Workers in the Financial District walk through the twin churchyards daily to gain something of the past - and to be reminded that a world exists beyond their own frenetic workaday lives.
The peaceful coexistence of Downtown's two cemeteries alongside ever-taller skyscrapers has taught us one thing: The living can honor the dead even as they live and build around them.
Some relatives of those killed on 9/11 believe that Downtown residents and workers want to rebuild quickly because they want to forget what happened on that Tuesday morning. This is a terrible myth. Downtown citizens want to properly remember their fallen colleagues and friends - and they don't want to work in or near a WTC that fails to honor their own generation of dead.
For the past couple of years, she's been writing great stuff about this.
1.It should acknowledge the victims, those identified and identified. There are many ways to do this, and a laundry list of the names it not necessary, although Maya Lin's Vietnam memorial forever changed the way memorials will be viewed so I think a listing of the names somehow will be incorporated.
2. It should acknowledge the original towers for the engineering feat they represented and the sheer meaning of those incredible silhouetted on the skyline. After seeing the schemes in conjunction with models and renderings, I think 3 of the schemes come close to doing this. And they represent the loss of those buildings in a simple but powerful way.
3. The bathtub pit should not left open but with the exception of the tower footprints should be brought up to street level. This is a controversial idea since many families want the site open to the bedrock below. Although i understand the want for this, it is not a smart decision in the long run. If the families really want a memorial that is truly accessible to visitors, they will desire a raised urban plaza at street level that will engage the neighborhood and not become an urban barrier that by it's design forces humanity away from the site.
the three schemes I think have potential are:
Reflecting Absence
Inversion of Light
and to a lesser extent Lower Waters
I think these 3 schemes use the metaphor of a container, or more accurately the definition of a void to define the profile and missing void of the WTC towers. The absence of the towers, clearly delineated simultaneously recalls the victims who occupied the buildings and it records the grand physical achievement of the towers.
These schemes are somber and moving, and will help visitors remember the original WTC towers and their inhabitants for a 100 years and beyond. They are not perfect, and there will be further refinement of the finalists. I am positive that the final scheme will be a great monument that properly serves the victims, the human occupants, and the WTC Towers that contained them. http://www.freerepublic.com/focus/f-news/1024918/posts
8 WTC Memorial Design Finalists Unveiled