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Brian Strawn and Karla
Sierralta
Click on any photo below to see a larger version
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Main
WTC Memorial Finalists Page
On display at the Winter Garden at the
World Financial Center starting November 19th. The Winter Garden
is open to the public from 7 am to 11 pm daily.
The memory of an individual and the combined memory of the community
as a whole are embodied by the footprints of the former World Trade
Center Towers and the new future for the area. On a personal level,
and as members of our larger communities, we were all affected by
the terrorist attacks on February 26, 1993 and September 11, 2001.
The footprints serve as healing points for our great losses.
Elements of water reflect light and memory.
2,982 light portals shine over the "Individual Memory Footprint",
where the North Tower of the WTC once stood. Each light glows with
individual intensity, honoring all of the victims who died. Elements
of water embrace and reflect memories related to those we lost,
those who survived and the selfless actions of those who aided in
rescue, recovery and healing. The journey to the emotional center
of the footprint is a personal experience. Evolving images are reflected
as water flows down the walls that support the plane of water above.
On glass and stone, the names are revealed. Here, as stories are
shared, they become part of our collective. A final resting place
for the unidentified remains embraces a private area for family
members and loved ones. This space, at bedrock, becomes the most
sacred.
Elements of earth create spaces that frame the sky.
92 Sugar Maples trees stand on the "Shared Memory Footprint".
The space, where the South Tower of the WTC once stood, is devoted
to the shared loss of a community, a city, a country, and the world.
These native trees of New York grow as a symbol of new life in the
soil of each of the 92 nations brought together by the great tragedies.
A shared path guides visitors through bands of nature that form
around the emotional center of the footprint. Stone walls that carry
messages of hope from each of the countries and a bed of wild roses
surround this quiet space for meditation and contemplation.
The emotional centers of each of the footprints resonate at a different
pace. The constantly evolving stories of the individual inform the
more slowly developing shared perspective of the collective. These
encounter one another, exchange their composition, and form landscaped
patterns allowing for intimate and public gatherings. Although the
intensity of the lights changes during the course of day, and the
trees weather with the passing of the seasons, the footprints will
act as a constant reminder.
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at private expense and in no way implies any endorsement or warranty
by Lowermanhattan.info as to the content of the item."
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