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The World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition was an open, international memorial contest, initiated by the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation (LMDC) according to the specifications of the architect Daniel Libeskind, to design a memorial for the World Trade Center site (later renamed the National September 11 Memorial & Museum) at the under-construction World Trade Center in New York City.
McCormick Tribune Campus Center, Chicago – Rem Koolhaas, 1998; New York World Trade Center. 2002 World Trade Center Master Design Contest – Daniel Libeskind (concept) World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition – Michael Arad and Peter Walker; Visual and Performing Arts Library, Brooklyn, NY – Enrique Norten / TEN Arquitectos
The World Trade Center site, ... picking a single winner by the end of the month. ... more than 5,000 entrants in the World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition in ...
The quotes from the World Trade Center site can be found in September Morning: Ten Years of Poems and Readings from the 9/11 Ceremonies New York City, compiled and edited by Sara Lukinson.
Twenty-three years since the 9/11 attacks, take a look at how the Financial District, the World Trade Center site, and Manhattan's skyline have changed. Photos show the dramatic changes to ...
Twenty-two years after 9/11 — and after battles with Pataki, Bloomberg and Port Authority — Larry Silverstein is closing in on the prize that long eluded him: Two World Trade Center.
[55] [56] The plan was anchored by the 1,776-foot (541 m) One World Trade Center and featured a memorial and a number of other office towers. [57] [58] Out of the World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition, a design by Michael Arad and Peter Walker titled Reflecting Absence was selected in January 2004. [59]
The winner of the World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition was Israeli-American architect Michael Arad of Handel Architects, a New York City and San Francisco–based firm. Arad worked with landscape-architecture firm Peter Walker and Partners on the design, creating a forest of swamp white oak trees with two square reflecting pools in the ...