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Full News Story
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For Immediate Release
Friday, April 8, 2005 |
STATE OF NEW YORK
EXECUTIVE CHAMBER
GEORGE E. PATAKI, GOVERNOR
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GOVERNOR PATAKI ANNOUNCES OPENING OF WORLD TRADE CENTER MEMORIAL EXHIBIT IN
BINGHAMTON
Models, Renderings, and Animations Depicting Reflecting Absence will
Remain on Display from April 11-21 and Continue to be Offered Statewide Through
the Month of April
Governor George E. Pataki today announced the opening of a World Trade Center
Memorial Exhibit at the Binghamton State Office Building which includes models,
renderings, and animations. The over four-acre memorial, Reflecting Absence,
will honor all those lost in the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001 and
February 26, 1993. The exhibit will be on display weekdays from April 11-21 on
the 18th floor next to the Warren M. Anderson Community Room.
"Last December we unveiled the final schematic design for a lasting memorial to
honor those we lost at the World Trade Center site and to tell the story of
September 11th to the world," Governor Pataki said. "Architects Michael Arad,
Peter Walker, and Max Bond have created a design that captures our sense of
loss, as well as the courage that prevailed in the face of tragedy. I am
pleased that we will be able to share this powerful design with the public in
Binghamton because it is truly a moving memorial. September 11th broke the
hearts of all New Yorkers, but it did not break our spirit and this memorial is
a tribute to that resilience and hope."
"I want to encourage the public to visit the memorial exhibit while it is
available at the Binghamton State Office Building or at one of the other
locations throughout the state that it will soon be traveling to. Our State,
our nation, and over 92 countries lost family, friends, and neighbors on
September 11th. We will share this memorial with the entire world," the
Governor said.
The exhibit will be open for public viewing weekdays at 44 Hawley St.,
Binghamton on the 18th Floor beginning at 8 am on Monday, April 11 and run
through Thursday, April 21. The exhibit will feature a scale model of the
memorial and site plan for the World Trade Center site including the Freedom
Tower, and an additional model that depicts the three levels of the memorial.
The exhibit is open on weekdays from 8 am-6 pm. After the display in Binghamton,
the memorial exhibit will travel to Hauppauge before returning to its permanent
exhibition at the World Financial Center, across from the World Trade Center
site. The exhibit was previously on display at the State Capitol in Albany, in
Syracuse at the SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry, in
Watertown at the Dulles State Office Building, in Rochester at Monroe Community
College, and in Buffalo at the Walter J. Mahoney State Office Building.
The memorial features a lively landscaped civic plaza with two massive voids
aligned with the footprints where the twin towers once stood. Other features
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. The design allows visitors to enter the memorial between the
footprints and descend down to 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 will be able to travel
down to the lowest level of the memorial where the Contemplation Room that
houses a tomb for the unidentified remains, 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.
In January of 2004, a 13-member jury selected Reflecting Absence by
Michael Arad and Landscape Architect Peter Walker as the design for the World
Trade Center Memorial. Their design was selected from over 5,000 international
submissions.
In April of 2003, The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC) launched
the international World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition. 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 New
York City Mayor Bloomberg, 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. Information on the Foundation can be found
on the web at www.WTCMemorialFoundation.org.
The Foundation expects to raise approximately $500 million. Donations can be
made on the Foundation’s web site or checks, made payable to the World Trade
Center Memorial Foundation, can be sent to:
World Trade Center Memorial Foundation, Inc.
PO Box 5024
Bowling Green Station
New York, NY 10274-5024
More information and additional renderings are available at
www.RenewNYC.com.
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