A View of the World Trade Center Site from the Hudson River.
World Trade Center Site Memorial 
              Competition 
              *Please visit the official competition website, www.wtcsitememorial.org, to see the winning design and other information on the Memorial Competition.
            
              The LMDC administered a World 
              Trade Center Site Memorial Competition to select a design for 
              a permanent memorial that will remember and honor all loss of life 
              on September 11, 2001, and February 26, 1993. The submission period 
              for the competition closed on June 30, 2003. During that time, 13,683 
              prospective participants from 94 nations and all fifty states registered 
              to compete. Submissions were accepted from registered 
              participants only through the deadline of June 30, 2003 at 5:00 
              PM EDT. The LMDC assumed the costs of managing the competition, 
              and competitors were required to submit a registration fee of 
              $25, which will be used toward the creation of the memorial. 
            During the first stage of the two-stage competition, the jury  
              reviewed anonymous submissions and selected eight finalists. During the second 
              stage, the finalists further developed their design proposals. The jury selected a winning design in January 2004.
              
            
            
              The Jury 
              The memorial competition jury is comprised of thirteen individuals 
              representing various point of view including world renowned artists 
              and architects, a family member, a Lower Manhattan resident and 
              business owner, representatives of the Governor and Mayor, and other 
              prominent arts and cultural professionals. During the first stage 
              of the two-stage competition, members of the jury reviewed anonymous 
              submissions and selected eight finalists.
              
              Jurors evaluated the designs based on how they 
              express the mission statement and program, as set forth in the competition 
              guidelines. The jury took part in a series of forums in which 
              the public expressed opinions on how elements in the mission and 
              program should be incorporated into the winning design. The forums, held in the summer of 2003, ensured that the jury was informed of 
              the public’s aspirations with regard to the memorial, while 
              entrusting jury members with the ultimate responsibility of selecting 
              a final design. 
            The following thirteen individuals were selected to sit on the 
              jury for the World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition:
            Paula Grant Berry
              Paula Grant Berry serves on the LMDC Families Advisory 
              Council and was a Memorial Program Drafting Committee member. Her 
              husband, David Berry, was killed in the South Tower of the World 
              Trade Center. Ms. Grant Berry graduated from Harvard University 
              in 1979 and received her MBA from the Columbia University Business 
              School in 1988. She has held several executive positions in publishing 
              and marketing including Doubleday, the Economist, Newsweek, Gruner 
              & Jahr and Scholastic. Ms. Grant Berry is a resident of Brooklyn 
              where she lives with her three children.
            Susan Freedman
              Susan Freedman is the President of the Public Art Fund. She currently 
              serves as a representative on the Board of the Museum of Modern 
              Art, as well as on the Boards of the Municipal Art Society, the 
              Eldridge Street Project, WNYC Radio, and as Secretary of the Board 
              for the City Parks Foundation. Ms. Freedman is the recipient of 
              the 1999 Associates of the Art Commission Annual Award, and was 
              selected as one of four finalists for the North American MontBlanc 
              de la Culture Award in 1994. Prior to her current position, Ms. 
              Freedman served as the Assistant to Mayor Edward I. Koch and Director 
              of Special Projects and Events for the Arts Commission of the City 
              of New York.
            Vartan Gregorian, Ph.D. 
              Vartan Gregorian, Ph.D. is the President of the Carnegie Corporation 
              of New York. Prior to his current position, he served for nine years 
              as the sixteenth president of Brown University. Dr. Gregorian is 
              the founding dean of the Faculty of Arts and Sciences at the University 
              of Pennsylvania (1974-1978), and served as the twenty-third provost 
              of the University until 1981. For eight years (1981-1989), he served 
              as the President of the New York Public Library. Mr. Gregorian is 
              the author of Emergence of Modern Afghanistan, 1880-1946. His awards 
              include the Ellis Island Medal of Honor, the American Academy of 
              the Institute of Arts and Letters' Gold Medal for Service to the 
              Arts and the National Humanities Medal awarded by President William 
              Jefferson Clinton. 
            Patricia Harris
              Patricia Harris is the Deputy Mayor for Administration for the City 
              of New York. Prior to her appointment, Harris managed Bloomberg 
              LP's Corporate Communications Department, overseeing its Philanthropy, 
              Public Relations, and Governmental Affairs divisions. Prior to her 
              employment at Bloomberg, she was Vice President for Public Relations 
              at Serino Coyne Advertising. She served for 12 years in the administration 
              of Mayor Edward I. Koch as Executive Director of the Art Commission 
              -- the agency that reviews all public art, architecture and landscape 
              architecture on city property-- and before that, as Assistant to 
              the Mayor for Federal Affairs.
            Maya Lin 
              Maya Lin is known for her site specific art and architectural projects. 
              For over fifteen years, Ms. Lin has run her own studio in New York 
              City, creating installations and buildings throughout the country. 
              Current architectural projects include an 8,000 square foot chapel 
              for the Children’s Defense Fund in Clinton, TN, and a 20,000 
              square foot bakery for the Greyston Foundation in Yonkers, NY. She 
              is working on art installations for the Lewis and Clark bicentennial 
              in Washington State and the Fine Arts Plaza at the University of 
              California at Irvine. Ms. Lin gained international recognition for 
              creating the Vietnam Veterans’ Memorial in Washington, D.C.and 
              the Civil Rights memorial in Montgomery, AL. She is a board member 
              of the Yale Corporation and the National Resource Defense Council. 
              She is represented by Gagosian Gallery in New York City.
            Michael McKeon
              Michael McKeon is a Managing Director of Mercury Public 
              Affairs. Prior to joining Mercury, Mr. McKeon served as Governor 
              Pataki's Director of Communications, and as the Governor’s 
              chief spokesman. He was responsible for overseeing the State's crisis 
              communications, during and after the September 11th terrorist attacks 
              on the World Trade Center. As the Governor's chief liaison on September 
              11th issues to City Hall and family groups, McKeon worked closely 
              with Mayor Michael Bloomberg and his staff, along with White House 
              senior staff, on the development and production of the ceremonies 
              marking the first anniversary of the September 11th attacks. Prior 
              to joining the Pataki administration in May 1995, McKeon worked 
              for more than 10 years as a reporter for three New York newspapers, 
              winning several awards for local and political reporting.
            Julie Menin 
              Julie Menin is the President and Founder of Wall Street Rising, 
              a not-for-profit organization founded in October 2001. The organization’s 
              mission is to help restore vibrancy and vitality in Lower Manhattan 
              as a 24/7 mixed-use community and destination. Ms. Menin was formerly 
              the Senior Regulatory Attorney at Colgate-Palmolive. Ms. Menin is 
              a resident of Lower Manhattan and owns Vine Restaurant, located 
              in the Financial District. Some of Wall Street Rising’s programs 
              and services have included Art Downtown, Do It Downtown! Discount 
              Card Program, a Resident and Retail Attraction Program and a Downtown 
              Information Center.
            Enrique Norten 
              Enrique Norten founded Taller de Enrique Norten Arquictectos S.C. 
              (TEN Arquitectos) in 1985 with partner Bernardo Gomez-Pimienta. 
              He is the recipient of many architectural awards, including the 
              Honorary Fellowship from the American Institute of Architects, and 
              the first “Mies van der Rohe” Award for Latin America. 
              He has taught at, among other institutions, the Pratt Institute, 
              Rice University, Columbia and Harvard. In July, 2002 he received 
              a commission, his first in the United States, from the Brooklyn 
              Public Library, to design its Visual and Performing Arts Library. 
              Mr. Norten was founding member of the editorial board of the magazine 
              Arquitectura. He teaches at the University of Pennsylvania, where 
              he holds the Miller Chair of Architecture. Mr. Norten has extensive 
              jury experience.
            Martin Puryear 
              Martin Puryear is a world renowned artist who studied painting at 
              Catholic University in Washington, D.C., and then served as a Peace 
              Corps teacher in Sierra Leone from 1964 to 1966. He went on to study 
              at the Swedish Royal Academy of Art in Stockholm and later received 
              his Masters of Fine Arts from Yale University. In 1989 Mr. Puryear 
              received the MacArthur Foundation Grant and was awarded the Grand 
              Prize at the Sao Paolo Biennale, where he represented the United 
              States. At the invitation of the French Ministry of Culture, he 
              then worked at the Calder Atelier in Sache, France in 1992. Mr. 
              Puryear recently completed several large scale projects including 
              a stainless steel sculpture for the J. Paul Getty Museum in Los 
              Angeles and a commissioned installation for the Festival d’Automne 
              in Paris. His work is represented in private collections in the 
              United States, Europe and Japan.
            Nancy Rosen 
              Nancy Rosen has been working in the field of public art for the 
              past three decades, organizing temporary exhibitions of outdoor 
              sculpture and, in 1980, establishing her office, Nancy Rosen Incorporated, 
              to assist public agencies, not-for-profit institutions and other 
              clients to plan and implement public art programs and fine art collections. 
              Her assignments have included organizing the Art-for-Public-Spaces 
              program for the U.S .Holocaust Memorial Museum in Washington, D.C. 
              and the first phase of the public art program for Battery Park City. 
              She has advised the Institute for Advanced Study in Princeton and 
              serves as the advisor to the Committee for Art in Public Places 
              at Middlebury College. She has been a consultant and panelist for 
              the New York State Council on the Arts and the City of New York, 
              and has chaired the Art in Public Places grants panel for the National 
              Endowment for the Arts. At the invitation of the U.S. General Services 
              Adminstration, Ms. Rosen participated in that agency’s Art-in-Architecture 
              Workshop. She has been serving on the Art Commission of the City 
              of New York since 2002.
            Lowery Stokes Sims, Ph.D.
              Lowery Stokes Sims, Ph.D. is the Executive Director of the Studio 
              Museum in Harlem. As Director of the museum, she has overseen major 
              expansion and renovation projects of their facility and collection. 
              Prior to her appointment in January 2000, she was Curator of Modern 
              Art at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, on staff since 1972. Dr. 
              Sims received her B.A. in art history from Queens College of the 
              City University of New York, her M.A. in art history from John Hopkins 
              University and her M. Phil. and Ph.D in art history from the Graduate 
              School and University Center of the City University of New York. 
              Dr. Sims has served nationally as a juror and guest curator at institutions 
              including the Queens Museum, the Pratt Institute, the Carribean 
              Cultural Center (New York), Cooper Union, the New Museum of Contemporary 
              Art, and the California Museum of Afro-American History and Culture.
            Michael Van Valkenburgh
              Michael Van Valkenburgh is the founder and principal of Michael 
              Van Valkenburgh Architects in Manhattan and Cambridge and he currently 
              resides in New York City’s West Village. The work of Michael 
              Van Valkenburgh Associates has won numerous national design awards 
              from the American Society of Landscape Architects and a Progressive 
              Architecture Award in 1997 for Allegheny Riverfront Park. Michael 
              was named the Charles Eliot Professor in Practice of Landscape Architecture 
              at the Harvard Graduate School of Design, where he teaches a design 
              studio once a year. He also served as chairman of the department 
              between 1991 and 1996. Mr. Van Valkenburgh has extensive jury experience.
            James Young, Ph.D.
              James Young, Ph.D. is the Professor & Chair of the Department 
              of Judaic & Near Eastern Studies at the University of Massachusetts, 
              Amherst. He is also the author of At Memory's Edge: After-images 
              of the Holocaust in Contemporary Art and Architecture; The Texture 
              of Memory, which won the National Jewish Book Award in 1994; and 
              Writing and Rewriting the Holocaust, which won a Choice Outstanding 
              Book Award for 1988. Professor Young was also guest curator of an 
              exhibition at the Jewish Museum, The Art of Memory: Holocaust Memorials 
              in History. Professor Young was appointed by the Berlin Senate to 
              the five-member commission for Germany's national "Memorial 
              to Europe's Murdered Jews," now under construction in Berlin. 
              Mr. Young is a resident of Massachusetts and has extensive jury 
              experience.
            In recognition of his accomplishments and devotion to New York 
              City, David Rockefeller will serve as an honorary member on the 
              jury. As honorary member, Mr. Rockefeller will be available for 
              consultation on the guiding vision for the World Trade Center and 
              to provide historical perspective to the evolution of downtown Manhattan.
            David Rockefeller 
              David Rockefeller is a distinguished philanthropist, business leader 
              and patron of the arts. He is Chairman Emeritus of the Museum of 
              Modern Art in New York City. Mr. Rockefeller served as an officer 
              of the Chase Manhattan Bank from 1946 to 1981 and as Chairman and 
              Chief Executive Officer from 1969 until 1981. He led Chase Manhattan 
              Bank in building Chase Plaza and becoming a principal anchor downtown 
              during the fiscal crisis in the 1970s. Since then, he has served 
              as Chairman of the bank’s International Advisory Committee. 
              Mr. Rockefeller has a long history of vigorous and successful advocacy 
              on behalf of Lower Manhattan, including the chairmanship of the 
              Downtown-Lower Manhattan Association. Mr. Rockefeller was the visionary 
              and leading force behind the development of the original World Trade 
              Center site. He was the founder of the NYC Partnership, now the 
              Partnership for NYC, which continues to serve as the premier voice 
              for business in New York. Mr. Rockefeller is also involved in numerous 
              other business, cultural and educational organizations as well as 
              foundation boards and charitable activities.