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Full News Story
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For Immediate Release
Thursday, December 16, 2004
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www.RenewNYC.com
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Contact:
Joanna Rose - LMDC
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(212) 962-2300
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GOVERNOR PATAKI AND MAYOR BLOOMBERG JOIN ARCHITECTS MICHAEL ARAD, PETER WALKER AND MAX BOND TO REVEAL NEW DETAILS OF THE WORLD TRADE CENTER MEMORIAL
Design Includes a Vast Landscaped Civic Plaza, Cascading Voids with Deeply Recessed Pools and an Area for Those Lost but Never Identified
New Schematic Design Features Gathering Spaces Above and Below Ground, Historic Access to Bedrock and Box Beam Columns, View of Exposed Slurry Wall, Memorial Hall, and Family Area to Provide Space for Reflection
Governor George E. Pataki and Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg joined Architects
Michael Arad, Peter Walker, and Max Bond today to unveil the schematic design
for a memorial at the World Trade Center site. Reflecting Absence will honor
all those lost in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and February 26,
1993.
Governor George E. Pataki said, "As we move forward with the rebuilding, the
memorial continues to be our first priority and the centerpiece of our efforts.
Michael Arad, Peter Walker, and Max Bond have created a moving and fitting
memorial to those we lost at the World Trade Center site. The memorial will
help tell the story of September 11th and the lives we lost, so that future
generations will understand the enormity of what happened here. The memorial
captures our sense of loss, as well as the courage and hope that prevailed in
the face of tragedy. The design also includes a special place for family
members to reflect on their loved ones, while ensuring that there will be
access to the bedrock and box beam columns of the original World Trade Center
site. I want to thank our team of architects, our Memorial selection jury, and
all those who have worked together to create this powerful and enduring
design."
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg said, "The memorial designed by Michael Arad and
Peter Walker was selected among many outstanding designs because of the way it
captures the depth of the attacks on our City, while also giving shape to New
York's spirit and our unshakable hope for the future" said Mayor Bloomberg.
"This design provides for places for reflection, for quiet retreat and for
prayer. I believe that as a City, as a nation and as a global community, we
need to be able to make these physical, personal and spiritual connections to
the events of 2001 and 1993, and that need is most intense for victims' family
members and their friends. I thank Max Bond for helping to give shape to
Michael and Peter's vision, and everyone who has contributed to this important
process."
In January of 2004, a 13-member jury selected ‘Reflecting Absence' by Michael
Arad and Peter Walker as the design for the World Trade Center Memorial. For
the past several months, the design team, with Associate Architect Max Bond,
embarked on the schematic design process to develop the physical and
programmatic elements of the memorial. The memorial features a lively
landscaped civic plaza with two massive voids aligned with the footprints where
the twin towers once stood.
Elements of the design include a large ceremonial one-and-a-half acre clearing
on the plaza level and a gallery on the second memorial level where the names
of those lost on September 11, 2001 and February 26, 1993 can be viewed while
water cascades behind them. Between the two pools, Memorial Hall offers a space
for visitors to sit and reflect, and serves as a gathering place that orients
visitors through the use of a directory to help loved ones find the names of
those lost those fateful days. It also offers the opportunity for future
programming for remembering all who we lost. On the lowest level, history is
preserved. The very foundations of the World Trade Center, the original box
beam column remnants can be accessed along with the exposed slurry wall. A
contemplation room provides a space for the remains of those lost and never
identified and an adjacent area offers a sacred space for victims' families.
Through the schematic design process, an intense period of investigation and
design advancement, an even more poetic and precise design has developed. The
design allows for visitors to enter the memorial between the footprints
descending down two 200-foot ramps, first to the west and then to the east, and
landing on the memorial level. The memorial level includes Memorial Hall
connecting the two viewing galleries that surround the reflecting pools and
whose exterior walls delineate the original footprints. Between the two pools,
and off Memorial Hall, visitors can travel down to the lowest level of the
memorial where the Contemplation Room, family area, and space for the medical
examiner are found. On the lowest level, the exposed box beam remnants can be
seen and touched and in the northwest quadrant, visitors will see and touch the
massive edifice of the exposed slurry wall. As visitors return above ground to
the plaza level, the surrounding trees mediate their return to daily life. By
working with the adjacent projects, the design team established an elevation
for the Memorial plaza which minimizes steps and walls surrounding the plaza.
To further increase accessibility to the Memorial, the truck ramp once
envisioned for location on the southern portion of the memorial site has been
relocated to the south of Liberty Street, making the memorial area a completely
pedestrian experience and an integral part of Lower Manhattan.
LMDC Chairman John C. Whitehead said, "Today, we take another important step
forward in the memorial process. In doing so, we advance swiftly toward the day
when the original memorial idea – ‘Reflecting Absence' – will be fleshed out in
stone and steel, water, and light. On behalf of both the LMDC and the Memorial
Foundation, I want to congratulate architects Michael Arad, Peter Walker, and
Max Bond. Through the evolution of your work, your inspired concept has become
an even more inspirational and complete design."
LMDC President Kevin M. Rampe said, "The design team should be commended for
their efforts. Working with the LMDC, they have created a tremendous memorial
experience that will resonate with generations to come. With this memorial
design, we fill the final void in our site and help fill the void in our
hearts. The schematic design has fulfilled our collective expectations for this
memorial—a design which will convey the magnitude of the loss we suffered,
while also reminding us of the inspirational heroism we witnessed."
Michael Arad, Partner at Handel Architects, said, "We have taken the powerful
concepts on which the design is based and working together and listening to
countless numbers of people to whom the success of the memorial is of the
utmost importance, we have refined the design and reinforced its intent. The
memorial will honor all and give us a place to gather, reflect, and find
meaning in the loss that we have all suffered."
Peter Walker of Peter Walker and Partners said, "We have accomplished a great
deal in a very short period of time. With this schematic design, we have
created a great canopy of hundreds of oak trees to form the memorial grove,
creating a memorable and spiritual green space apart from the busy city and
embracing the memorial pools. In the southwest quadrant of the grove, a grass
paved glade provides a home for the September 11th ceremonies and other family
gatherings."
Max Bond of Davis Brody Bond LLP said, "Our collective goal throughout the
schematic design process was to make the visitor's experience as meaningful,
informative, and comfortable as possible. We are very pleased with the
provision of a range of choices now available to visitors to the Memorial. Some
may simply experience the Park and view the pools from above. Others may choose
to descend to the Memorial Hall from which they might visit either or both
pools. Upon returning to ground level they would again experience the park, a
symbol of renewal."
A design statement is attached which describes each of the three levels of the
memorial.
The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation launched the international World
Trade Center Site Memorial Competition in April 2003. Guidelines for the
competition were developed based on the memorial mission statement and program.
These guiding documents were developed by two separate volunteer committees,
comprised of family members, residents, survivors, first responders, arts and
architecture professionals and community leaders. The documents were shaped by
thousands of public comments generated at public meetings in every borough,
Long Island, Connecticut and New Jersey, as well as comments received from
around the world through letters and the LMDC's website.
In what became the largest design competition in history, 5,201 submissions were
received from 63 nations and 49 states. All 5,201 proposals were evaluated by a
13-member memorial jury comprised of individuals representing various points of
view, including world renowned artists and architects, a family member, a Lower
Manhattan resident and business owner, representatives of the Governor and
Mayor, and other prominent arts and cultural professionals. The jury evaluated
proposals in a two stage process based on how well each design expressed the
mission statement and program, as set forth in the competition guidelines.
The World Trade Center Memorial Foundation has been created to construct, own,
operate, and maintain the memorial. The Foundation can be found on the web at
www.WTCMemorialFoundation.org.
The design competition and exhibition were made possible by the Lower Manhattan
Development Corporation, which is funded by a Community Development Block Grant
from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development. For more information
on the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation and renderings of the memorial
visit www.RenewNYC.com. The design and
accompanying models will be on display in the Winter Garden in the World
Financial Center.
Click here to view the design group's statement.
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