Katrantzos Sport, Athens — the Roof Slab Expanded, Pushed the Columns, Floors Fell
Summary
The Katrantzos Sport department store, an eight-storey reinforced-concrete building in central Athens, partially collapsed in the early hours of 19 December 1980, when an after-hours arson fire drove the unprotected concrete roof slab to expand, push out the perimeter columns, and drop a major part of the upper floors; the building was empty, so the death toll was zero. The fire did not burn the building down. It heated the concrete until the structure tried to expand, and because the frame had no room to expand into, the expansion turned into force — force that pushed the perimeter columns outward until the floors they carried fell.
This is one of the cleanest documented cases of fire-induced collapse by restrained thermal expansion in a concrete frame. The fire, set around 03:07 with a simultaneous attack on the nearby Minion store, began on the seventh floor and ran the full height of the building unchecked: there was no automatic sprinkler system and effectively no vertical or horizontal compartmentation to slow it. Over a burn of two to three hours, fire temperatures reached roughly 1,000 degrees Celsius. The 18-centimetre conventional concrete roof slab, supported on 41-centimetre square reinforced tied columns, expanded horizontally as it heated — and with no expansion joints in the floors or the roof to absorb that movement, the slab simply shoved its own supports aside. One corner of the roof displaced laterally by almost 60 centimetres.
That displacement was the failure. The columns and connections at the top of the building were overloaded not by the weight they were designed to carry but by the differential thermal expansion the structure could not relieve, and a major part of the fifth through eighth floors came down. The lower floors and the building's overall stability survived, which is why the case is catalogued as a partial collapse rather than a total one.
The arson was never solved; the case eventually reached the statute of limitations and was legally closed. But the structural verdict was unambiguous and is the reason the building appears in the engineering literature, including NIST's survey of fire-induced building collapses. Katrantzos is the textbook demonstration that a reinforced-concrete frame can be defeated by fire without burning, if its thermal expansion is restrained and it has nowhere to grow.
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Timeline
The Build: A Standard Concrete Frame With No Room to Grow
Katrantzos Sport was, structurally, an ordinary building — and that is the point. It was an eight-storey reinforced-concrete department store of conventional construction: a frame of 41-centimetre square, reinforced, tied columns supporting conventional cast slabs, the topmost of which was an 18-centimetre conventional concrete roof slab. Nothing about the frame was experimental, and on paper it was entirely adequate for the gravity loads, the crowds of a Christmas-season retail floor, and the lateral demands of a mid-century Athens commercial block.
Its vulnerability was not in any member's strength. It was in two omissions that only matter under fire. The first was the absence of expansion joints. The floors and roof were detailed as continuous, jointless diaphragms, which is structurally tidy at room temperature but leaves the building with no way to relieve dimensional change. Concrete and its embedded steel expand when heated; a slab that cannot expand freely must instead push on whatever restrains it. The second omission was at the occupancy level: the store ran as an open multi-storey retail volume with no automatic sprinklers and effectively no vertical or horizontal compartmentation. There was nothing to keep a fire on one floor from becoming a fire on all of them, and therefore nothing to keep the heating localized.
Together these two features set the trap. A fire-resistant building does two things that Katrantzos could not: it confines a fire so that only part of the structure is heated, and it tolerates the thermal movement of the parts that are heated. Katrantzos confined nothing and tolerated nothing. It was a frame with no room to grow, wrapped around a retail floor plan that guaranteed a fire would heat all of it at once.
The Failure: Expansion as a Demolition Force
The fire was set around 03:07 on 19 December 1980, on the seventh floor, as one half of a coordinated arson that also struck the Minion store the same night. The building was empty, which is why the death toll is zero — a fact of timing, not of safety design. With no sprinklers to check the fire and no compartmentation to confine it, the flames spread through the open upper floors and developed into a sustained, building-wide fire. The fire department arrived roughly thirty minutes later, by which point the upper storeys were fully involved.
What happened next is the part that distinguishes Katrantzos from an ordinary burnout. Over two to three hours, fire temperatures reached approximately 1,000 degrees Celsius, soaking heat into the concrete slabs and columns. As the concrete heated, it expanded. The roof slab, an 18-centimetre plate spanning the full footprint of the building, grew in every horizontal direction. In a building with expansion joints, that growth would have been absorbed harmlessly. Here, the slab was continuous and restrained by the perimeter frame, so its thermal expansion had only one outlet: it pushed outward on the columns that held its edges.
The forces this produced were large and entirely lateral — directions the columns were never sized to resist. One corner of the roof was driven almost 60 centimetres out of its original position. The 41-centimetre tied columns and their connections, designed to carry vertical load, were overloaded by horizontal demand from the expanding slab above them. As the perimeter supports were pushed out of plumb, the floors they carried lost their seats, and a major part of the fifth through eighth storeys collapsed. The mechanism was not fire weakening the concrete to the point of crushing; it was restrained differential thermal expansion overloading specific elements and connections. The building was demolished by its own growth.
The Reckoning: A Structural Verdict Without a Culprit
The criminal investigation went nowhere. Police detained suspects linked to anarchist circles, an organisation claimed the attacks on 22 December, and the cases of Katrantzos and Minion were never solved; they eventually reached the statute of limitations and were closed. There was no trial, no convicted arsonist, and no legal accounting for the two billion drachmas of damage the two fires caused.
The engineering reckoning was more conclusive, even without a culprit. Investigators and later analysts converged on a single, well-supported diagnosis: the collapse was attributable to the large horizontal expansion of the unprotected 18-centimetre concrete roof slab, carried on 41-centimetre reinforced square tied columns, in a structure with no expansion joints in its floors or roof. The named cause was the restraint of the differential thermal expansion, which overloaded specific elements — the perimeter columns and the slab-to-column connections at the top of the building.
That diagnosis is why Katrantzos outlived the news cycle. It became a reference case in the fire-engineering literature and was incorporated into NIST's analysis of building-collapse incidents as a documented example of fire-induced collapse driven by thermal expansion rather than by direct loss of material strength. It belongs to the same family of lessons that the WTC 7 investigation would later make famous: that thermal expansion of restrained floor systems, not fire "melting" structure, can be the governing collapse mechanism. Katrantzos demonstrated it two decades early, in concrete, and in plain view.
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Contributing Factors
Aftermath
No one died at Katrantzos Sport; the arson was set after hours, so the toll was zero, and the building's loss was counted in drachmas — part of an estimated two billion drachmas of damage across the Katrantzos and Minion fires set that night. The arson cases were never solved and reached the statute of limitations, leaving no convicted party. What endured was the structural lesson. Katrantzos became a documented case study in fire-induced collapse by restrained thermal expansion in reinforced concrete, cited in the fire-engineering literature and incorporated into NIST's survey of building-collapse incidents. It reinforced the design principle that structures must accommodate the thermal movement of their members under fire — through expansion joints, through compartmentation that limits the heated area, and through detailing that does not lock a slab into a frame it can tear apart by simply getting hot. In the forensic record it stands as the concrete-framed forerunner of the thermal-expansion collapse mechanism: proof, decades before it became a household argument, that a building can be brought down by fire without any of its material having to melt.
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Lessons
- Detail every floor and roof to relieve thermal growth — provide expansion joints sized for fire temperatures, because a slab that cannot expand will push out the columns that hold it.
- Account for restrained thermal expansion as a real fire load case, not an afterthought; a frame designed only for gravity can be overloaded laterally by its own heated, restrained members.
- Compartmentalise and sprinkler open retail and assembly buildings so that fire heats only part of the structure at a time, limiting the expansion the frame must absorb.
- Remember that fire defeats structures by movement as well as by strength — diagnose the thermal-expansion path, not just the question of whether a member has lost capacity.
- Catalogue and learn from partial collapses; Katrantzos kept its lower floors but lost its top four, and that survivable failure carried the same lesson a total collapse would have, decades before the field was forced to relearn it. ---
References
- Analysis of Needs and Existing Capabilities for Full-Scale Fire Resistance Testing (NIST GCR 08-917) NIST (Beitel & Iwankiw, Hughes Associates)
- NIST GCR 08-917 — full report PDF (Katrantzos collapse case) NIST publication archive
- The 1980 Arson Attacks That Ended the Era of Greek Department Stores Greek Reporter
- Fire gutted two of Greece's largest department stores today UPI Archives (19 December 1980) — verify URL resolves
- Katrantzos Department Building in Athens after the 1980 Fire — partial roof and column collapse (figure) ResearchGate (verify access)