| The entire site is a monument to the tragedy of 9/11 consisting 
                of an interconnected series of five buildings that creates a cathedral-like 
                enclosure across the entire 16 acre site. A vast public plaza 
                and park is formed around the connected footprints by a protective 
                ring of towers. A living memorial will develop over time becoming 
                both a monument to the past and a vision for the future.  Preserving the footprints of the World Trade Center, the memorial 
                visitor descends seventy-five feet below ground along a spiral 
                walkway to then look up through the footprints to the sky. Rather 
                than looking down, the memorial directs visitors to look upward 
                in remembrance. A Sky Memorial atop the first tower will allow 
                visitors to complete the memorial pilgrimage by looking down over 
                the hallowed ground where so many heroes lost their lives. In the sacred space of the memorial, immense arches tower over 
                the plaza and expansive public spaces are laid out to optimize 
                the flow of people and create an inviting sense of openness. This 
                integrated strategy of development serves commuters, nearby residents 
                and tourists alike and reflects the rich urban fabric that has 
                evolved in Lower Manhattan over the past 30 years. United Towers 
                encompasses over 10.5 million square feet in a single contiguous 
                building to be built in phases, the highest tower measuring 1620 
                feet, approximately 112 floors.  The interconnection of the five towers provides for unique commercial 
                and public space. For example, at 800 feet in the air, approximately 
                the 60th floor, a multi-level "City in the Sky" connects 
                the towers with gardens, educational centers, shopping, cafes, 
                a sports center, a broadcast center and a conference center. The 
                possibility of very large connected floors invites not only new 
                public functions at unprecedented heights but also large contiguous 
                floor plates that can attract businesses back from the suburbs 
                into Lower Manhattan. Throughout the complex, vertical sky gardens 
                are arranged every five floors thereby enhancing the working environment 
                and allowing a maximum amount of sunlight, saving energy and improving 
                the views from within. This single building built in five phases will not only be the 
                tallest building in the world, it will also be one of the safest. 
                Each of the sloping towers contains multiple independent stairways, 
                connected every 30 floors by areas of refuge. From any point in 
                every building there are many ways for people to exit, having 
                the option of going down, and of moving horizontally into an adjacent 
                building.
 The site surface is returned to grade where pedestrians can walk 
                across the site freely in all directions. Greenwich Street connects 
                Tribeca with Lower Manhattan through the site. From Liberty, Cortlandt, 
                Dey and Fulton Streets 60 story archways frame views connecting 
                the city to the river. The proposed underground train station 
                is designed to promote the flow of pedestrians, avoid bottlenecks 
                and provide a wide range of intuitive connections to the streets, 
                the plaza and the memorial. A major five-story civic space dedicated 
                to the multi-modal connections of MTA, PATH and Air trains is 
                located at the same subterranean level as the base of the memorial 
                competition site, allowing a connected experience of monumental 
                public infrastructure and the memorial.
   |