custom ad
NewsJanuary 13, 2003

NEW YORK -- Replacing the fallen World Trade Center towers with the world's tallest building would demonstrate courage. Or would it be hubris? Five of the nine designs for a rebuilt trade center propose structures that would surpass Malaysia's 1,483-foot Petronas Twin Towers as the tallest in the world. The trade center towers themselves were once the world's tallest at 110 stories each, or 1,350 feet...

By Karen Matthews, The Associated Press

NEW YORK -- Replacing the fallen World Trade Center towers with the world's tallest building would demonstrate courage. Or would it be hubris?

Five of the nine designs for a rebuilt trade center propose structures that would surpass Malaysia's 1,483-foot Petronas Twin Towers as the tallest in the world. The trade center towers themselves were once the world's tallest at 110 stories each, or 1,350 feet.

A public hearing is set for Monday to gather public opinion on the designs. A final plan is to be selected in the next few weeks.

Some people believe the new structure must be a dramatic statement.

"Failing to rebuild full scale is what paints a bull's-eye on other landmarks," said Louis Epstein, founder of the World Trade Center Restoration Movement. "It emboldens the terrorists to do more."

Beverly Willis, director of the Architecture Research Institute and a founder of a community group called Rebuild Downtown Our Town, agrees that the "wound" in New York's skyline should be repaired with something tall and distinctive.

However, she said, creating the world's tallest building without regard to the neighborhood "just seems to be not only impractical, but ostentatious and generally in bad taste."

The nine designs by seven teams of architects were commissioned by the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which together will choose one plan by next month.

While no one is suggesting the new construction will faithfully reproduce any of the models, officials will base their plans on one of the designs.

Building taller towers

Some, like Norman Foster's "kissing towers," offer office buildings taller than the twin towers destroyed in the Sept. 11, 2001, attack.

Others would consist of airy structures that invoke the towers without replicating them.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

Daniel Libeskind's design includes a spire with the symbolically significant height of 1,776 feet, but only the first 70 stories of his building would house offices.

Above the office level, tourists could visit his "gardens of the world," Libeskind said.

"It's like going to the high point of the Eiffel Tower," he said. "You don't go there for more than a few minutes."

Greg Lynn, whose United Architects presented a design that combines five buildings into one crystalline structure, described a system of stairways connected every 30 floors by areas where people also could move horizontally.

"From any point in the building you have literally thousands of ways to get down to the ground, so it's a very safe complex," Lynn said.

His team's proposal also includes a 1,620-foot tower.

Marketing the space

But if they build it, will anybody come?

Last August, a New York Times/CBS poll found that 53 percent of New Yorkers would not want to work in an upper floor of any new building at the trade center site. Fifty-nine percent said that whatever is built at the site should not be as tall as the towers it replaces.

That could change in the decade it will take to build the new offices.

"By that time, I believe all of the safety concerns will have been addressed," said Meyer Feig, who heads the World Trade Center Tenants Association.

Feig, who ran a recruiting firm in the trade center's south tower, said his group consists of about 130 smaller tenants from the towers. Most group members who responded to a recent survey said they wanted to see at least a 110-story building on the site.

"It makes the statement that we may have been attacked, but we'll rebuild and come back stronger than ever," Feig said.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!