, and unable to sustain the displacements demanded of them.
The mechanism was brittle, not exotic. Thin reinforced-concrete floor slabs sat on slender columns and were braced by an off-centre pair of shear walls — a north service core and a south wall — that left the structure torsionally unbalanced. When the earthquake drove the floors sideways, the columns had to follow. Lacking the close-spaced transverse ties that let a ductile column bend without bursting, they reached the limit of their cover concrete at very small drifts, lost their ability to carry vertical load, and failed. Once the columns on one side let go, the floors above dropped one onto the next in a classic pancake collapse. Only the north core was left standing.
The building had been designed in 1986 and completed in 1987 by Alan Reay Consultants Ltd. The structural design was carried out by David Harding, an engineer who had not previously designed a building taller than two storeys, working without adequate supervision from the firm's principal. The Royal Commission found the design was deficient and should not have been approved, that Harding had worked beyond his competence, and that the building did not comply with the loadings and concrete codes in force when it was built. The structure that fell in 2011 had carried a latent overload trap in its columns since the day it opened. A junior engineer was assigned work above his experience, a developer pressed for minimum-cost design, a peer review and a council consent passed a deficient design, and a non-ductile load path was built into a country that had already moved decisively toward ductile detailing. The earthquake supplied the demand; the building had never had the capacity.
Timeline
The Building and Its Eccentric Frame
The CTV building was a six-storey reinforced-concrete office block of unremarkable appearance: thin floor slabs spanning between slender columns, with lateral resistance provided not by a balanced moment frame but by two shear walls placed off-centre — a service core at the north end, a wall to the south. That eccentricity is the building's first structural sin. When stiff elements are bunched on one side of a floor plan, an earthquake does not merely push the building sideways; it twists it. The centre of stiffness and the centre of mass do not coincide, so the floors rotate about the stiff north core and the columns farthest from it — on the south and west — are forced through the largest displacements. The columns least able to deform were the ones the layout demanded should deform the most.
The columns themselves were the fatal deficiency. By 1986 New Zealand practice required concrete columns and joints to be confined with close-spaced transverse ties so they could yield in a strong earthquake without their concrete bursting and their load capacity collapsing. The CTV columns had very little of that confinement steel and a large proportion of unconfined cover concrete. The DBH investigation and the Royal Commission found they could sustain only very small drifts — well under one percent — before the cover concrete reached its strain limit and the column lost its ability to carry the floors above. These were not ductile columns that would bend and warn; they were brittle columns that would crush and drop the building. Combined with the torsional plan, the structure had a load path with no reserve and no graceful failure mode.
The Collapse Sequence
When the magnitude 6.3 earthquake struck on 22 February 2011, its motion was unusually intense — close to the city, with strong vertical and horizontal components. The floors were thrown sideways and the eccentric plan twisted them about the north core, driving the south and west columns past their tiny displacement capacity. The cover concrete spalled, the lightly tied cores crushed, and the columns lost axial capacity almost simultaneously across one face. This is the defining feature of a non-ductile column failure: sudden, near-simultaneous, and total. There is no progressive yielding, no redistribution to neighbours, because the neighbours are equally brittle and equally overloaded.
With the columns gone on one side, the floor slabs lost their support and dropped. Each falling floor struck the one below, and the impact drove it down in turn — the pancake mechanism, in which gravity, not the earthquake, finishes the building. The beams and slabs broke away from the north core as they fell; the drag bars meant to tie the floors to the shear walls failed, so the one stiff surviving element could not arrest the collapse of the floors it was supposed to brace. In seconds the six storeys lay flattened, only the north core standing above the rubble. The collapse was fast and complete enough that survival depended almost entirely on where a person had been sitting when the floor beneath them fell.
The Reckoning: Competence, Supervision, and a Deficient Consent
The two investigations that followed did not blame the earthquake. Both the DBH technical investigation and the Royal Commission found that, while the February shaking was severe, the building collapsed because its structure was deficient and non-compliant with the codes in force when it was designed. The Royal Commission's Final Report concluded the design should not have been approved: the columns lacked the confinement required for ductile behaviour, the beam-column joints were inadequately detailed and prone to brittle shear failure, and the eccentric wall layout produced torsional response the columns could not survive.
The finding that mattered most was procedural rather than metallurgical. The design had been performed by David Harding, who had never before designed a building taller than two storeys, without adequate supervision from the firm's principal, Alan Reay; the developer had pressed for minimum-cost design. The design then passed a peer review and a council consent that should have caught the deficiencies and did not. No villain, no defective concrete batch, no freak load: a junior engineer placed beyond his competence, unsupervised, his deficient design waved through the checks that existed precisely to catch it. No one was criminally prosecuted — in 2017 police declined to lay charges — and the consequences that followed were professional, with Engineering New Zealand upholding a disciplinary complaint against Reay for inadequate supervision in 2024.
Contributing Factors
Aftermath
The CTV building collapse killed 115 people — about 60 percent of the 185 who died in the 22 February 2011 Christchurch earthquake — and stands as the deadliest building failure in New Zealand's history. No criminal prosecution followed; in 2017 police declined to charge anyone, and the formal sanction came only in 2024, when Engineering New Zealand's disciplinary committee upheld a complaint against the firm's principal for inadequate supervision. The legacy lies in the codes and in practice. The Royal Commission's Final Report drove sweeping change in New Zealand seismic engineering: stricter assessment of existing earthquake-prone buildings, reform of the consenting and peer-review system, sharper expectations around engineer competence and supervision, and renewed scrutiny of pre-1990s non-ductile concrete buildings nationwide. Internationally, CTV became the modern textbook case for what non-ductile column detailing costs in a real earthquake — proof that a building's seismic survival is decided not by the violence of the ground but by whether its own columns were ever detailed to bend instead of break.
Lessons
- Detail every gravity-carrying column for ductility, not just strength: confine it with close-spaced ties so seismic displacement deforms it without destroying its capacity to hold up the floors above.
- Locate lateral-force-resisting walls so the centre of stiffness sits near the centre of mass; eccentric bracing twists the floor plan and concentrates the worst demand on the columns least able to survive it.
- Make the connections that tie a diaphragm to its bracing at least as strong and ductile as the elements they join, because a surviving shear wall is useless if the floors can break away from it.
- Match the engineer to the task: do not assign multi-storey seismic design to someone whose experience stops at small buildings, and if you must, supervise closely enough to catch what inexperience cannot see.
- Treat peer review and consent as a re-derivation of the load path against the governing code, never a confirmation of paperwork; a check that does not redo the analysis offers only false assurance.
References
- [Final Report — Volume Six: Canterbury Television Building (CTV)]( — Royal Commission of Inquiry into Building Failure Caused by the Canterbury Earthquakes
- Technical Investigation into the Structural Performance of the CTV Building
- [CTV Building]( — Wikipedia
- [Committee decision on CTV Building collapse]( — Engineering New Zealand
- Timeline: CTV building collapse