A View of the World Trade Center Site from the Hudson River.
 
Selected Design for the WTC Site as of February 2003
              Introduction:
              
            
              
I arrived by ship to New York as a teenager, an immigrant, and 
                like millions of others before me, my first sight was the Statue 
                of Liberty and the amazing skyline of Manhattan. I have never 
                forgotten that sight or what it stands for. This is what this 
                project is all about.
              When I first began this project, New Yorkers were divided as 
                to whether to keep the site of the World Trade Center empty or 
                to fill the site completely and build upon it. I meditated many 
                days on this seemingly impossible dichotomy. To acknowledge the 
                terrible deaths which occurred on this site, while looking to 
                the future with hope, seemed like two moments which could not 
                be joined. I sought to find a solution which would bring these 
                seemingly contradictory viewpoints into an unexpected unity. So, 
                I went to look at the site, to stand within it, to see people 
                walking around it, to feel its power and to listen to its voices. 
                And this is what I heard, felt and saw.
              The great slurry walls are the most dramatic elements which survived 
                the attack, an engineering wonder constructed on bedrock foundations 
                and designed to hold back the Hudson River. The foundations withstood 
                the unimaginable trauma of the destruction and stand as eloquent 
                as the Constitution itself asserting the durability of Democracy 
                and the value of individual life.
              We have to be able to enter this hallowed, sacred ground while 
                creating a quiet, meditative and spiritual space. We need to journey 
                down, some 70 feet into Ground Zero, onto the bedrock foundation, 
                a procession with deliberation into the deep indelible footprints 
                of Tower One and Tower Two.
              The foundation, however, is not only the story of tragedy but 
                also reveals the dimensions of life. The PATH trains continue 
                to traverse this ground now, as before, linking the past to the 
                future. Of course, we need a Museum at the epicenter of Ground 
                Zero, a museum of the event, of memory and hope. The Museum becomes 
                the entrance into Ground Zero, always accessible, leading us down 
                into a space of reflection, of meditation, a space for the Memorial 
                itself. This Memorial will be the result of an international competition.
              Those who were lost have become heroes. To commemorate those 
                lost lives, I created two large public places, the Park of Heroes 
                and the Wedge of Light. Each year on September 11th between the 
                hours of 8:46 a.m., when the first airplane hit and 10:28 a.m., 
                when the second tower collapsed, the sun will shine without shadow, 
                in perpetual tribute to altruism and courage.
              We all came to see the site, more than 4 million of us, walking 
                around it, peering through the construction wall, trying to understand 
                that tragic vastness. So I designed an elevated walkway, a space 
                for a Memorial promenade encircling the memorial site. Now everyone 
                can see not only Ground Zero but the resurgence of life.
              The exciting architecture of the new Lower Manhattan rail station 
                with a concourse linking the PATH trains, the subways connected, 
                hotels, a performing arts center, office towers, underground malls, 
                street level shops, restaurants, cafes; create a dense and exhilarating 
                affirmation of New York.
              The sky will be home again to a towering spire of 1776 feet high, 
                the "Gardens of the World". Why gardens? Because gardens 
                are a constant affirmation of life. A skyscraper rises above its 
                predecessors, reasserting the pre-eminence of freedom and beauty, 
                restoring the spiritual peak to the city, creating an icon that 
                speaks of our vitality in the face of danger and our optimism 
                in the aftermath of tragedy.
              Life victorious.