special 9/11 issue: 10 years later

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do wnto wn express September 11 Ten-Year Anniversary Commemorative Issue Ten Years Later A Decade of Renewal The Headlines Tell the Story

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Downtown Express looks back at 10 years' coverage and spotlights the recovery of a city.

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Page 1: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

downtown expressSeptember 11

Ten-Year Anniversary Commemorative Issue

Ten Years LaterA Decade of Renewal

The Headlines Tell the Story

Page 2: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective2 downtown express

Lincoln Anderson, Lawrence White (photog-rapher), John Sutter, Albert Amateau, Jennifer Jensen, Wickham Boyle, Keith Crandell, Josh Rogers, Maria Yoo, W.F. Wooden, Roslyn Kramer, Stacey Harwood, Alison Damast, Jason Borelli, Ed Gold, Richard Jones (photos), Arthur Y. Webb, William Winkelman, Caitlin Harris, Jerry Tallmer, Kelly McMasters, Elisabeth Robert (photo), Francis R. Angelino, Patricia Fieldsteel, Tim Gay, Sascha Brodsky, Tien-Shun Lee, Jess Espinosa, Bonnie Rosenstock, Billy Romp, Kara Alamo, Francis R. Angelino, Aliza Aber, Emma Seitz-Cherner, Emily Irwin,

Karyn Leigh Barr, Ginger Strand, Ellison Walcott, Dominique Herman, Marie-Caroline Martin, Diana Bellettieri, Kerstin Vosshans, Belie Grunbaum, Eva Marie Knoll, Tien-Shun Lee, Syd Steinhardt, Laurie Nadel, Caroline Binham, Lillie Dremaux, Valerie Nahmad, Cleveland Adams, Mary Reinholz, Jane Flanagan, Paul Schindler, Paula Tushbai, Gal Beckerman, Matthew Roy, Elizaebth O’Brien, Karen Russo, Sarah Garland, David Fried, Danielle Stein, Marie-Caroline Martin, Heather J. Wilson, Jamie Dean, Jane S. Van Ingen, Laura S. Greene, David Stanke, Ramin Talaie, Aaron Krach, Patricia Belizario, Sharon

Hartwick, Dara Lehon, Ashley Winchester, Erin Bruehl, John Arbucci, Jaclyn Marinese, Laura S. Greene, Jenna Greditor, Kaitlen Jay Exum, David Wallis, Jessica Mintz, Michael Luongo, Janel Bladow, Deborah Lynn Blumberg, Jess Wisloski, David H. Ellis, Erica Stein, Arthur S. Leonard, Ronda Kaysen, Timothy Lavin, Divya Watal, Rachel Evans, Peter Sanders, Shivani Mahendroo, Jesse Greenspan, Matthew Reiss, Nancy Reardon, Lauren Dzura, Bill Hine, Cathy Jedruczek, Ellen Keohane, Rachel Snyder, Sara G. Levin, Caitlin Eichelberger, Orli Van Mourik, Rachel Breitman, Claire F. Hamilton, Tonya Garcia,

Chad Smith, Alex Schmidt, Neal Schindler, Rania Richardson, Willa Paskin, Anne O’Neil, Leonard Quart, David Spett, Anindita Dasgupta, Janet Kwon, Nicole Davis, Lori Haught, Jefferson Siegel, Tim Cummings, Skye F. McFarlane, Chris Bragg, Ernest Scheyder, Jennifer Milne, Lucas Mann, Sarah Norris, Julie Shapiro, Lee Ann Westover, Sebastian Kahnert, Sisi Wei, Scott Stiffler, Helaina N. Hovitz, Monica Uszerowicz, Frank Morales, Will Glovinsky, Robert Harvey, Ishita Singh, Nikki Dowling, John Bayles, Alison Bowen, Michael Mandelkern, J.B. Nicholas, Terese Loeb Kreuzer, Aline Reynolds

Contributors

What a decade it has been since 9/11/2001 -- a devastation and a decade that have totally transformed our neighborhoods.

In reviewing the coverage in the Downtown Express and The Villager of the past ten years of 9/11 itself and its still ongoing reverberations, it struck us that the story is in the headlines. In short, it’s more than a thousand stories detailing Downtown New York’s continuing struggles with the pain, horror, and dislocation of 9/11; the enormous efforts to get people back into their homes and businesses; and the sheer pulling ourselves together that give an over-whelming American and New York response to terror: You cannot break us, we will only come back stronger.

This Commemorative Issue is laid out chronologically and scrolls the headlines of our coverage, year by year, interspersed with photographs from the decade.

Those who live and work downtown, and even some who don’t, will well remember the nerve-wracking dramas of our children being transported to welcoming schools outside the district; of parents demanding environmental and pollution analysis to see if they can get their kids back into their own schools; of businesses trying to open their doors to see if they still had any custom-ers; and of the leaders of our nation, state, and city formulating (and re-formulating) a massive resolve to rebuild Downtown, and the World Trade Center site itself.

The W.T.C. rebuilding process, at the end of day, is one of the most remarkable and democratic building experiments ever put

in play -- a vast plebiscite on who we are as a people and how we can come together for a common purpose and actually get not just something done but, God willing, something extraordinary done.

It is pretty clear from the scrolling of the last decade’s stories that our community’s ten-year response to tragedy and rebuilding was not easy. It was done in fits and starts, it had huge delays, there was sometimes great political and civic vision, and sometimes great political discontinuity and failures of vision. Some of our political institutions operated dynamically and transparently, others less so.

What comes through in the end is some-thing of the essence and strength of a healthy urban democratic process. Citizens and civic groups mobilized impressively to rebuild a community. Leaders emerged who listened, planned, and implemented a vast development process that deepened the area’s residential presence and diversified its commercial make-up. The resulting mixed-use neighborhoods of Lower Manhattan are much more stable than pre-9/11, more able to weather economic challenges and other dislocations.

And what has resulted is a better, health-ier, and stronger Downtown, one that has doubled its population since 9/11/2001 and is today among the most livable and dynamic neighborhoods in the entire city. Downtown is clearly back, and stronger. It is a story we can all be deeply proud of.

— John W. Sutter

There are tragedies throughout history so immense and significant that the impact has altered the way people think about the world and the way they move within it. These tragedies have defined the generations that witnessed them and have governed the generations that followed them.

On September 11, 2001 the United States of America was the victim of an attack that captivated humanity and that ultimately repositioned the neighborhood we call home and placed it at the center of the world.

Lower Manhattan bore the brunt of the day’s devastation, as the area surrounding the World Trade Center became known as “Ground Zero” due to both geography and the human casualties that resulted. But the saga of Lower Manhattan that has unfolded over the last ten years, the vast devastation at its center, its rebirth and its undeniable role as a beacon of resilience, began minutes after the first plane struck the North Tower.

And the saga is still being written today. Residents and business owners have never faltered in their goal to revive the commu-nity; moreover they have vowed to make it even better than it was on that fateful day.

There have been milestones along the way, marking signs of revival and serving as teachable moments for the future. When the PATH station reopened in 2003, when the ground was broken for a new elementary school, and when the “Survivor Tree” was returned home to the W.T.C. site in 2010, tears of joy and tears of sadness were shed. And every milestone and every resulting ounce of emotion has over the last decade

redefined a community, a city and a country.The story of Lower Manhattan’s response

to 9/11 has many characters. The roles include elected official, first responder, teacher, student, clergy member, business owner and resident. The story of the neigh-borhood’s rebirth over the last decade has been written by both people who were here and witnessed the tragedy first hand and by those who have moved to the city since. And it is clear that the story is not only local, as nearly every city in every state has someone who came to volunteer during the immediate recovery effort. It was evident early on that the roles were being filled by people from all five boroughs, the entire state and from all over the country.

Like many of our readers, 9/11 is never completely out of our mind. That is probably because, as the saying goes, it is never com-pletely out of sight. Since we are a weekly newspaper in Lower Manhattan, Ground Zero is in our backyard.

This fact became evident immediately after the attack when our publisher decided to make the Downtown Express a weekly newspaper instead of a twice-monthly news-paper. He recognized that people in a disas-ter zone desperately need information, and that Lower Manhattan had been changed forever and would continue to change for years. The need to report on a neighborhood that was then and is again at the center of the world was clear and present. And it still is today.

— John Bayles

Letter from the Publisher Letter from the editor

Publisher & editor

John W. Sutter

AssociAte editor

John Bayles

Arts editor

Scott Stiffler

rePorters

Aline ReynoldsAlbert Amateau

Lincoln Anderson

sr. V.P. of sAles And MArketing

Francesco Regini

AdVertising sAlesAllison GreakerMichael Slagle Julio Tumbaco

retAil Ad MAnAgerColin Gregory

business MAnAger / controllerVera Musa

Art / Production director

Troy Masters

Art director

Mark Hasselberger

grAPhic designer

Jamie Paakkonen

interns

Lily BouvierSam Spokony

Published by Community media, LLC

515 Canal St., Unit 1C, NY, NY 10013 Phone: (212) 229-1890

Fax: (212) 229-2790On-line: www.downtownexpress.comE-mail: [email protected]

Downtown Express is published every week by Community Media LLC, 515 Canal St., Unit 1C, New York, N.Y. 10013 (212) 229-1890. The entire contents of the newspaper, including advertising, are copyrighted and no part may be reproduced without the express permission of the publisher - © 2011 Community Media LLC.

PUBLISHER’S LIABILITY FOR ERRORThe Publisher shall not be liable for slight changes or typographical errors that do not lessen the value of an advertisement. The publisher’s liability for other errors or omissions in connection with an advertisement is strictly limited to publication of the advertisement in any subsequent issue.

Member of theNew York Press

Association

Member of theNational

NewspaperAssociation

© 2011 Community Media, LLC

Page 3: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 3

2001For community newspapers, early September typically means lots of feature stories

about kids returning to school and the agendas of local officials returning from vacation. But the events of Sept.11, 2001 changed that. And not just for community papers in Lower Manhattan, or even in New York.

There were community papers all over the country that were forced to use their front pages to tell stories of the kid who grew up on Main Street, who worked his way through college, and subsequently landed a job in the financial capital of the world. The stories, however, usually contained a question as to whether that kid was still alive.

Our local news took on new urgency. Readers in our Lower Manhattan disaster zone desperately needed information on which schools were open and shuttered, what firehouses had lost entire companies, what environmental testing showed about the quality of the air, when Battery Park City could be reoccupied. What was the response of our elected leaders and the Community Board? What programs were emerging to help residents get back into their homes and businesses to reopen their doors? The news was moving so quickly and the need so great for up-to-date local information that in October 2001, the Downtown Express decided to go from bi-weekly publication to weekly publication.

Two jets, two hours – then Twin Towers are gone • Primaries delayed, relief is main concern • Into the rubble, September 13,

midnight to 4 a.m. • Local fire houses hit hard; entire companies lost • Thousands lack power • With songs and candles, thousands attend vigil in the Village

• Schools and universities open doors to relief effort • Thousands are drawn Downtown to mourn, gawk, be a part • Students are relocated from W.T.C. disaster area • Primaries to be held Sept. 25 • Battery Park City Authority pushes to reopen buildings • After devastation, residents try to rebuild lives

• N.Y.U. evacuates seven dorms • Stranded pets are saved from the evacuated buildings • Ninth Precinct defuses angry protest at East Village mosque • New sites for Downtown voters • Seawall okay • Seamen’s Church helping out • Local firefighters recall their friends and the horror • Three injured, no

deaths at the First Precinct • Weisbrod: Lower Manhattan is ready to rebuild • World Financial Center could begin rebuilding in a month • Most of Battery Park reopens • Tribeca businesses band together for relief • Lower Manhattan restaurants begin to regroup • 700 rush, or rushed to Downtown Hospital on Sept. 11 • B.M.C.C. helping rescue workers and preparing to reopen • A desperate search for loved ones at the

Showing SignS of Strength

In the days following 9/11, scores of New Yorkers gathered along the West Side Highway hold-ing up these and other signs to thank the first-responder firefighters from Tribeca’s Ladder Company 8, nicknamed the “Ghostbusters” fire-house; and the Financial District’s Engine Company 6. Some of them were Red Cross volunteers, who walked around Lower Manhattan handing out food and water to police officers and trying to boost morale. The volunteers began at Union Square, worked their way down to St. Vincent’s Hospital, walked next to the highway, crossed Canal Street, and headed up 6th ave-nue to Washington Square Park.

Six firefighters from Ladder Company 8, including Lieutenant Vincent Halloran, climbed the stairs of the burning North Tower that morning in attempt to safely evacuate as many people as pos-sible. Halloran never made it out alive.

c 2002, continued on p.5

Tuesday, September 11th

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective4 downtown express

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 5

2001armory • No business at the Seaport • Parents need answers on the opening of

P.S. 234 and P.S./I.S. 89 • A five-block run to safety for teens and moms • Wagner Park reopens • Disaster poetry reading • Residents and

businesses frustrated over access issue • Pace University remembers • Gateway Plaza

tenants make demands on Lefrak • Downtown parents worry about school space and air

• Soldiers draw on the spirit of P.S.•I.S. 89 • Soccer provides a relaxing escape for

children • Small businesses band together to survive • Officials

say ‘stuffy air’ may be causing headaches at Stuy • B.P.C. Authority, residents coping

after Sept. 11 • Nadler warns of nuclear and other dangers • B.P.C.

nursery struggles with reduced enrollment • Waiting to reach out and touch someone at

Southbridge • Jerry, Bill and Hillary come out to support Tribeca

• Park construction resumes despite delays on Pier 40 • P.S. 89 moves and East Side program is forced out • P.S. 234 parents debate returning •

Some homeless were also displaced Sept. 11 • Clinton and Silver

say thanks to Downtown Hospital • Police look to shrink ‘frozen zone’ and wall it off •

Downtown water main project resumes • Utah town pitches in • Construction equipment

stolen • What to build downtown? Planners and Architects debate what to build downtown

• Fundraiser for local fire and police stations • Board hopes to revive park plan • Downtown lobbying trip produces mixed results • Ballfield

construction still on track, B.P.C.A. says • Pataki announce

$25 million grants •

Enrollment down at P.S. 89 and preschools • City

turns P.S./I.S. 89 back to

the Board of Ed • C.B. 1 sets conditions for school reopenings

• Not everyone wants

to rebuild the financial center • Trinity Church reopens • Some Burial Ground artifacts rediscovered in W.T.C. • Air quality news: so far, so good • Checkpoint hassles continue for

cars • Lice? What about anthrax, smallpox and asbestos? • Crowds return in smaller numbers

to this year’s parade • Senate approves $5 billion stimulus for New York • Struggling to make it south of ‘ground zero’ • Businesses go to ‘one-stop shopping’ event for help • Con Ed

to dig 5 miles of streets in 6 months • Air quality in Stuyvesant may be getting

c 2001, continued on p.5

Doubling upAfter the attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, the Villager

and the Downtown Express put out a dual issue.

two planeS, two hourS anD the twin towerS are goneThe unforgettable images of Sept.11, 2001, like the one above, were splashed

across front pages of newspapers all across the world.

Page 6: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective6 downtown express

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 7

2001worse • Cleaning begins at Trinity Pl. High School • Tenant fights and rent strikes continue in B.P.C. • Restore the streets which the W.T.C. replaced, says C.B. 1 • Web

surfers moved by essay • Businesses should publicize discounts • Veterans Plaza rededicates on two-month anniversary • Checkhov Now means even

more • Market to move to Battery Pl. • Searching for volunteer searchers • Board of Ed pushing to reopen P.S. 234 in January • Panel calls for one agency to monitor air quality • Fraunces restaurant, the first George W.’s hangout, reopens • Gateway leaders recommend deal with

Lefrak • No plan to reopen B.P.C. movie theater • Planners agree ferries can help save Downtown • Stuyvesant air is not getting worse •

Rebuild as high as Twin Towers • Park construction continues in the Village... Tribeca work near Hudson is still years away • Madelyn takes on Rudy • Durst:

Downtown needs more residents • Borders hopes to come back • California students help P.S. 234 • Wils says Giuliani is ignoring Downtown residents • P.S./I.S. 89 parents mull their return • P.S. 234 to vote on return • Small businesses begin to collect grants • B.P.C.A. hoping for pedestrian bridge • Washington Market Park expansion delayed • B.P.C. nursery open house • Will the W.T.C. barge stay near Harrison Street? • Spare space for Borders? • Parents, officials debate when to open P.S. 234 • 40,000 books cleaner, library reopens to the public • Pataki and Giuliani

pick team to rebuild Downtown • Officials discuss Downtown section of subway • Buddhist painting to protect Downtown • Trying to bring fun and business back to Wall St. • Some local leaders call for moving W.T.C. barge north • Time to organize children’s return to neighborhood schools •

Reclaim P.S. 234 in Jan. • Trade Center artist regroups with his comrades • L.M.C.C. presents its World Views at New Museum • Greenwich St. block

a birD’S eye view of grounD ZeroAn aerial photo of Ground Zero days after the attacks shows the mounds of rubble that had to be cleared.

c 2001, continued on p.8

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective8 downtown express

2001reopens • $100,000 for B.P.C. Nursery • SoHo was anti-Taliban pre-Sept. 11 • Silverstein says put Route 9A underground • Artist donates

painting to fire museum • Gerson leads tour of W.T.C. and its greater area • B.P.C.A. and residents clash over proposed bridge • Board, parents

close to Feb. 1 deal at P.S. 234 • Tribecans buying Christmas trees earlier • Onward Christian cleaners; Baptists complete work • A Feb. return to P.S. 234 • Parents say: Move the barge • Barge fight continues •

Freed thanks restauranteurs • P.S. 234 conditions for return • Residents begin fight for temporary rec space • Giuliani and students remember victims

and celebrate park’s renovation • Angling to please, B.P.C.A. proposes new design

• Liberty, Ellis ferries open later this week • Trust resurfacing

Chelsea field for Downtown children • Barge raises questions as children return to school • A life spent with the W.T.C. • Leaders look

to improve Downtown transportation • Pitching in to help Downtown businesses •

City Hall Park still closed 14 weeks later •

City to leave B.P.C. in spring? • P.S. 89 fearful, I.S. 89 anxious to return • I.S. 89 may

open Jan. 22 • Residents protest against W.T.C. debris barge •

City grants for non-profit and non-retail businesses • No plans to reopen City Hall Park

• Children’s programs return to New Amsterdam Library

�ank you to the entire Lower Manhattan community for

extraordinary courage, strength and resilience in the face of overwhelming odds. �ere is much to remember and

honor as our rebuilding continues.

State Senator Daniel Squadron

212-298-5565 [email protected] Broadway, Suite 2011New York, NY 10007

MCC Remembers 9/11And Honors those whose lives were lost

And Thanks the first respondersWho bravely sought to help their fellow man

WWW.MANHATTANCC.ORG

buSh viSitS Downtown aS reSiDentS Search for anSwerSA few days before ordering an attack on Afghanistan, President Bush paid a visit to

Downtown. He made a stop at P.S. 130 in Chinatown and spoke to Lower Manhattan business leaders at Federal Hall on Oct. 3. While at P.S. 130, he told the students they were “lucky to have heroes” in their classrooms, referring to the faculty that safely evacu-ated the school, located on Baxter Street, on the day of the attacks.

Bush also accompanied Gov. Pataki and Mayor Guiliani to Engine Company 55, which at the time was missing four firefighters. Lt. Jimmy Schade said Bush’s visit raised the spirits of the company.

Page 9: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 9

When 2002 began many Downtowners were still reeling from the 9/11 attacks and were in desperate need of a year defined by progress. It quickly became clear that the progress would be slow going.

But signs of hope came in the form of hotels opening in Battery Park City, the announce-ment that the federal government had earmarked billions of dollars to help rebuild the neighborhood, and the re-opening of two Lower Manhattan schools that had been evacu-ated and temporarily relocated.

Debris from Ground Zero was finally disappearing by way of barges launched from Pier 25, and actor Robert De Niro helped bring to life the Tribeca Film Festival, an event that has returned every year since and gives the local economy a boost. Community Board 1 became the most important community board in the city as its members tire-lessly advocated for money for schools, cultural groups and small businesses. U.S. Representatives Jerrold Nadler and Carolyn Maloney challenged FEMA to ensure that Lower Manhattan residents received the aid they deserved. And the World Trade Center site’s rebirth began as seven different architectural teams offered up nine different visions of how the devastated site should be designed.

2002B.P.C Ritz Carlton and Marriott Financial Center hotels open in Downtown’s struggling market • Clinton and

Schumer visit B.P.C., announce plans for

$1.1 billion in federal aid • Bill to honor heroes with Congressional Gold Medal passed in the House • Chinatown groups

scramble to help businesses, workers •

W.T.C. platform crowds overwhelm Downtown; businesses, residents object

• Lower Manhattan Development Corp.

begins to plan the future with $2 billion

from Washington • Many at P.S. 89

continue to fight return • Bloomberg says he’ll listen to Downtown residents when it comes to planning for the new W.T.C. • Pier 94 Disaster

Assistance Service Center moved to

Chambers St. • P.S. 89 parents to take non-binding vote on return • Three-day move for P.S. 234 • Real Estate Co. Insignia-ESG back at One Liberty Plaza • Teachers’ union signs deal to move

Downtown in an effort to support the area • Ticket-system for ground zero viewing platform is working, Downtowners say • Route 9A

reopening pushed back, not likely until April • New resident assistance group forms, called The Downtown Community Restoration Project • At public forum, workers, pols, businesses pledge to work together • New restaurants boldly open despite the odds: Plumeri, The Harrison, the

Stone Street Tavern, Seattle Coffee Roasters, Cookie Island, Les Halles and others try their luck Downtown • Many I.S. 89 students celebrate return; grateful to be back • P.S. 89

parents say Levi will compromise over students’ return • Nadler says E.P.A. is passing the buck Downtown • A portion of City Hall Park finally opens •

P.S. 24 Second graders publish pre-September photo book, “My Neighborhood Downtown” • Superheroes pay tribute to firefighters in New York City

the night the ‘tribute’ lightS went outFor a little over a month, 88 searchlights installed next to the site of the Twin Towers formed two vertical columns of light. The

art installation, created by the Municipal Art Society of New York, was called “Tribute in Light” and ran from March 11 to April 14, 2002.

Initially thought of as a one-time-only installation, the “Tribute Lights” returned the next year for the anniversary and have returned every year since to commemorate the collapse of the towers. On a clear night, the vertical beams can be seen from 60 miles away.

c 2002, continued on p.10

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective10 downtown express

2002Fire Museum and New York City Comic Book Museum’s new at exhibit on 9/11 fire heroes • Focus on Downtown businesses

— New ones open, some $$ for others, some struggling still look for government help

• P.S. 89 return opponents reject Feb. 28 offer • W.T.C. agency: permanent memorial will be built last • New Tribeca shops say business is picking up

• Loan deadline extended for small businesses affected directly by 9/11 • Skilled volunteers — some unemployed — assist businesses

• Clinton defends Mideast policy at Downtown forum • Architects weigh in with ground zero ideas • P.S. 89 P.T.A. resists parent vote and return • Planting some ferns to remember victims

at Pier 26, as part of America Forest’s Memorial Tree Groves effort • Shopping giants

begin to reopen doors Downtown: Part of W.F.C. opens, Century 21 later this month,

J&R expands • Silverstein aide says Greenwich St. may be extended • Hundreds swarm to W.T.C. forum sponsored by the Civic Alliance to

Rebuild Downtown New York • $15.6 million disaster relief package for B.P.C. residents

• W.T.C. ‘Bathtub’ retaining wall is cleared and safe for now, city and P.A. officials say • Residents debate Twin Tower light

design • Some parents transferring away from Downtown schools • Bloomberg outlines his vision for Downtown’s future • A ferry for Mommy:

Patricia Mary Smith, 2 1/2, who once promised to get her mother a boat, last week

helped christen the Moira Smith, a NY Waterway Ferry named for her mother, a police

officer who was killed Sept. 11 • C.B. 1 sees alternatives for ground zero • Marie Savettiere volunteers to sew a Firefighters’ quilt •

Some B.P.C. residents say relief offer is not enough • Short- and long-term plans to rebuild PATH • W.T.C. plans surge: L.M.D.C. begins work under

fire • Nadler hammers E.P.A. on air testing •

Battery Park City Day Nursery steadily rebuilding enrollment • Reconnecting to Battery

Park City: Construction begins on Rector St. bridge and on Route 9A repairs; W.T.C.

South Bridge may be rebuilt this spring • Bloomberg aide says press ban

Assemblymember

Deborah J. Glick853 Broadway, Suite 1518, New York, NY 10003

Tel: 212-674-5153 / Fax: [email protected]

Ten years later we remember all those

who are no longer with us and salute

all the heroes who came together

to make our City even stronger.

The Downtown communty remains

as vibrant as ever, a testament to the

spirit of all those who live here.Honoring all New Yorkers

who have overcome tragedy and continue to work

toward personal growth and understanding.

In Memorium

Greenwich House Hosts

A Decade in the Aftermath of September 11Photography ExhibitionSeptember 12 - October 14, 2011Premier Reception on Monday, September 12, 2011RSVP required, contact GH Music46 Barrow Street212-242-4770

StuDentS return to p.S. 234 anD p.S. 150When the Twin Towers collapsed, schools like P.S. 234 and P.S. 150 in Tribeca were

quickly evacuated. The teachers and students had no idea more than five months would pass before they would return to their classrooms. Both of the schools were relocated, temporarily, to schools in the West Village, where in some cases rooms were crammed with up to three teachers and 90 students.

On Monday, Feb.4, 2002 the two schools reopened. The photo above shows Anna Switzer (in red jacket), the principal of P.S. 234 at the time, and Bob Townley (far right), executive director of Manhattan Youth greeting the parents and students.

c 2002, continued on p.11

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 11

2002

Assemblyman Shelly Silver250 Broadway ·Suite 2307 • New York, NY 10007

212 · 312 · 1420 • [email protected]

“As we continue to rebuild Lower Manhattan, the victims of September 11 will remain in our hearts and memories. The acts of that day will stay with us forever, but the resiliency of our great community will continue to move us forward.”

at C.B. 1 meeting on the W.T.C. memorial was a mistake • Light memorial for B.P.C.; W.T.C. sphere in historic Battery Park • Remembering the

victims: The Battery Park City museum holds vigil and discussion • After five months away, High School of Economics and Finance, is last high school to reopen • P.S. 89, the last ground zero school, reopens • Shoppers swarm back to Century 21 • Politicians praise Century 21’s Downtown reopening • Whitehead on ground zero’s future, says submerging Route 9A likely • Some fearful B.P.C. parents try home schooling • Chatham Green tenants: Checkpoints are choking us • City: W.T.C. barge will leave by ‘early June’ •

Bloomberg sets up Downtown air quality group, Lower Manhattan Air Quality Task Force • Two Downtown memorials dedicated six

months after: “The Sphere” by Fritz Koenig and “Tribute Light” twin tower replica • East will meet West in free ferry service to connect Battery Park City with east end of Wall St. • Pier 25 W.T.C. debris barge protest • St. Paul’s Chapel, site of 9/11 relief, to close for cleaning • Village officers-heroes honored at Annual Cop-of-the-Year awards • NYU Downtown Hospital honored for response on 9/11 • P.S. 89 still

waiting for promised air filters • Parents protest debris barge at Pier 25 • Chinatown groups raise objections to East River bridge tolls • The ‘bathtub’ and other tales from the deep: Divers check safety of W.T.C. foundation • Gerson proposes plan to help mom and pop businesses

Downtown • Downtown Italian restaurant Caracello reopens • Real estate market appears to be picking up • Downtown subway station rebuilding continues

• Parks development is part of plan to retain B.P.C. residents • Museum of Jewish Heritage, American Indian Museum join Lower Manhattan’s rebuilding efforts • De Niro, Bloomberg and AmEx trumpet first annual Tribeca Film Festival • Statue still closed, but Liberty remains an attraction • NYU Downtown Hospital plans for post-9/11 threats • I.S. 89 unveils tile art project of images of hope and renewal post 9/11 • B.M.C.C. picks up the pieces, coping with budget cuts and a damaged Fiterman Hall • West St. and Battery Tunnel reopen — Rector Br. Next • Feds to close more Downtown streets for security • Immigrant group protests for undocumented victims • Silver’s package proclaims 9/11 as state holiday, no sales tax in Lower Manhattan stores on July 4 weekend, need for air quality tests • Chinatown still hurting after 9/11,

report says • Authority finds operator for North Cove Marina, to the delight of Downtown boaters • New York Partnership and Chamber of Commerce gives $1.1 million in grants

c 2002, continued on p.12

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective12 downtown express

2002

Standing Together With Our Community

New Fiterman Hall reopening 2012. The original Fiterman Hall was the only academic building in the nation destroyed on 9/11.

To improve the lives of our students, contributions may be made to the BMCC Foundation. For more information, call 212-220-8020.

Borough of Manhattan Community College

to 9 small businesses in Lower Manhattan • Blueprints of Downtown’s future unveiled • Smallest businesses falling through the cracks • L.M.D.C. adopts expansion of residential

incentives • L.M.D.C. looks to restore Cass Gilbert building, site of 24-hour fire on 9/11 • W.T.C. relief fraud: Albert Dross arrested for false claim •

It’s almost...bye-bye barge time; beginning of the end of the debris barge operation • Liberty St. pedestrian bridge, formerly the South

Bridge, reopens • Tribeca restauranteur Albert Capsuoto of Capsuoto Freres, advocates for Downtown’s small businesses • City to repave 37 miles in 5 weeks; FEMA aid will pay

if done in time frame • Officials say sun will rise on B.P.C. ballfields next year • $33 million to keep 14 big employers, large firms in Lower Manhattan

• Stuyvesant High School, B.M.C.C. students talk with terror victims in Northern Ireland • Stress rates high among children, says report by Board of Ed • Southbridge is just outside zone eligible for relief; wary of relief promise from Safe Horizon • Chinatown residents chastise FEMA at meeting •

United Artists Battery Park 16 Cinema and Embassy Suites hotel reopen just in time for Tribeca Film Fest crowds • AmEx returns with $1 million gift for Lower Manhattan summer concerts and events festival • Feds to consider grant plan to continue attracting residents to Lower Manhattan • Eight months

later, E.P.A. will clean apartments • Brookfield presents plan for new Winter Garden • Scholars at B.M.C.C. honored in name of fallen classmates • Skyscraper Museum design approved, new location to open this year • Tens of thousands flock to Tribeca festival for films, fun and music • W.T.C. ceremony set for May 30; Tribeca piers to reopen • Silverstein’s architect presents 7 W.T.C. plan • Downtown tax-free days passed Upstate • L.M.D.C. increases proposed aid

to residents • W.T.C. planning team named • Questions persist as E.P.A. begins indoor cleanup • Con Ed pulls up last mile of cable that supplied temporary power

Downtown • Tribeca Playhouse raising money to stay open, says all investors withdrew after 9/11 • Ground zero recovery work, cleanup ends, allowing for a moment of silence at a May 30 memorial ceremony • Most studies show stress is rising Downtown • Cedar St. tenants ask about cleanup of

evacuated buildings • With recovery done, St. Paul’s closes for cleaning • L.M.C.C. arts group, homeless after losing space in W.TC. Tower 1, gets donated

space in W.F.C. • B.M.C.C. grads praised by Hillary Clinton for enduring hectic year of 9/11 tragedy • Proposal to name West St. Heroes Highway, after 9/11’s heroes • Remains still being recovered at and near ground zero • Protestors demand more aid for Chinatown • Stress psychiatrist says more 9/11 treatment needed • Proposal for “Freedom Trees” be planted around city • Meet Silverstein’s architect, David Childs, the man most likely to design ground zero’s new

c 2002, continued on p.13

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 13

2002

Julie Menin wishes to thank and acknowledge all

who stood tall with our community

in our darkest hour as now

on this ten year anniversary

we reflect, remember and unite.

buildings • Imagining 19,000 opinions for ground zero • Clinton backs mental health plan of children affected by 9/11 • Firefighters

still waiting for safety improvements to address problems that came up on 9/11 • Examining possible 9/11 harm to pregnant women • Beat goes on at

Murray Street Studio after a temporary close • FEMA expands housing benefit program • E.P.A. questions private test results that indicate high mercury levels • $12 million in federal aid approved for Downtown schools • Strong reactions to the marketing of ground zero: the debate

over vendors and souvenir sales at the W.T.C. • Forum on Lower Manhattan redevelopment expects to draw 5,000 voices • PATH station’s

destruction was a route to success for harbor’s ferry king NY Waterway • Tiny Greek “Saint Nicholas Church” likely to be rebuilt at W.T.C. •

Flocking to remember 343 casualties at city’s Fire Museum • Release, React, Rethink: officials take second look at W.T.C. plans after strong reaction • What’s next for block near

ground zero? Tenants across from W.T.C. hope to return • Federal Hall Exhibit collects community input on W.T.C.; visitors are underwhelmed by 6 W.T.C. plans • Council says FEMA is shortchanging the city on money to replace $30 million lost in damaged technology • C.B. 1 grills E.P.A. over W.T.C. cleanup • $4.55 billion for MTA and PATH rebuilding; nearby department store Century 21 agrees transportation is what is needed • Details of

E.P.A. cleanup plans draw fire from some • Reassurance given to Cedar-Liberty tenants: L.M.D.C. says won’t raze homes as part of redevelopment plan • W.F.C. shops anxious for Winter Garden reopening • Trade Center’s engineer, Leslie E. Robertson, is still building skyscrapers • After 9/11, bomb squad’s job gets busier • Questions still as L.M.D.C. starts over with W.T.C. designs • City Council says W.T.C. site should include a public

market like Seattle’s Pike Place • Land of memorials ponders the 9/11 addition; BPC Residents worry their community will become a “living graveyard” • E.P.A. extends cleaning deadline for resident apartments • Month of free dances in historic Battery Park: Downtown Dance Festival, interrupted last year on 9/11, will happen

at full speed this year • Watching easy riders road down to ground zero, for the 9/11 commemorative motorcycle ride fundraiser • Chatham Green to rally to reopen Park Row • Downtown Jews prepare as High Holy Days coincide with 9/11 anniversary • South Ferry station could move to Battery Park • Memorializing the sounds of 9/11:

The Sonic Memorial Project produces a radio and online documentary about the W.T.C. • Gays try to extend 9/11 advances to other tragedies • Chinatown

poor air quality exacerbated by 9/11; asthma survey by local group shows high rate • First part of viewing wall will be unveiled Sept. 11 • Ceremonies planned c 2002, continued on p.14

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective14 downtown express

2002from sunrise to sunset Sept. 11, 2002 • Congress returns for historic session at Federal Hall, near old Twin Towers • City blocks $15 million fund for B.P.C. residents: say they have plenty of

incentives already • Residents protest continuing closure of Park Row • City comptroller

outlines economic hits from 9/11 • Transit Police Officer Ramon Suarez’s family and woman he saved, remember • Officials say

Winter Garden opening marks renewal • E.P.A. begins apartment cleanup, slowly but surely • 1 year, 4 days after 9/11 closure: South Ferry, Rector, Cortlandt

subway stations reopen • Fire Dept. adds anti-terrorist protections •

C.B. 1 puts last touches on W.T.C. plans • Running for freedom: “Let Freedom Run” held to remember 9/11 victims • 1 year tribute: sailboats gathered in front of Statue of Liberty fly 1,000

sails, 3,000 flags to honor the victims • 1st anniversary ceremony brings a mix of emotions for local residents • C.B. 1 stresses transportation in

W.T.C. plans • Business, civic leaders outline ways to revive Downtown, call for

demolition of closed buildings around the W.T.C. • 1,000 cyclists participated in “Face of America 2002” ride from W.T.C. to Pentagon, to honor 9/11 victims • Little health risk to residents from 9/11, panel says •

Residents and victims’ families working

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May We Never Forget the tragedy of 9-11-01 and the losses we all suffered as a result of that horrific act of terrorism.

Lower Manhattan is a worldwide symbol of American Capitalism. We are resilient, strong, and do persevere.

NYC Check Express celebrates 40 years of being a part of this community and wishes all residents and businesses

great success for future decades.

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however, nothing could have preparedour our company for september 11,

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we would like to thankour loyal customers and members

of the community who have supportedthe resilience and rethe resilience and recovery

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c 2002, continued on p.15

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 15

2002together on W.T.C. plans • C.B. 1 support for Chatham Green and Park Row • L.M.C.C.’s

new exhibit “Looking In” brings art to empty storefronts • $7 million from Congress for “Center for Catastrophe

Preparedness and Response” terrorism center at N.Y.U. • No plans to fix or demolish Deutsche Bank • Speaker Silver introduced legislature to exempt Downtown grants from Federal taxes • Grocery shoppers,

art critics give dog mixed reviews: American Kennel Club DOGNY Public Art Program installs statues to honor

dogs who participated in 9/11 rescue missions • Baby Luca, “ground zero’s first baby,” turns one as life gets back to normal • Feds ask Wall St. firms to relocate operations to lessen blow of

possible future attacks • Customs House says it hopes to return to Downtown • Doctors

give status report on W.T.C. health studies: some evidence of effects to ground zero workers, but so far no evidence

of widespread problems to residents • Red Cross offers assistance to help and encourage residents to have apartments cleaned • W.T.C. souvenir vendors struggle to make ends meet • FEMA protest: Maloney and Nadler say people aren’t getting the assistance they’re

entitled to • Critics say there are better ways to spend business grants • FEMA to help Downtown schools pay for

lost time by funding additional hours in the classroom • 40 miles of street repairs Downtown: Greenwich just the beginning of 5-year project

• Telemarketers try to tap into FEMA 9/11 funds: misleading practices skirt the line between being legal and illegal, officials say • Critics charge W.T.C. Individual

and Family Grant Program aid stats are inflated • Downtown questions Olympic Plan, worries that 2012 Olympics in NYC would distract from Downtown rebuilding • City presents

5-year plan for Downtown streets, to repair damage from rescue, debris removal, construction traffic • 26 people charged with W.T.C. scams •

I.R.S. to tax Downtown residential grants • Terrorism drives up insurance rates, report says; commercial insurance premiums up 73 percent in the city • Young designers use Legos to build a new W.T.C. at the NYC Police Museum • E.P.A. Downtown cleanup draws criticism • Downtowners worry over

fuel stored in buildings • FEMA, Clinton, Schumer announce $4.1 million Pace center • New M.B.A. program “MBAs4NYC”

helps Downtown businesses • L.M.D.C. President Tomson unveils new timetable for Downtown’s future • FEMA enforces deadline despite mail

mix-up; applications returned to sender after federal agency misses payments on P.O. box bill • Holiday lights return to Winter Garden after a two-year absence • Deutsche moves to

Wall St., uncertain about Liberty building • Citibank donation: $50,000 to the Alliance for Downtown New York, to help alleviate 9/11 economic woes • Architecture students New York Institute of Technology take their crack at designs for ground zero • Nino’s America’s Kitchen for rescue workers, goes back

to being a restaurant • C.B. 1 speaks, city silent on diesel safety • Hospitals, residents complain about Park Row closure, say impedes rapid emergency transit • Residents want to stay Downtown, Downtown Alliance survey says Workers’ Board rules two ways on gay

‘spouses’: Aug. change in state law applies only to spouses of 9/11 victims • Will it be any of these?; Public reacts to nine ideas from seven teams for W.T.C. site • Fire commander voices concern about diesel storage

theater reopenS in time for film feSt The United Artists Battery Park 16 Cinema reopened

just in time for the crowds of film buffs that flooded Lower Manhattan for the inaugural Tribeca Film Festival. Robert De Niro, one the fest’s founders, created the event in hopes of stimulating the neighborhood’s economy post-9/11.

Over the last ten years, Lower Manhattan has grown into a thriving residential and cultural community. This transformation is possible due to the resilience and spirit of downtown residents — who have demonstrated their unwavering commitment to their community every day since

the attacks on September 11, 2001. I am inspired by the strength of this community and honored to serve as your representative.

Councilmember Margaret S. Chin

We remember family, friends, neighbors and heroes lost September 11, 2001

But we look forward, with hope, as we continue working together to rebuild our community and our lives, stronger and more vibrant than ever before

Inspired by their lives and their blessed memory

Battery Park Synagogue 385 South End Avenue, New York, NY 10280

(212) 432-7022 [email protected] unaffiliated, egalitarian congregation

…serving the downtown community since 1986

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective16 downtown express

The Rudin Management Company

wishes to extend our heartfelt thoughts and prayers to

those who lost family and friends on September 11, 2001.

As we honor those who died on this 10th anniversary,

we hope for a better future

filled with peace, tolerance and love.

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 17

Public meetings to be held on future of W.T.C. site • Debate begins on shorter West St. tunnel • Don’t rush decisions says public on rebuilding process • Community Board 1 considers W.T.C. proposals, makes recommendation • FEMA criticizes itself in 9/11 aid report •

First Precinct officers honored for role in 9/11 • Tomson to leave L.M.D.C. in February • C.B.1 backs 3 W.T.C. plans • One week left to apply for FEMA aid for 9/11 • FEMA decides to accept some late applications for aid • Chevys and Applebees struggle across from W.T.C.; one-and-a-half years later, business

still down about 55 percent • Pataki backs West. St. tunnel in letter • N.Y.U. takes advantage of post-9/11 low rents; chooses Woolworth center for a location to help in revitalization • Do Tour Buses belong on the ‘footprints?’; Battle lines harden over W.T.C. bus garage • Final decision on W.T.C. architectural team expected Feb. 27 • B.P.C.A. objects to Port Authority plans for temporary PATH exits •

FEMA suspects fraud in aid applications • Battery Park City Day Nursery enrollment is close to pre-9/11 numbers • Daniel Libeskind picked to design W.T.C. • Families, residents fight over W.T.C. ‘footprints’ • One teen’s view of the bus debate: Development is necessary for residents who have

2003Nearly two years after the attacks on the Twin Towers, national media attention on Lower

Manhattan was fading as the Bush administration launched the Iraq war. Business in Lower Manhattan was still down 55 percent, restaurants were closing and a community board stepped up and said loud and clear, “We must be heard — this is our home.”

Funding was identified for a new high school in the neighborhood, Millennium High, and there was a renewed focus on pedestrian traffic and access, specifically the Vesey Street Bridge. Debate raged on the West Street Tunnel. Immense pressure was put on federal government agencies like the E.P.A. to pay attention to air quality concerns that were on the verge of being altogether forgotten. Daniel Libeskind was picked to design the W.T.C. and the L.M.D.C. began the search for memorial ideas; 13000 responded to the memorial design competition. Silverstein and Childs took the lead on Freedom Tower relegating Libeskind to “collaborating architect.”

The year also saw firefighters return to “10 House” on Liberty Street and saw the formation of a movement to make sure Chinatown, and Park Row, were not lost in the mix.

cloSer to a DeciSion for grounD ZeroIn January 2003, the Lower Manhattan Development Corp. narrowed the nine choices for the World Trade Center site down to either THINK team’s World Cultural Center or a

design by architect Daniel Libeskind. On Monday, Feb. 1, executives with the Port Authority, the city and the L.M.D.C. met and reached what they described as a consensus, perhaps on which two plans to consider. A final decision on a street plan for the site were expected within two months.

c 2003, continued on p.19

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective18 downtown express

ON THIS 10 YEAR ANNIVERSARY OF SEPTEMBER 11TH

WE REMEMBER THOSE WHO WERE LOST ANDALL THOSE WHO LOVED THEM.

WE THANK THOSE WHO RESPONDED THE FIREFIGHTERS, POLICE OFFICERS, EMERGENCY WORKERS

AND VOLUNTEERS.

WE WILL NEVER FORGET THOSE WHOSE LIVES WEREIMPACTED AND THOSE WHO CONTINUE TO REBUILD.

THE PEOPLE OF GOLDMAN SACHS

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 19

2003to see the W.T.C. hole every day • L.M.D.C. looks to plan the rest of Downtown; After architect choice, still more decisions to make • Some families call for Wils to resign from L.M.D.C., say she hasn’t been sensitive to victims • Report disputes E.P.A. on initial 9/11 claim on air quality • B.P.C.A. says West St. tunnel likely • Residents ask Libeskind to improve W.T.C. access with street-level walk-throughs • British to spruce up Hanover Sq. with $2.5 million memorial garden • Complaint filed on elevators, handicap

access since 9/11; Rector Street bridge opening nears • Winter Garden wins Lucy G. Moses Preservation award for restoration after 9/11 damage • Pro-troops rally at W.T.C. • City considers creating Chinatown Empire zone • Mayor asks Feds to fund terrorist-prevention • $2.9 million for labor training, to address

unemployment in wake of 9/11 • Borders close to return, at 100 Broadway • L.M.D.C. tracks progress, informs public with W.T.C. exhibit: “From

Recovery to Renewal: The Public Process of Rebuilding the World Trade Center Site and Creating a Permanent Memorial” • Libeskind to attend C.B. 1 forum, present plan • Taxman cometh to take 9/11 grants, unexpectedly • Beginning to put Downtown’s plans into place; Millenium

Hilton reopens • Airport access is a key to Downtown’s future • Progress and recovery continues in B.P.C. • Chinatown battling after economic hits from Sept. 11 • St. Paul’s Chapel needs spirituality and space on Church St. • Vinnie Amesse photographs 9/11 memorial tattoos; exhibit at Staten Island Historical Society Museum

• 33 charged with falsely claiming 9/11 needs • Libeskind signals flexibility in memorial process • First Solaire tenants moved out of

B.P.C. in 9/11 aftermath • Chinatown searching for answers on Park

Row; City, residents debate closure • City looks to Rockaway and Brooklyn for Chinatown help • Pataki commits to Downtown timeline: Downtown

Greenmarket, high school this summer; W.T.C. memorial selected

this fall; Libeskind tower topped off in 2006 • Sept. 11 funds will go

toward Millenium High School Downtown • L.M.D.C. begins search

for W.T.C. memorial ideas • Asbestos found in Independence Plaza

North after E.P.A. cleanup; toxins are still in residents’ apartments •

Wedge of Light will have shadows every 9/11; Libeskind’s claim that his building would have no shadows on 9/11 anniversaries is disproved • At British memorial inaugural ceremony:

Princess Anne says garden will grow at Hanover Sq. • Park Row

lawsuit continues as talks stall • Tribeca Film Festival returns to help revive Downtown • Open space

questions at the W.T.C. site are one critique of Libeskind’s plan • E.P.A. says I.P.N. stairwells are safe • Downtown fears resurface with sign painted by Brooklyn artist James Peterson reading: “Caution: Low Flying Planes” on Leonard St. • Business group from Florence,

Italy adopts Tribeca, offers aid for children and businesses Downtown • Downtown favors West. St. tunnel for better access to W.T.C. memorial, poll says • Loretta Thomas bounces back to teach dance to kids • Deadline passes for L.M.D.C. residential grant giving incentives to new residents • 13 thousand vie to design W.T.C. memorial • Principal attributes P.S. 89’s low test score performance to high turnover after 9/11 • Housing developer approved for Liberty

Bonds at Tribeca’s 5C site • Borders’ second chapter Downtown; New location at 100 Broadway opens • Council proposes new Park

Row law • W.T.C. Greenmarket Market returns • W.T.C. Memorial jury hears residents, families clash; Final design choice scheduled for October • Tragedy brought her to B.P.C.: Sister of W.T.C. victim moves to B.P.C. to feel closer, works as counselor for Project Liberty •

Downtowners celebrate the return of Borders • Advocates press for affordable housing Downtown as part of Lower Manhattan’s plans for the future

• Construction gets underway at Skyscraper Museum; Museum has much more attention post 9/11 • D.O.T. presents Vesey St. pedestrian bridge plans

c 2003, continued on p.21

remembering the teDDy bearSThe weeks and months following 9/11 were filled with selfless acts of charity. Many were inspirational

and led to works of art, whether in the form of dramatic productions or full-fledged documentaries. In 2003 “September Bears,” premiered at St. Paul’s Chapel chronicled the story of Sue Lucarelli, who handed out 60,000 teddy bears after 9/11.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective20 downtown express

New York University

pauses

to

remember and honor

the lives lost

on

September 11, 2001.

Job: 08_25_11_OGCA_The Villager

Publication: The Villager

Size: 9.875” x 11.4”

Color(s): 4/c

Material Type: pdf

Line Screen:

Delivery: email [email protected]

Issue Date: tbd

Closing Date: tbd

Proof: second

Date: 08.31.11

Designer: al

We continue to mourn those

members of the NYU community

and fellow New Yorkers who died

on that tragic day.

NYU stands by New York: past,

present, and future.

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 21

2003• Downtown’s new population boom underway • “September Bears” play at St. Paul’s Chapel chronicles the story of Sue Lucarelli, who handed out 60,000 teddy bears after Sept.

11 • Former National Guardsman to lead B.P.C. emergency C.E.R.T. team • Downtown family-run printing plant Admiral Communications

is holding on south of W.T.C. • Plan floated to expand P.S. 234 to address Lower Manhattan’s population boom • Judge says police are ‘heavy handed’ on Park Row • Two false terror alarms disrupt Downtown • Leadership school students

chose to contribute by building Downtown rec center • Silverstein-Childs take W.T.C. lead; Libeskind becomes collaborating architect

• Pataki objects to tower move • New York Times’ developer seeks 9/11 funds for Midtown • W.T.C. plan criticized at environmental hearing, many say changes are needed • C.B. 1 committee skeptical of West St. tunnel plan • Occupation’ near Park Row must end, judge rules • Check is not in the mail, merchants say, anxiously awaiting 9/11 relief • Arts groups look to bring culture to W.T.C. at planned cultural center • Chinatown anger boils up at L.M.D.C. meeting, residents say their needs have been ignored • C.B. 1 leans against West St. tunnel, sees bridge plans • Moms

of W.T.C. babies question birth-weight study on effects of 9/11 toxins • Judge’s ruling provides ‘road map’ for reopening Park Row • Red Cross

9/11 Program consolidates, moves its operations to Hanover Sq. • Pataki restates West St. tunnel support at Vesey St. bridge ceremony • L.M.D.C. returns to Chinatown for second

meeting • Quieter 9/11 ceremonies two years later • Health study begins for residents, W.T.C. workers • Many art groups look to occupy new W.T.C.

cultural center • On 9/11 anniversary, local artists focus on “Restoration” at a World Trade Art Gallery exhibition • Port looks to buy back W.T.C. retail, leasing rights • Despite toxic

report, E.P.A. clears 114 Liberty St. building for residents to return • Fighting ‘Ground Zero’ as a phrase and tourist stop • Bus garage plan could reopen

W.T.C. wounds • Mayor, governor back 9/11 Liberty Bond funds for Midtown • Clinton blocks E.P.A. appointment over Downtown air, says agency mishandled 9/11 pollution • Clinton calls for review of E.P.A. testing, broader apartment tests Downtown • Council introduces pollution reduction bill

for W.T.C. construction • E.P.A. delays release of lead tests • Port presents plans for PATH hub at W.T.C. • N.F.L. donates $5 million

to rebuild Lower Manhattan • Whitehead says Liberty Bonds won’t be wasted Downtown, in W.T.C. construction • What memorial? Winter Garden visitors confused over plans •

Put the bus garage under the W.T.C. memorial • W.T.C. signs: should they stay or go? • Running to remember; Fireman’s widow to run marathon in husband’s memory • W.T.C. health survey is poorly run, some say • W.T.C. plans on track, Pataki says • E.P.A. releases results from some lead tests • Across

from the W.T.C., Liberty St. firefighters return • E.P.A. moves closer to releasing test

results • The W.T.C. superblock worked well for retail •

Paving the PATH’s way: Downtown getting ready for PATH’s reopening • Memorial design choices to be unveiled • PATH opens to tears and joy • Mixed reactions to memorial designs • D.O.T. looks to lengthen proposed West St. tunnel • Zagat releases book

to help Downtown • Century-old Barthman’s Jeweler, struggling to stay open since

9/11, looks to the future • Give me Liberty for $5 million: Martin Scorsese to help raise

money to reopen Statue of Liberty • E.P.A. releases results from lead tests • Residents raise questions on W.T.C. Health Registry • Lead analysis indicates minimal effect from W.T.C. • Childs’s

and Libeskind’s collaboration on Freedom Tower design to be revealed Dec. 19 • C.B. 1, newspapers endorse memorial plans • Not much help for

small businesses: Leonard Altabet owns Worth Eyes eyeglass store in Tribeca, says last

2 years have been most difficult • Wind and light for Childs’ W.T.C. tower design •

Preparing for the holidays with terror alerts and additional security measures • 6th Precinct remembers its fallen heroes

of 9/11 • C.B. 1 backs conditional Liberty Bond extension • Changes to Freedom Tower are beyond expectations

We want to acknowledge and thank all of the members of our

community who have joined together in the last decade to

renew the vitality and viability of our businesses and community. Lower Manha�an is a shining

example of resilience and economic recovery.

Lower Manhattan Marketing Association

P.O. Box 121Peck Slip Station

New York, NY 10272

[email protected]

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective22 downtown express

n y c . g o v / h h c

NEW YORK CITYHEALTH ANDHOSPITALSCORPORATION

WTCEnvironmental

HealthCenter

Bellevue Hospital CenterElmhurst Hospital CenterGouverneur Healthcare Services

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 23

For Lower Manhattan, the year 2004 was all about design and demolition. The design of the Freedom Tower, as it was then named by Governor Pataki, was debated. Over 5000 different designs were released for the 9/11 Memorial and the Memorial Foundation was legitimately established. Plans were laid out to ensure that the future

W.T.C. site would include dedicated space for cultural institutions; the arts groups selected were the Joyce Theater, The Drawing Center, Signature Theater and Freedom Center. The Santiago Calatrava-designed PATH train and subway station was unveiled to mostly rave reviews.

The announcement that the Deutsche Bank building would be demolished sparked concern in the community and raised questions about asbestos and the role of the E.P.A. After assuring residents the air was fine in the months after 9/11, the E.P.A. was taken to task by many, including the Sierra Club, which issued a report detailing the failures in air quality testing and claiming the agency had misinformed the public.

A major milestone did signal that life was slowly returning to the way it was pre-9/11. The makeshift PATH station at the W.T.C. once again became the busiest stop in the system at 33,500 riders a day. On the more mundane front of “return to normality,” Downtown rents started to escalate as 9/11 residential grants dried up and the real estate bubble gained momentum.

Cultural buildings to return to memorial design with 36,000 sq. ft. of proposed space • C.B. 1 gets Freedom Tower presentation • Masters

in disaster are the latest degree, with Metropolitan College of New York’s new Emergency

and Disaster Management program • Juror Julie Menin gave birth while nurturing a design • W.T.C. train station unveiled; described as a station with ‘life, lightness and hope’ • Great minds think alike? Stuyvesant high school students try their

own at a W.T.C. memorial design • Albany close to passing law barring vendors at Ground Zero • 9/11 Residential Liberty Bonds close to being

used up • Glowing reviews for Calatrava train station design at C.B. 1 • At Downtown speech, Gore says Bush exploited post-9/11 fears, ‘abused’ nation’s trust on Iraq • The second winter of Liberty St. and Vesey St. bridges discontent: pedestrians

say not enough has been done to facilitate access across West St. • B.M.C.C. inks deal to

move out of temporary classrooms, move in across from Fiterman • L.M.D.C. releases cultural organization short list of candidates for new W.T.C. arts center • Construction concerns at the W.T.C.: residents say

slower, business community says faster • 5,201 memorial ideas released • A long way home: handicapped access across West Side Hwy is still

deficient • 1993 W.T.C. bombing remembered; names of victims will be included in

W.T.C. Memorial design • C.B.1 Landmarks committee approves Wall Street’s security design: security barriers will become more aesthetically pleasing • Downtown reacts to W.T.C. vendor law •

E.P.A., Clinton announce panel to study W.T.C. response • Advocates tell L.M.D.C. to

spend money on jobs and housing • Children’s asthma study suggests possible 9/11 effects: compared the number of clinic visits for asthma in Chinatown before and after Sept. 11, 2001 •

Residents file suit against the E.P.A. • Poll: Downtown rebuilding is on the right track,

but distrust of E.P.A. soars • Chinatown residents hear traffic plan changes for Park Row

and Confucius Plaza • Getting ready to build — the reopened World

c 2004, continued on p.25

2004

initial renDering of new w.t.c. One of the first renderings of the World Trade Center site was unveiled in 2004,

including architect David Child’s original design of One W.T.C. (then called “the Freedom Tower”), the W.T.C. Memorial and the Calatrava PATH terminal.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective24 downtown express

NEW YORK DOWNTOWN HOSPITALSTILL HERE. STILL GROWING WITH YOU.

170 WILLIAM STREET | (212) 238-0180 | www.downtownwellness.org

Ten years ago, New York Downtown Hospital participated in the single largest hospital response to an emergency ever. Over the course of two days, with no utilities, the Hospital treated 1,500 people, including 269 firefighters, police, and rescue workers. As a result of this effort, the Downtown corporate community came together to fund a new Emergency Center that would be the most up-to-date facility, twice the size of its predecessor, with the latest available technology, to meet the needs of the Lower Manhattan communities.

This new Emergency Center was built on what was the Hospital’s center courtyard.

After a decade of expansion, the roof of the Emergency Center became the foundation for the Hospital’s new Wellness & Prevention Center, which provides advanced cardiac diagnostic technology, and a full spectrum of women’s services, including mammography and DEXA scan. Based on the results of your screening, you and your physician will develop a plan to protect, promote and maintain your health, as well as to prevent disease and disability.

Lower Manhattan is the fastest growing neighborhood in New York. And New York Downtown Hospital is continuing to grow to meet your needs.

A DECADE OF GROWTH

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2004Trade Center PATH station is once again the busiest stop in the system at 33,500 riders a day. • It is one of the reasons that many Lower

Manhattan leaders say there is a renewed sense of optimism • Optimism as Downtown plans move to building stage • Transportation: an airport-commuter

link is crucial for Downtown • Finding the right arts mix at the new W.T.C. • New York Chinese Cultural Center, reopened since 9/11, will build on Chinatown’s strengths •

Looking forward to living across from the progress • Parks: Downtown park renovations making Lower Manhattan a lot greener • Design for the W.T.C.

memorial; train center design; Freedom tower design • Downtown retailers say things are picking up • W.T.C. health bill “Remember 9/11 Health Act” will

give health screenings and treatments to residents and rescue workers • With $100,000 from Bloomberg and $7million in other private donations, Liberty Statue’s pedestal to reopen this summer • Panel named, agreement proposed for W.T.C. artifacts • How to spend Downtown’s last billion? Debate over Lower Manhattan’s funds intensifies • E.P.A. watchdog panel looks to expand testing • Vesey elevators coming this summer to a bridge near you • 9/11 money battle continues at C.B. 1; Board recommends affordable housing, park space, community centers, a school

• A police parking lot since 9/11, police forced off James Madison Plaza to neighbors’ delight • St. Paul’s Chapel near W.T.C. marks

locale with formal exhibit • High School for Leadership and Public Services nears end of repairs, begins to emerge from 9/11 ashes • Kennedy Dancers spring concert: “9/11 in The Shadow of the World Trade Center” at Greenwich St. Theater • Pataki backs rail, car tunnels; West St. tunnel still part of

W.T.C. plan • Environmental statement for W.T.C. still lacking, C.B. 1 committee says • Kerrey to welcome 9/11 Commission to home turf for hearings on emergency response • E.P.A. panel considers ways to connect remaining dust to 9/11; watchdog group wants to determine whether any asbestos, lead

or other toxins that are in apartments now can be traced to the destruction of the World Trade Center • Anger & tears for 9/11 Commission at emergency response hearings • River fest returns to Lower Manhattan, flows between the East and the Hudson • 9/11 mental health assistance still available through the 9/11 Mental Health and Substance Abuse Program, funded by Red Cross and the September 11th Fund • Lower

Manhattan emergency drill: The city’s Office of Emergency Management simulated a

subway explosion in Lower Manhattan at Bowling Green station early Sunday morning

to test the response time of Police, Fire, Transit and Emergency Medical personnel •

9/11 Commission’s Kerrey: On 9/11, Kerry and V.P. run (‘definitely no’) • A quilt sewn by Kentucky grandmother Mary M. Henderson

is ready for the W.T.C. firehouse • E.P.A. panel considers its next step: broader testing in areas exposed to W.T.C. dust cloud? • Memorial barrier removed as W.T.C. plans

proceed • 9/11 memories to be preserved at W.T.C. “Story Corps” sound booth • New York Disaster Interfaith Services opens across from the W.T.C. • Arts groups selected for the W.T.C.: L.M.D.C. has chosen Joyce dance

theater, the Drawing Center, Signature Theater and Freedom Center • Some Chinatown residents charge N.Y.P.D. racism — New Park Row suit filed on environmental grounds • 9/11 business groups

looking for money three years later; Some planning and business groups formed as a

result of the Sept. 11 attacks are wrapping up their work, while others search for money

to continue • E.P.A. panel continues to debate what to do • Cornerstone of Freedom Tower to be laid on Independance Day: building’s critics ready for a fight • New Jersey’s 9/11 memorial, designed by Frederic

Schwartz, will be visible Downtown • L.M.C.C. artist’s group gets new home for W.T.C. tower 1 art studio • Downtown’s $3 billion pot is

shrinking, official warns • Construction begins on the Freedom Tower • Final push to sign up for W.T.C.

c 2004, continued on p.26

a Special ShoulDer to cry onIn 2004 one mourner at the 9/11 anniversary ceremony found a very special shoul-

der to cry on; the shoulder of former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective26 downtown express

2004registry health study • Lesbian partner wins in 9/11 fund suit • Deutsche demo raises asbestos concerns • Vets protest war at the W.T.C. • E.P.A. panel plans to expand test program to residences and workplaces north of Canal • Downtown reacts to terror threats against Citigroup buildings and the New York Stock Exchange • With 50,000 enrollees so far, city looks to make

biggest W.T.C. Health Registry bigger • W.T.C. culture groups talk to C.B. 1 • After almost three years closed, Church St. post office reopens, gets stamp of

approval • Coordinated Construction Act for Lower Manhattan encourages faster rebuilding, minority hiring, cleaner emissions • Watchdog group Good Jobs New York criticizes L.M.D.C’s allocations, says it favored big business • Sierra Club releases report on environmental response to 9/11, claims E.P.A.

misinformed residents about air dangers • Pennsylvania artist Steve Tobin is sculpting a memorial for St. Paul’s Chapel from a 9/11-damaged tree • W.T.C. lawsuit filed by 9/11 families, to halt W.T.C. construction until satisfying historic preservation

requirements • Seniors plan G.O.P. protest in B.P.C., concerns include civil liberties in the post-9/11 world • Anti-war signs overlook the W.T.C. site •

“RingOut” Protesters to ring bells and form ring around W.T.C., to commemorate victims of 9/11 while protesting Republican National Convention in NYC • Subdued

remembranceSilver;s away from the W.T.C. • A homecoming at long last:

Greenspan-Abramson family is first to move back into 114 Liberty St., the

last residential building to reopen • Public process to dismantle Deutsche building begins • Committee looks for W.T.C.

memorial entrance-exit ramp location • W.T.C. health studies discussed at

forum: NYU conference reviews previous health studies • New index

developed to measure Downtown economy indicates it’s slowly healing •

Downtowners call for more say over L.M.D.C. money: Gerson leads protest

calling for community say in use of remaining $860 million • Last 7 W.T.C. beam raised as Port’s new leader is approved • C.B. 2 looks to make Village’s tile

park at Greenwich Ave. and 7th Ave. S an official 9/11 memorial •

Tribecan playwright Jon Robin Baitz’s, troubled about 9/11, presidential campaign, returns to ‘fight it out’: “My Beautiful Goddamn City” is part of First Annual Tribeca Theater Fest • Silverstein shows off

7 W.T.C.’s mettle to Silver; occupancy will begin early next year • Ferry commuters react to Waterway’s money woes caused by PATH station reopening • E.P.A.’s 9/11 leader Paul Gilman to leave • 80 War Resisters League members marched from W.T.C. to Stock Exchange in protest of Iraq War, 7 were arrested • Show me the money, Silver says at L.M.D.C. meeting, calling on agency to

support schools, libraries, Chinatown projects, Hudson River Park with remaining funds • E.P.A. waits for permission to test its own offices • Planning group discusses retail future of W.T.C. • The British Memorial Garden garden is coming, but some wonder about statue • Green light for Hudson Park

green • Pataki announces L.M.D.C. will fund park’s Tribeca section • Israeli trauma specialist Dr. Tuvia Peri advises Downtown school guidance counselors • 9/11 families rally for intelligence bill on W.T.C. progress • W.T.C. victim name debate resurfaces with Memorial

Foundation creation • New York Disaster Interfaith Services operates grant program for W.T.C. workers’ health • E.P.A. extends period for public on the Draft Proposed Sampling Program • L.M.C.C. announces: over $6 million grants for Downtown’s small arts groups • Baseball to pinups, post-9/11;

Downtown baseball artist Andy Jurinko switches subjects • Majestic’ oaks for memorial: Architects unveil design adjustments • L.M.D.C. presents Deutsche takedown plan, asks the E.P.A. for monitoring help as some, but not all, praise the plan to dismantle the contaminated

building • E.P.A. attempts to clarify role in Deutsche Bank demo

another tightrope walk; thiS time in honor of 9/11Philippe Petit, who walked a tightrope between the Twin Towers in 1972, paid homage to the

towers and its victims with a performance in Washington Sq. Park on Sat. September 12, 2004. He stretched a tightrope between a tree and lamppost. Before getting on the wire, Petit — who performed in mime — led the crowd in a moment of silence; he took off his hat, put it over his heart and pointed Downtown.

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In 2005, The Lower Manhattan Development Corporation doled out its first round of grants to cultural and community groups. A design was unveiled for what would become known as the W.T.C. Performing Arts Center and a push began to lure cultural groups

Downtown. Charlie Maikish was named Lower Manhattan Construction Command Center director. A heated debate arose on programming content at the Freedom Center, with some 9/11 families protesting the potential political content of future exhibits. Governor Pataki tossed the Freedom Center from W.T.C. plans, claiming that “Freedom should unify us: this center has not.”

A report was released that showed that the Lower Manhattan office market was rebounding, and official talks commenced on the design of the 9/11 Museum.

Construction began on the new Goldman Sachs headquarters at 200 West St. The 43-story building occupies 2.1 million square feet. Goldman was awarded $1.65 billion in Liberty bonds to cover part of the building’s $2.1 billion cost, in addition to other city subsidies.

As the death toll from the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan increased, the year’s anniver-sary of 9/11 was marked by anti-war protestors.

2005Wils: tunnel extension will push costs to $1 billion •

Preservation has improved the W.T.C. development plan • W.T.C. Memorial group’s first

meeting • C.B. 1 comments on W.T.C. memorial adjustments

• Damaged landmark Beaux-Arts building, 90 West St., readies to reopen as apartments

• Charles Maikish named Downtown building coordinator

• W.T.C. memorial for ‘93 victims unveiled •

Mayor expected to sign compromise for Park Row • Debate over Downtown money:

Weighing W.T.C. construction against other projects • Olive Leaf Wholeness Center in Gramercy Park area offers spa for people still traumatized by 9/11 • House resolution introduced on W.T.C. memorial plan

• Overlooking the site where a father recovered his son’s body, after a three-month search • Park Row buses likely to return next

month • West St. tunnel money debate begins • W.T.C. vending law

prohibits souvenir sales in Ground Zero area; One year later: Sales still down, vendors

mad, residents still wary • Lease signed for W.T.C. Tribute CenterE.P.A.’s new testing plan has holes, critics say • Work begins

on Downtown’s British Memorial Garden • Transportation and W.T.C. site are top priorities • Pataki unveils Downtown spending plan; $1.4 billion in

9/11 aid left to spend • Chinatown included in final pieces of L.M.D.C. spending plan •

W.T.C. Cultural Center design unveiled • Trying

to move from here to a rebuilt W.T.C. • Kicking up dust over new air testing plan •

Struggling to put on a show near Ground Zero: Eric Brown organizes Lower Manhattan

Arts Festival and Variety Show to breathe life back into the area • Cultural building receives good reviews from C.B. 1 • More streets will make the

Freedom Tower less secure • ‘Liquid Assets’ outdoor cafe opens across from the W.T.C.

• Photographer Danny Lyon’s new book “The Destruction of Lower Manhattan” shows

Downtown before the W.T.C. • Tower of fear, not freedom for some Downtowners • B.P.C. dog run to be named after Sirius, the canine killed on 9/11

• Critics say E.P.A. plan leaves out some workers • “Serving

Those Who Serve” offers herbal supplements for 9/11 health problems • Changes for the

worse at the Freedom Tower • Art groups back Drawing Center at the W.T.C. site • Racist postcard taped to W.T.C. fence door •

c 2005, continued on p.28

paying reSpectSFor years before the W.T.C. construction site was walled off, people of all ages, such

as the boy above, would place flowers, pictures or messages of hope on the fence that surrounded the site.

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2005Small Downtown arts groups move plans forward with new 9/11 grants • Freedom requires standing up to 9/11 family leaders • StoryCorps revisits Ground Zero to record 9/11 tales, oral histories • Do security guards need more training? • One more victim of the World Trade Center’;

Slain writer’s battles Downtown and in Iraq • Residents and 9/11 families share common ground • Recalling Berenthia (Berry) Berenson Perkins, one of the

thousands killed on 9/11 • 9/11 anniversary events scheduled in Lower Manhattan: “What Comes After: Cities, Art and Recovery” Summit; Congressional 9/11 Hearing; 9/11 Fourth Anniversary Observance at the World Trade Center Site; “Manhattan Remembers” Sunrise Ceremony in B.P.C.; the September Concerts at B.P.C. • Arabic lessons to begin near Ground Zero at Stuyvesant high

school • “Hope for the future” film documents post-9/11 student trauma Downtown • Remembering 2001; honoring the fallen four years later

• L.M.C.C. international conference, “What Comes After: Cities, Art and Recovery,” causes anger over politically provocative art exhibit taking place on 9/11 anniversary • Public

forum takes input on programming at the future 9/11 museum • 9/11 fourth anniversary ceremonies begin with the sunrise • Small anniversary turnout

at firefighters’ museum • Talks begin on W.T.C. Memorial’s museum • A heated debate over photographing New York’s bravest: Exhibits “Photos by New

York’s Bravest and Finest” at SoHo Photo and “Photos by Gary Suson” at Ground Zero Museum Workshop coincide with the 4th anniversary • Pataki tosses Freedom Center from

W.T.C., says “Freedom should unify us. This center has not.” • Freedom Center decision proves democracy works • More doubts

cast on fate of W.T.C. performance space • Protests over Iraq War body count mark a grim milestone at Ground

moving the “w.t.c. croSS” from grounD Zero to St. peterS churchThe “W.T.C. Cross,” two steel beams in the shape of a cross, was discovered days after 9/11. It remained on the W.T.C. construction site and served as a symbol of resilience for

the workers. It was moved to St. Peters Church on Church Street, where it stayed until 2011 — when it was placed in the future site of the National 9/11 Museum.

c 2005, continued on p.29

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2005Zero • E.P.A. to change dust plan after rebuke • Slow-moving path to W.T.C. retail

• Resident: Mostly signs of hope looking across the W.T.C. • Update: Getting ready to begin building the W.T.C. memorial • Governor’s Downtown

Manager: Downtown progress is real and steady • L.M.D.C.: A ‘better and stronger’

Downtown is being built • C.B. 1: Residents need retail and culture on Downtown’s front burner • Construction Commander: Working to reduce

the pain from $20 million worth of construction • Downtown Alliance: New incentives

will insure Downtown remains the financial capital • Fiscal Watchdogs: Let the free market and public decide Downtown’s future •

Chinatown Partnership: Chinatown begins to build on the unity that came after 9/11

• New report says Downtown office market is rebounding

• Downtowners, scientists, Clinton blast E.P.A.’s new testing plan • Open up to closing off Cortlandt St. • Memorial fountains will run dry in winter •

Panel scientists tee off on widely criticized E.P.A. plan • Arts community reflects on cultural loss at the W.T.C. • British architect returns to W.T.C. to design new Church St. tower •

Volunteer Simone Cornu puts post-9/11 disaster training into practice • Mayor’s delay threatens W.T.C. redevelopment

tribattery popS march acroSS weSt St.Battery Park City resident Tom Goodkind leading his musical ensemble, the TriBattery Pops, across West St. in 2005. West Street and the pedestrian bridges were a topic of

debate in the community then, and remain a contentious issue today.

Protestors of the Iraq war demonstrate in front of the Millennium Hilton Hotel in Lower Manhattan on the fourth anniversary of 9/11 — an annual ritual that has lasted throughout the years.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective30 downtown express

We will never forget.

Ten years later, we are proud to commemorate the fortitude of the world’s

greatest neighborhood on one of the world’s darkest days. We’re still here, and it’s because you are too. So

here’s to standing together, indivisible, with liberty and

another round for all

295 Greenwich St. (corner of Chambers Street), NYC

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Five years after 9/11 Lower Manhattan seemed in limbo. Newly elected Gov. Eliot Spitzer, after making a huge mark on Lower Manhattan as the state’s Attorney General and shaking up, or down, Wall Street, made little to no mark in regard to the rebuilding

of the World Trade Center site.A few signs of life materialized when a new Starbucks opened on Carlisle Street and

Merchants NY opened in Battery Park City. But the recovery money was still sluggish in reaching small businesses and arts groups. The Drawing Center starting feeling the same political heat that sunk The Freedom Center the previous year, and looked to move to the Seaport from the W.T.C. Larry Silverstein’s 7 W.T.C. was named the city’s best new build-ing by the Municipal Art Society, but his complete control of rebuilding the entire W.T.C. site was taken away as The Port Authority was named developer of Tower Five. Frank Sciame was asked to “value engineer” the burgeoning costs of the W.T.C. Memorial and recommended a vast scaling back of costs and amenities to get the Memorial back in line with its original $500 million price tag. Alice Greenwald was tapped to run the W.T.C. Memorial Museum. President Bush returned to Ground Zero to mark the fifth anniversary and was greeted by as many protesters as supporters.

2006

Drawing Center sketches its future; after criticism from 9/11 families, center looks to move from W.T.C. to Seaport • Port and city take the Cortlandt St. retail fight to C.B. 1 • Some in Battery Park City worry about closing pedestrian bridges for West St. construction • 4.65 billion reasons why I should rebuild, Silverstein says; Bloomberg and P.A. wonder, should Silverstein be the one to rebuild the whole W.T.C.? •

Officials reverse stream on 9/11 Memorial waterfalls, find a way to run them year-round • Work to demolish damaged Fiterman Hall may actually begin • Washington-Carlisle St. Starbucks and Merchant’s NY cafe: A few signs of new life as Downtown businesses struggle • More than 100 Downtown arts groups

make their case for L.M.D.C. dough • Call for W.T.C. health czar to oversee treatment for first responders

five yearS later, Still SheDDing tearSA passerby breaks down into tears as he peers through the cracks of the barricade surrounding Ground Zero. For some, the site was as emotionally provoking in 2006 as it was

in 2001.

c 2006, continued on p.32

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2006• Architect James Carpenter brings light to Downtown buildings, plans lighting for base of Seven W.T.C. • Holocaust

Memorial Director Alice M. Greenwald to run W.T.C. Memorial Museum • Federal judge ‘shocked’ by E.P.A. statements that post-9/11 Lower Manhattan was safe • Movers and shakers say retail is moving Downtown • Independent agency should referee

Silverstein-Bloomberg W.T.C. dispute, Stringer says • C.B. 1 lashes out at state bill to move 9/11 material from Fresh Kills landfill •

E.P.A. skips out on City Council hearing to discuss 9/11 cleanup plan • An underground memorial loses some of its upside: Changing directions in the 9/11 Memorial design •

Arts groups cash in on L.M.D.C. cash • Day of bravado and finger-pointing after Silverstein-Port W.T.C. talks break down • Community activists still press the 9/11 environmental fight • Despite protests by 9/11 families to preserve more Twin Tower bedrock, W.T.C. memorial construction work

begins • Tribute 9/11 Visitors Center seeks W.T.C. photos • W.T.C. fight buried briefly as Municipal Art Society awards three

Downtown projects: Seven W.T.C. is best new building • E.P.A. says ‘no’ again to Deutsche Bank demolition plan • Downtown groups look to

continue 9/11 Memorial construction, oppose 9/11 families’ lawsuit • More E.P.A. concerns, more Deutsche Bank demolition delays • Downtown family objects to 9/11 footage on children’s show • With W.T.C. deal: Silverstein takes W.T.C. Two, Three, Four; Port takes Tower Five, delays retail construction • Nadler

blasts J.F.K. rail link, W.T.C. cleanup: says Downtowners are being ‘poisoned’ • Ready or not, 9/11’s ‘United 93’ arrives in theaters: British writer-director Paul Greengrass

recreates hijacked flight • School cell phone ban raises ire of parents near the W.T.C. • Deutsche Bank demolition demonstration draws attention

c 2006, continued on p.33

a cauSe to Stop, pauSe anD reflect on what waS anD what will beIn 2006 the portions of the World Trade Center site were still visible through an iron grate. This NYPD officer stopped to pause; in the background the “W.T.C. Cross,” two steel

beams discovered in the rubble after the attacks, is visible. The “W.T.C. Cross” was moved in 2011 into the future space of the National Sept. 11 Museum.

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2006to environmental concerns • 9/11 Memorial pedestrians won’t be stalled, officials say: Pedestrian circulation study has good findings • Frank

Sciame, Kevin Rampe tapped for new W.T.C. roles • One opening, one bombshell at the W.T.C.; two days in the life of the W.T.C. • As Seven W.T.C. opens, insurance companies delay funds for further

construction • The man behind life’s joy: Mark di Suvero has created 70-foot sculpture for reopening of Liberty Plaza Park as Zucotti Park • River-to-River Festival returns with a bang • Sciame hints at cuts to the W.T.C. memorial; 9/11 names will

move, museum may stay • Residents’ 9/11 health funds running out, but W.T.C. Registry health survey continues • Deutsche

Bank demolition delayed; Silverstein gets more bonds • 9/11 Memorial cuts please

many, cost questions remain • For these characters, it’s not a wonderful life: “The

Great New Wonderful” directed by Danny Leiner, is about New Yorkers coping

with 9/11 • Architect David Childs’s design of Freedom Tower’s base and plaza • Construction

workers, union leaders, pols rally to demand insurance funds for timely W.T.C.

construction • New delay for Fiterman: demolition bids disregard environmental standards • NY Waterway to pay back $1.2 million in 9/11 billing dispute • City seeks to take over W.T.C. arts center project •

Shifting dollars, debatable legacy as L.M.D.C. approaches its final days • Menin says Port is interested in building a W.T.C. middle school

• Downtowners in the street give mixed marks to L.M.D.C. • Manhattan Youth group forum would see if kids are all right five years later • Small merchants say 9/11 rebuilding is plowing them under • Images of 9/11, five years later: “Here: Remembering 9/11” photo exhibit by professionals and amateurs to be permanent part of W.T.C. Memorial • Tribute W.T.C. Visitor Center to open on anniversary with

galleries, gift shop, ‘full experience’ of both former W.T.C. and 9/11 • Moving on, despite the pull of the past, at “Here: Remembering 9/11,” the first public show of the W.T.C.

Memorial Museum • Silverstein pledges environmentally-friendly W.T.C. construction • 9/11 demonstrators

demand better health care for rescue workers and area residents • At preview opening, an emotional first look at Tribute W.T.C. Visitor Center • In ABC mini-series “Path to

9/11,” everyone is to blame • Bringing the 9/11 Commission Report to life: T.V. series traces the “Path to 9/11” in under five hours • Anne Nelson’s 2001 play ‘The Guys’ is remounted for Sept. 11’s fifth anniversary • New designers on the block: W.T.C. architects talk up designs for Church St. shopping •

Bush, grannies, families find their way to mark 9/11, commemorating and demonstrating five years later • L.M.D.C. shakes

budget, finds $200 million • Stefan Pryor, L.M.D.C.’s first hire, reflects on final days • Picturing loss: Seven W.T.C. exhibit “9/11 and the American Landscape: Photographs by

Jonathan Hyman” commemorates country’s grief • E.P.A.: Shroud should come down!; agency ready to approve Deutsche Bank demolition • Fiterman takedown still in limbo • Clinton, Kennedy call for hearings on 9/11 bill to provide health money for affected

workers and residents • Air quality control: Participants check for pollutants in Brooke Singer’s public art project • 9/11 Memorial run honors firefighter Stephen Siller, killed on 9/11 • No plan for W.T.C. tour buses in the early years • W.T.C. Memorial Foundation gets children’s 9/11 art from all over country • B.M.C.C. hopes Fiterman demolition will begin in 2007 • W.T.C. Memorial Foundation: Raising the money while we build the 9/11

memorial • C.B. 1: Cultural building shouldn’t be delayed any longer • Family member: Will the city do a better search for human remains this time? • W.T.C. workers’ forum to address injuries sustained by first responders • Port holds public hearing

on W.T.C. Vehicle Security Center • W.T.C. remains search splits community board • Intrepid aircraft carrier swings Downtown to unfurl stars and

stripes near the W.T.C. • Visitors invited to tell stories, make their marks on Freedom Tower’s beam

preSiDent journeyS to l.e.S. for 5th anniverSary of 9/11 First lady Laura Bush and then-U.S. president George W. Bush President Bush

bow their heads in prayer at the Pitt St. firehouse on the Lower East Side on Sept. 11, 2006.

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2007In 2007 the 9/11 health fund debate started to heat up, with first responders pressing the

issue and receiving support from Mayor Bloomberg, Community Board 1, and Congressional leaders. Four years later, what become a huge mobilization of New York’s political lead-ers and 9/11 health advocates would result in the James Zadroga 9/11 Health and Compensation Act. The Police Department studied the Park Row closure, which has had a devastating effect on Chinatown’s businesses, but nothing came of it. City Hall’s north section finally opened. The Port Authority’s construction activity ramped up to around the clock, and W.T.C. construction noise arose as an issue.

In May, a 22’ section of pipe fell down 35 stories from the Deutsche Bank building under-going demolition, injuring two firefights at the firehouse below. And in August, a seven alarm fire broke out on the 18th floor of the building, burning well into the night, and eventually killing two firefighters, Joseph Graffagnino and Robert Beddia, who had become trapped in a nightmarish maze of blocked exits and plastic sheeting.

Nadler would cut Iraq war money; says 9/11 dough should flow • 9/11 care at Bellevue Hospital for residents who can’t cough up cash • City

Council and community blast E.P.A. cleanup plan • Cop Cesar Borja’s death and Clinton draw more attention to 9/11 health concerns

• C.B. 1 sides with 9/11 families on search for human remains • Down payment or chump change? Bush’s

pledge of $25 million in 9/11 health care funds hailed and assailed • 9/11 workers’ struggle to get workers’ comp • First-person stories form heart of tours around the W.T.C. • Bloomberg joins fight for residents’ 9/11 health care • Community balks at plan to place W.T.C. stairs on site of new Battery Park City school

• Downsizing of P.A.C. draws questions, concern and hope • City speeds up P.A.C. plan under Port pressure • Look out below! Billions’ worth of

building down at the W.T.C. • Downtown parent Anthony Shorris in charge of W.T.C redevelopment as Port’s executive director • Royal visit: King Albert II of Belgium at the W.T.C. • 9/11 opera: A musical reconciliation of 9/11 conceived from Wickham Boyle’s newspaper columns • German cyclist Robert Diener

rides cross-country to raise awareness of 9/11 victims’ children • 9/11 dog handler indicted for bilking F.E.MA., Red Cross • Some families

demand 9/11 ceremony at W.T.C., despite construction • Police study on Park Row changes, street’s closure remains • Early warnings of the Deutsche Bank fire that killed firefighters Robert Beddia and Joseph Graffagnino: what led to their deaths? • Port’s W.T.C. work may go

c 2007, continued on p.35

working ‘rounD the clock, above anD below grounDAs the Port Authority extended construction hours at the W.T.C. site in order to try and meet target dates, neighbors complained of ‘round-the-clock noise.

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2007‘round the clock • 9/11 ceremony plans include more street closings • New Yorkers

reflect on 9/11 photo, video and object exhibit, “Here is New York: remembering

9/11” • Pelosi backs 9/11 health bill • Presidential

candidate John Edwards impresses Downtown crowd with counter-terrorism

plan • Anthrax scare sets off false terror alarm on Sept. 11 • Silverstein unveils new W.T.C. tower details • City expands 9/11 health

program for residents and workers • City hires 9/11 pediatrician; W.T.C. construction hours expand • Chinatown looks for

roadblock to city’s new Park Row plans • 9/11 health support from presidential

candidate Mike Gravel • Bottom line for 9/11 non-profits: We need help • With fundraising nearly done, we’re

building the 9/11 Memorial • Work at the W.T.C., PATH station construction

underway • The 9/11 syndrome of playing the victim •

W.T.C. neighbors express their frustration over construction noise • E.P.A. hasn’t eliminated lead contamination from Downtown, critics say • 9/11: the new pulse of Lower Manhattan artists • “I am Legend” movie conjures up 9/11 fears again • Anger grows as Port races to meet deadline, work goes on 24/7 • PATH hub date pushed back a year, not to open until 2011

at the w.t.c. conStruction Site, workin’ their fingerS to the boneIn 2007 the pace of construction picked up at the W.T.C. site, and work was taking place 24/7 as the Port Authority raced to meet deadlines.

firefighterS killeD in 130 liberty St. blaZe Robert Beddia, 53, of Staten Island and Joseph Graffagnino, 33, of Brooklyn, were killed

by an Aug. 18, 2007 fire at the former Deutsche Bank tower. They were both pronounced dead at Downtown Hospital after suffering from cardiac arrest.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective36 downtown express

For every one of us, the journey since September 11, 2001, has

been a difficult and painful one. As a small neighborhood

business, resilience hasn’t been easy. But we found the strength to carry on, and here we are, ten

years later, still going strong.

The Joseph Cione & Co. family thanks you for your continued support. To mark the 10-year anniversary of 9/11, please visit us during the month of September to receive your free Gift Card in

the amount of $10, to give to a friend, to keep for yourself.

You've been there for us, we'll always be here for you. Together we'll rebuild downtown. God Bless

Joseph Cione & Co. Full Service Salon1 WFC, 200 Liberty StreetNew York, NY 10281212-757-2561 M-F: 6AM-8PMS: 10AM-6PM

Joseph Cione & Company

www.josephcione.comwww.worldfinancialcenter.com

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 37

2008In 2008 Chris Ward was appointed Executive Director of the Port Authority by Governor

Paterson, analyzed the construction and development timelines, and set the Port’s W.T.C. construction schedule on a more realistic and solid path. J.P Morgan halted its plan for a W.T.C. trading floor in a future Tower 5, a victim of the fast approaching financial crisis. The last temporary PATH station opened at the W.T.C. and the demolition of Fiterman Hall finally started after seven years of paralysis; the City agreed to finance $139 million of the $325 million cost of the new facility. Deutsche demolition continued in fits and starts after the disastrous 2007 fire and Mayor Bloomberg talked again about closing the L.M.D.C. The presidential candidates were silent on the 9/11 health bill. The struggle between the Port Authority and Silverstein Properties over building delays and financing heated up.

Port misses eastern bathtub excavation deadline, says “worst” construction noise is almost over • Port hears the shouts over construction noise: Local residents are cautiously optimistic about Port’s new anti-noise plan • 9/11 Memorial Museum seeks residents’ artifacts • 9/11 Museum moves opening to 2011, will use the extra time to plan • W.T.C. construction pieces begin to take shape: New PATH Entrance, Survivors’ stairway,

Tower Sites, Freedom Tower, Atmosphere • E.P.A. says it waited five months for Deutsche Bank demolition plan • 9/11 health cuts may

keep coming, advocates warn • Bush cuts residents, others out of 9/11 health budget • Moody’s Corporation rebuilds

damaged ‘Credit’ sculpture at 7 W.T.C. • Deutsche Bank decontamination approved, demolition plan still not ready • CUNY hopes Fiterman demolition will begin this year •

L.M.D.C. hopes Deutsche Bank demolition can resume late this year • $5 million in L.M.D.C. grants ready for stores hurt by Downtown

construction • In Beth Murphy’s film, “Beyond Belief,” two 9/11 widows lend support to women in Kabul • In what turns out

to be his last hurrah, Spitzer offers advice to Downtown businesses • 9/11 Survivors staircase endures a temporary move • Wrestling with Bear

Stearns, JPMorgan halts plans for W.T.C. trading floor building • 9/11 search-and-rescue dogs seem healthy • Tribute W.T.C. Visitor

an entrance anD exit ramp like no other; reServeD for family onlyDuring the 2008 anniversary of the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, family members who lost loved ones were allowed to walk down a ramp into Ground Zero. This anniversary will

be a totally different experience, as the National 9/11 Memorial will make the walk down the ramp obsolete.

c 2008, continued on p.38

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective38 downtown express

2008Center asks, “What’s different since 9/11?,” seeks poetry submissions • New tricks for old commuters: Last temporary PATH entrance opens at W.T.C. • 9/11 Museum exhibits go online • Activists organize 9/11

health forum at B.M.C.C. • West St. work will temporarily close Rector bridge, again • P.A.C. is “forgotten stepchild,” critics charge • Port reports on W.T.C. progress • Pope Benedict blesses the

W.T.C. • Residents eligible for 9/11 mental health payments from city Health Dept.

• E.P.A. shrugs at contamination findings, saying it’s ‘no surprise’ • Feds block 9/11 health care money

for residents, seek additional data first • Silver: City puts new Fiterman building in doubt, B.M.C.C. lacks funds to rebuild • Settling

community lawsuit but not all issues on Park Row: City pledges to reduce impact of

closure on area residents • Marines, F.D.N.Y. hold Memorial Day run to the W.T.C., to remember • Deutsche Bank demolition on hold,

but contractor discusses cranes, safety and morale • At Bellevue Hospital’s W.T.C. Environmental Health Center, city treats children for possible 9/11 ailments • L.M.D.C. money promised to Downtown

schools sits out another school year • B.M.C.C. fights for Fiterman funds at City Hall hearing • L.M.D.C. head Avi Schick blames C.B. 1

for some Deutsche Bank delays • Downtown reacts as Port throws out W.T.C. rebuilding deadlines •

Chris Ward says he’s no Moses, but despite schedule delays, promised land is in sight

Work continues on most W.T.C. projects • Asbestos work outside Fiterman prompts surprise and explanation • Deutsche Bank

fire one year later: Victims’ families still waiting for answers as they grieve • Push

for better buildings safety at Deutsche Bank and beyond • Fire Department Report details Deutsche Bank firefighters’ last fatal hour

• A PATH hub in 2016?: Wait for W.T.C. train station may be at least eight years •

Residents file new suit on Park Row plans, spurred by emergency center proposition

• Signing W.T.C. memorial beam, for this year’s 9/11 anniversary, Flags with victim’s names on display in Battery Park • Bloomberg takes new stab at closing L.M.D.C. • Port slows

down W.T.C. work to accomodate nearby residents • City blasts CUNY for its threat

to delay Fiterman demolition • 9/11 Memorial and Museum group pilots national educational program at Millennium High School • Five-million-dollar city campaign publicizes free 9/11 health program • Reflecting with Downtown on 9/11•08 • As Wall St. shakes, it recalls the last business fallout: Tribute Center opens new exhibit on post-9/11 business recovery • Governor prioritizes Calatrava station above

W.T.C. towers • Port: W.T.C. towers will weather shaky financial storm • L.M.D.C. announces schools grant program • Presidential candidates silent on 9/11 Health and Compensation Act bill • Palin expresses 9/11 health concerns • Six-story flag unfurled on every 9/11 anniversary • Port’s

W.T.C. Office of Program Logistics to tackle neighbors’ noise concerns • Obama backs 9/11 health bill • Port expects W.T.C. Memorial plaza to

open in 2012 • In “Performing Tribute,” personal 9/11 accounts shared by survivors • Port looks to make W.T.C. site more community-friendly, give public tour to hear out

c 2008, continued on p.39

roSeS anD remorSe mark anniverSaryA grieving family member tosses a rose into a makeshift memorial pool during the

2008 anniversary of 9/11.

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 39

2008concerns • Fiterman demolition in sight as city ends money fight, agreeing to pay a share •

City to dress up the W.T.C. site with info on progress for the rest of construction • Looking to build green at the W.T.C., all office

towers aim for LEED-Gold certification • Bloomberg, Silver have laugh as city pays up for Fiterman • Port: We’ll be “better neighbors” as we rebuild W.T.C. • Working to open 9/11 Memorial as soon

as we can • Silverstein: Downtown will rise again, it always does • Downtown Alliance: Getting back

to business with art and trains • Tribute Center: There IS something open at the W.T.C. • C.B. 1: two schools aren’t enough to match Downtown’s growth • Careful with the art: Louise Nevelson’s “Shadows and Flags” sculpture,

covered with soot after 9/11, is removed for cleaning • Mother of United flight 175 victim reunited with son’s remains after seven-year bureaucratic snag • Silverstein exec is ‘frustrated’ with Port’s W.T.C.

progress • Insurers chip in funds for Deutsche Bank demo • A new day for Dey St. as it reopens after PATH construction • City pushes Chatham Sq. plan for permanent Park Row closure, despite

shouts from Chinatown • Bloomberg and Silverstein chummy as German bank, WestLB, inks Seven W.T.C. deal • C.B. 1: Deutsche Bank could learn demo lessons from Fiterman • C.B. 1 backs Chinatown’s

opposition to Chatham Sq. plan • Arbitrator panel rules Port owes Silverstein millions for Tower Four misconduct • C.B. Board 3 opposes Chatham Sq. plan • South Ferry station almost ready to open • W.T.C. worker has minor injuries after falling four feet from crane

a meeting of the mayorSIn 2008 Mayor Michael Bloomberg exchanged words with former NYC Mayor Rudy Giuliani at that year’s 9/11 commemoration event in Zuccotti Park.

DifferenceS aSiDeThe two candidates for President

of the United States in 2008, Sen. John McCain and Sen. Barack Obama, both attended the 9/11 anniversary ceremony at Ground Zero.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective40 downtown express

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 41

2009Explaining W.T.C. progress to tourists at the Tribute W.T.C. Visitor Center • W.T.C. ramp to ‘footprints’ becomes history as construction

progresses • Port’s Chris Ward says recession could change W.T.C. timeline • Ground zero construction work to get more city review • Port moves toward opening 9/11 Memorial in 2011 • Silver says L.E.S. business are still hurting from 9/11 • Obama says he’ll ‘never forget’ those sick from 9/11 • Work stops after construction negligence: W.T.C. crane dangles over street • Economic downturn is second body blow to businesses recovering from 9/11 • Bustle and delay at the W.T.C. construction site • Former W.T.C. elevator

motor that helped save thousands will go into 9/11 museum • W.T.C. faces decades of delay; Silverstein blasts Port • Ward fires back at Silverstein

in W.T.C. fight • Port reports short-term W.T.C. progress • Fed up with W.T.C. delays, Silver says, build third tower now • Obama to delegate $70 million to 9/11 health in 2010 • W.T.C. Memorial worker injured in fall • Ups and downs of the W.T.C. construction negotiations to come • Demos

for last two 9/11-damaged buildings approved • It was just an emergency drill, but the fear was real at the W.T.C./PATH station •

W.T.C. talks focus on towers and money, not retail podiums • Work on W.T.C. Four continues despite impasses • Silverstein Executive Janno Lieber

Shining a light on progreSS, even amiDSt an economic DownturnThe recession that gripped the country in 2009 did not bring the construction at the World Trade Center site to a halt. Though timelines did have to be altered, developers

Silverstein Properties and the Port Authority made sure progress would continue.

c 2009, continued on p.41

The economic downtown was another blow to small businesses in 2009 and the Port Authority’s Executive director, Chris Ward, acknowledged it could alter the timeline for the World Trade Center site. But it was a tussle between the Port and Larry Silverstein that slowed activity at the site, as well as more negligence illustrated by a crane dangling from the W.T.C. site out above the street. Ultimately the two parties would reach an agreement and new target dates were set.

Newly elected President Obama did give residents some hope, as he vowed “never to forget” those with 9/11-related illnesses. He would eventually make good on that promise by signing into law the James Zadroga 9/11 Healthcare Act a little over a year later.

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective42 downtown express

2009makes his case to C.B. 1: blasts Port plan, but sees some movement at W.T.C. •

Rosie the Riveter redux: Women work it at W.T.C. construction site • Street work could delay

9/11 Memorial’s 2011 opening, official Joe Daniels warns • Lower Manhattan

Construction Command Center report supports Silverstein in W.T.C. dispute • Two

dozen of the big ones: 24 massive columns installed in Freedom Tower construction •

Port finished with eastern W.T.C. excavations, says clock on Silverstein will start this week • Vendors beware: Official

W.T.C. souvenirs for sale at new 9/11 Memorial Preview Site • The ‘A’ List; memorial at the NYC Fire Museum • 9/11 Museum unveils new

details • Manhattan Youth marks eighth anniversary with quiet ceremony • L.E.S. ‘beach pier’ won’t see W.T.C. steel storage • Queens imam —

an alleged terrorist — loves U.S., says radical attorney Kuby • Thompson says, open

Park Row and consult neighboring community • Bloomberg says his powers are limited at the W.T.C. • City raises

doubts about moving W.T.C. Performing Arts Center • Silverstein breaks the silence

in W.T.C. dispute • The money fight at the W.T.C.; Release of W.T.C. construction

target dates • U.S.S. New York warship, built from W.T.C. steel, pays her respects • Rain and filters clean Downtown air since 2006, says

L.M.C.C.C. • Port may consider early ban on W.T.C. tour buses • Downtown people and pols have mixed feelings on hosting 9/11 terror trials •

One more 9/11 blight to go: 9/11-damaged Fiterman Hall is down • Silverstein makes W.T.C. bonds application to finance more building •

Entrance to Liberty St. pedestrian bridge moved until 9/11 memorial plaza is finished • Chinatown activists press fight to move 9/11 terror trials

craneS, craneS everywhereAs construction picked up pace at the W.T.C. site, more and more cranes became

visible to passersby. In a way, seeing all of the cranes was a signal that progress was being made.

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 43

As 2010 got underway the question on everyone’s mind was exactly where the terror trial for Khalid Sheikh Mohammed would be held. Lower Manhattan residents were ada-mant that it should not be held in their neighborhood. Julie Menin and Community Board 1 floated the idea of holding the trial on Governors Island, an idea Mayor Bloomberg

called “dumb.” But United States Attorney General Eric Holder stopped short of promising that it would not be held in Manhattan.

After a new deal was struck between Larry Silverstein and the Port Authority, work at the W.T.C. site seemed to pick up pace and one of the biggest moments for many in the neighborhood was when Tower One became visible above the fence that had blocked it from view for so long. Another sign of life returning to the site was in early September when 14 trees were delivered and planted on the site of the memorial.

But what dominated much of the national news cycle as well as the local news around the 9th anniversary was the announcement of a proposed Islamic community center on Park Place. Branded the “Ground Zero Mosque,” Community Board 1 took a bold stance on the project and after holding a monthly meeting that required Chair Julie Menin to call in the NYPD to keep the peace, the board supported the project, now known as Park51.

The Zadroga bill received final Congressional approval on December 22, 2010, and was signed into law by President Obama on January 2, 2011.

2010Deutsche Bank demolition gets another violation: Steel-cutting torches were near fuel tank • Survey finds Lower Manhattan

Development Corporation small business program underpublicized • Silverstein claiming victory, too, in W.T.C. dispute with Port • Bloomberg: Move terror trials out of Lower Manhattan, but Gov. Island idea is ‘dumb’ • W.T.C. decision sends Silverstein and P.A. back to the table to negotiate a

building schedule • Downtown 9/11 terror trial site dying, but not yet dead • Lower Manhattan Development Corp. demands staff changes at Deutsche Bank contractor after litany of safety violations • Rising steel at the W.T.C.: One W.T.C. to be finished in 2013 • Senate passes resolution

opposing plan to hold the 9/11 terrorist trials in NYC; Squadron opposed resolution on tribunal issue • Sparks fly as Deutsche Bank work is stopped by an electrical fire •

W.T.C. noise escalates again with PATH excavation • L.M.D.C. blasts Deutsche Bank demolition lawsuit; celebrates

$100 million settlement • What Deutsche Bank insurers giveth, Bovis tries to taketh away • Port approves $542 million contract for PATH

train hub • Lower Manhattan Construction Command Center likely to stay after 2010 • National Sept. 11 Memorial & Museum holds speaker series: “9/11, Today and Tomorrow,” to examine continuing 9/11 impact on everything from security to culture • W.T.C.

construction worker injured after 14-foot fall • Few W.T.C. tour bus ideas, even more problems • Contractor Bovis adds extra shift to 130 Liberty,

hopes to finish Deutsche Bank demo by year’s end • 9/11 heath bill passes House of Representatives panel • More W.T.C.

risk for Silverstein, but bigger potential payday as developer looks to pre-lease retail space in Tower 3 • How to spend the rest of the 9/11 funds: Infrastructure is needed to

accommodate the growing population • Work at the W.T.C.: Some of the Memorial plaza will open on tenth anniversary of 9/11 •

L.M.C.C.C. helping solve problems in the largest construction program in the city’s history • Long before it’s a done deal, a debate on Silverstein’s pre-leasing agreement • “Project Rebirth,” Jim Whitaker’s new documentary chronicling the lives of ten people affected by 9/11 • Push to use $150 million in

treeS bring life back to grounD ZeroAround 400 swamp white oak trees were carefully

pruned and prepped for delivery to the National Sept. 11 Memorial at this very nursery in Millstone Township, N.J.

Starting in the early morning of Aug. 27, 2010, a small team of arborists loaded the 21,000-pound trees onto large trucks, two per truck, to make the 90-minute drive into Lower Manhattan. They worked 26 hours straight amid hot daytime temperatures — encasing each tree in tarp, tying them up and positioning them on the flatbed trucks. The workers then placed barrels of hay on the trucks to lessen the vibrations during the journey to Manhattan. Loading each tree took roughly 30 minutes.

In the eyes of many, the trees symbolize rejuvenation of the World Trade Center. “All we think about when we see [Ground Zero] is death and destruction. To me, it means that we bring life back to that horrible, horrible, tragic site,” said Ronaldo Vega, design director for the National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum.

c 2010, continued on p.45

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective44 downtown express

We salute the individuals who have come together to

rebuild Lower Manhattan during the past 10 years

and we honor those who lost their lives on

September 11, 2001

F.J. Sciame Construction Co., Inc. | Sciame Development, Inc. 14 Wall Street, New York, NY 10005 | 212.232.2200 | www.sciame.com

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 45

2010leftover money for W.T.C. Performing Arts Center • W.T.C. work less than liberating for many walkers: Liberty St. bridge moved to accommodate construction • L.M.D.C. says city is sitting on

millions for Downtown recovery and doing nothing • Cordoba Initiative, a possible

new neighbor to W.T.C., hopes to build on good faith • Squadron supports Cordoba House move; C.B. need not approve • City is passing

the L.M.D.C. bucks, yet again • C.B. 1 supports Cordoba move Downtown amidst zoo of a meeting

• Local pols push 9/11 health care bill through committee to House of Rep. floor •

Downtown Alliance survey says Downtown population is swelling • Local pols push for Park Row re-opening • First responders officially

honored after nine years with W.T.C. responder day • Cordoba House protest draws

crowd, opposition says it is only the beginning • Hotel’s view in the eye of the beholder: World Center hotel on Washington St. has bird’s eye view of Ground Zero • Contrary to popular opinion, Muslims

and mosques okay in Downtown • For C.B. 1, Cordoba issue in the past, wants to move

on • Deutsche Bank building is almost down, but trouble is only beginning • NYC Landmarks Preservation Commission hearing on Cordoba site takes angry turn; decision will come at summer’s end

• Ground Zero construction is moving along as planned • New Lower Manhattan Cultural Council Pres. Sam Miller has a passion for the arts • Uncovering the past — a 30-

foot ship — while building for the future • Ferries may provide solution to tour bus dilemma when 9/11 memorial opens • 9/11 health bill flops; Zadroga fails to pass House • C.B. 1 asks L.M.D.C. for more transparency on 130 Liberty Deutsche Bank

demolition • Tribute W.T.C. Visitor center begins recruiting volunteers for tenth anniversary commemoration • Park51 debate continues with lawsuit, Con Ed and M.T.A. • Durst Org. wins bid to develop One W.T.C. • Imam Rauf has had no talks with Gov. Paterson about moving Cordoba • Paterson and POTUS create media firestorm after Park51 comments; local pols react • Week of protests, media appearances stir Park51 debate • W.T.C. site has new

life; first trees are planted at 9/11 Memorial • Port, Silverstein seal deal on towers Two, Three and Four • A conversation with Larry Silverstein

on W.T.C. progress, his relationship with the P.A., the future of Lower Manhattan’s real estate market • One press release better than 50: More than 50 citywide and national

organizations form an umbrella coalition supporting Park51 • Muslim Cabbie stabbed • Personalities emerge in front of Park51 site, some to oppose and

some to support • Rally around the country for Zadroga legislation • Unique exhibit of Aggie Kenny’s drawings sheds new light on 9/11 first responders • A peaceful vigil on the eve of 9/11 by Park51 supporters • 9/11 9th anniversary: Sacred day for many is marred by “Ground Zero mosque” protests • Annual 9/11 Manhattan

Youth event invites adults, families, children to share feelings, offers perspective for all • C.B. 1 asks L.M.D.C. to hone in on W.T.C. Performing Arts Center • Glassbead collective provided inspirational light show on Park51 façade: “unity” and “equality” projected in a dozen languages • Protester and Reverend

debate Park51 on Lower Manhattan streets Saturday • Park51 Imam Rauf returns home, addresses controversy • Holland Tunnel traffic to swell; D.O.T. readying for 9/11•11 •

Zadroga bill one step closer to law, moves to Senate • “Society for Truth and Justice” group emerges to denounce Park51• Park51 releases new architectural design • Greening Ground Zero: 50 of 400 trees have been planted • Park51 or not,

there will be a mosque on Park Place • Ten-month countdown until 9/11 Memorial opens • Deutsche Bank demolition delayed due to crane issues • Intense lobbying for Zadroga:

it’s now or never • G.O.P. Senators block debate on 9/11 health bill • Summer’s protests positive for Cordoba and Imam Rauf • On

a mission to make room for everyone: Homeless men at NYC Rescue Mission became 9/11 first responders; nine years later, mission calls on community • G.O.P.’s move to block 9/11 bill angers NY pols • Attack on Imam Rauf sparks interfaith events • Local pols praise Zadroga’s passage • How the Zadroga

miracle happened • FealGood Foundation goes to Washington to lobby Zadroga on heroes’ behalf • One survivor from 9/11 returns home, for good: 9/11 “survivor tree” is planted on memorial plaza • Mayor’s office had behind-the-scenes role in Park51

thankSgiving at the w.t.c. conStruction SiteThe Friday before Thanksgiving 2010, approximately 500 World Trade Center con-

struction workers scarfed down turkey subs, angus hamburgers and hot dogs supplied by Big Daddies caterers. The workers took a well-deserved break to enjoy a pre-Thanks-giving dinner arranged by developer Larry Silverstein on the ground floor of 4 W.T.C.

Interspersed throughout the male-dominated crowd were actual fathers, sons and cous-ins who all partake in the family construction business. The families felt proud to be a part of such a momentous project. “I had goose bumps, being on a site like this,” said Antonio Rodrigues Sr., sitting next to his nephew, Antonio Rodrigues, Jr. “There’s an amazing amount of people around every day… so you know you’re part of something big.”

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Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective46 downtown express

Just days into 2011, President Obama signed into law the James Zadroga 9/11 Healthcare Act while on vacation in Hawaii. Immediately Lower Manhattan residents that fought to get the bill passed started another fight to make sure the law covered certain illnesses, like cancer and P.T.S.D., and to make sure that the geographic boundary lines for those who could apply for compensation were expanded.

The Deutsche Bank building’s tortured demolition was finally complete to ground level in January, with the basement deconstructed in February. The Port Authority is presently constructing the Vehicle Security Center at the site.

On Sun., May 2, President Obama interrupted the television airwaves and announced that a covert mission had succeeded in locating and killing Osama bin Laden. Even though he did not make the announcement until almost midnight, throngs of people left their homes and headed to Ground Zero to mark the event.

It was also a year that saw One W.T.C. rise even higher -- it is now at 81 stories -- and also attract media giant Conde Nast to sign a lease occupying a third of the building’s office space.

Getting the Memorial ready for the 10th anniversary of 9/11, and planning the cer-emony, was all parties’ singular focus these last several months, not without some bumps and bruised political egos.

On Saturday, Sept. 10, Community Board 1 is organizing Hand in Hand —Remembering 9/11, which will commemorate the 10 year anniversary of the September 11th attacks. Thousands of people will grasp hands to form a human chain along the waterfront from the tip of Lower Manhattan heading north.

2011FealGood Foundation to help 9/11 victims find lawyers for federal compensation • Science and the city at

Seven W.T.C.: NY Academy of Sciences headquarters reside on the 40th floor

• Deutsche Bank building almost down •

9/11 responder Timothy Brown hopes to halt Park51 construction • National Sept. 11 Memorial and Museum app brings

9/11 voices to life and to your phone • Demolition of Deutsche Bank building

brings fate of L.M.D.C. to fore • New study by city Dept. of Health and

Mental Hygiene proves 9/11-related post-traumatic stress can linger for years •

9/11 memorial’s new interactive timeline provides a detailed account of 9/11 • Pols, govt. aim to clarify 9/11 health bill

• Working on the weekend at One W.T.C; 58 floors of framing have been completed • 9/11 victims receive legal advice

on compensation rights to be granted by Zadroga law • 9/11 ad pulled after insulting NY firefighter • Pols: Stop Downtown tour bus

invasion with remote parking incentives • Bin Laden’s death, Obama’s visit brings crowds to Ground Zero • Digital guide will help families and friends quickly locate loved

ones’ names at 9/11 Memorial plaza • New safety procedures implemented

after iron rod falls 13 floors; third W.T.C. health survey to be distributed in

August • Former P.S. 150 student premiers 9/11 film, ‘The Second Day’ • C.B. 1 frustrated with L.M.D.C.: Agency doesn’t

provide full disclosure of programs and finances • Lower floors of One W.T.C. require façade makeover • Crossing Vesey St.

remains problematic for pedestrians • Dr. John Howard to return as W.T.C.

health program director • Condé Nast signs lease at One W.T.C. • 9/11 families protest future repository placement

next to Memorial Museum • Downtown residents seek recognition on 10th

anniversary of 9/11; C.B. 1 members ask to be part of the family ceremony •

Finalizing the plans for 9/11 Memorial plaza; Memorial Museum might charge

c 2011, continued on p.47

SteaDily riSingOne World Trade Center, which is steadily going up one floor per week, is now more than

80 stories high. Once completed in mid-to-late 2013, it is poised to become the tallest tower in North America at 1776 feet — a symbolic reference to America’s signing of the Declaration of Independence on July 4, 1776.

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downtown express Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective 47

2011• 9/11 health bill’s Victim Compensation Fund draft regs are released • 9/11 family groups hope to reopen Deutsche Bank case • Artist Muriel Stockdale’s 9/11 flag symbolizes diversity • Zadroga

Act V.C.F. boundaries debated • C.B.1’s ‘Hands across Lower Manhattan,’ 9/11

community event, taking shape • Ribbon-cutting symbolizes 9/11 survivor’s resilience: Zadroga Act treatment funds are released • 9/11 survivors excluded from 10th anniversary commemoration • The

Zadroga question: to pay or not to pay for legal services • Review of cancer alarms many: fed. denies treatment and compensation to 9/11 cancer patients • Pols identify need for better first responder

communication during crises: New law aims to establish nationwide network

• City Department of Transportation’s tour bus plan for 9/11 Memorial opening is set • Forum focuses on post-9/11 prejudice • One W.T.C.’s many

meanings; some visible and some not • Downtown residents mixed on whether to stay or go for 9/11 10th anniversary

potuS takeS victory lap On Thurs., May 5 President Barack Obama visited Ground Zero for the first time since being elected president, drawing hundreds of residents, tourists and journalists to Lower

Manhattan eager to catch a glimpse of the Commander-in-Chief. Ground Zero was one of several stops Obama made in New York that day to commemorate the victims of 9/11 in light of Osama bin Laden’s death the weekend prior. While the tenor of the Ground Zero ceremony was solemn, as the President placed a colorful wreath of flowers at the base of the survivor tree on Memorial Plaza and proceeded to pay his respects to 9/11 family members, the scene on Church St. was jubilant and chaotic.

tower finally goneThe demolition of the former Deutsche Bank tower at 130 Liberty Street was finally

completed days after this photo was taken on Jan. 10, 2011. The tower, which was heavily damaged on Sept. 11, 2001, required careful demolition that involved a system-atic decontamination and dismantling of each of the floors.

Page 48: SPECIAL 9/11 ISSUE:  10 YEARS LATER

Ten Years Later - A 9/11 Retrospective48 downtown express

Remembrance

Resilience

Renewal

Joseph Amatuccio

Officer Christopher C. Amoroso

Jean A. Andrucki

Richard A. Aronow

Ezra Aviles

Arlene T. Babakitis

James W. Barbella

Officer Maurice V. Barry

Margaret L. Benson

Daniel D. Bergstein

Edward Calderon

Officer Liam Callahan

Lieutenant Robert D. Cirri

Carlos DaCosta

Dwight D. Darcy

Niurka Davila

Officer Clinton Davis

Frank A. De Martini

William F. Fallon

Stephen J. Fiorelli

John Fisher

Officer Donald A. Foreman

Officer Gregg J. Froehner

Barry H. Glick

Rosa Gonzalez

Officer Thomas E. Gorman

Joseph F. Grillo

Ken G. Grouzalis

Patrick A. Hoey

Officer Uhuru G. Houston

Officer George G. Howard

Officer Stephen Huczko

Inspector Anthony P. Infante Jr

Prem N. Jerath

Mary S. Jones

Officer Paul W. Jurgens

Deborah H. Kaplan

Douglas G. Karpiloff

Sergeant Robert M. Kaulfers

Edward T. Keane

Frank Lalama

Officer Paul Laszczynski

Officer David P. Lemagne

Officer John J. Lennon

Officer John D. Levi

Executive Director Neil D. Levin

Margaret S. Lewis

Officer James F. Lynch

Robert H. Lynch

Myrna Maldonado

Captain Kathy Mazza

Officer Walter A. McNeil

Deborah A. Merrick

Officer Donald J. McIntyre

Susan Miszkowicz

Dir./Supt. of Police Fred V. Morrone

Nancy Muniz

Officer Joseph M. Navas

Pete Negron

Officer James Nelson

Officer Alfonse J. Niedermeyer

David Ortiz

Pablo Ortiz

Officer James W. Parham

Nancy E. Perez

Officer Dominick A. Pezzulo

Eugene J. Raggio

Judith Reese

Officer Bruce A. Reynolds

Francis S. Riccardelli

Officer Antonio J. Rodrigues

Officer Richard Rodriguez

Chief James A. Romito

Kalyan K. Sarkar

Anthony Savas

Officer John P. Skala

Edward T. Strauss

Officer Walwyn W. Stuart

Officer Kenneth F. Tietjen

Lisa L. Trerotola

Officer Nathaniel Webb

Simon Weiser

Officer Michael T. Wholey

Louie Williams

Robert Kirkpatrick

Stephen Knapp

William Macko

Monica Rodriguez Smith and her unborn child

Wilfredo Mercado

John DiGiovanni

SEPTEMBER 11, 2001

FEBRUARY 26, 1993

The Port Authority of New York & New Jersey remembers our colleagues, friends and family who lost their lives at the World Trade Center, and as the 10th anniversary arrives, the region — and the world — can now visit, remember, and reflect. We remain committed to building, in their honor, a space shared by everyone forever.

DOWNTOWN EXPRESS AD - 9/11/2011