You are not logged in. Login Now
 0-24   25-49   50-51        
 
Author Message
gull
WTF to do with the WTC? Mark Unseen   May 31 03:46 UTC 2002

So, what do you think should be done with the World Trade Center site?  
Redevelop it?  Turn it into a park?  Erect a monument?
51 responses total.
mynxcat
response 1 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 03:51 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

gull
response 2 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 04:04 UTC 2002

The World Trade Center towers *did* implode into themselves.
vanessa
response 3 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 04:14 UTC 2002

My first thought is that they should rebuild them, with design 
modifications to make them more resistant to damage than before.  I 
think it would be a shame if the site just became a park or some huge 
gaudy memorial.  OTOH if the towers were rebuilt, then would there be 
enough tenants?  Personally, I think would have a lot of anxiety about 
even walking into the building, but then I am that kind of person.

I heard on NPR 5/30 that the man who owned the Windows(?) on the 107th 
floor of tower A wants to move back in if they are rebuilt.  I guess 
there will be others, but I think it would trigger a whole new wave of 
post traumatic stress problems for NYC.  
bru
response 4 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 04:37 UTC 2002

They should not be built exactly as they were.  They should be built stronger,
taller, an more energy efficient. New safety features should be built in so
people will not be trapped in an emergency.

Learn from the failure adn rebuild.  There should still be room at teh base
for a large memorial park to be built as well.
johnnie
response 5 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 05:01 UTC 2002

They started prepping for rebuilding on the site a while back, even 
before the cleanup was finished.  They haven't decided what, exactly, 
they're planning to build yet, except to say that it won't be WTC2 (the 
original version wasn't particularly profitable), and it will include 
some sort of memorial.  Final plans are due by the end of the year.
rcurl
response 6 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 05:39 UTC 2002

I can't imagine thinking any city skyline has "charisma": a lot of big
boxes. If any skyline has "charisma" it is a mountain or other natural
feature. There were a lot of buildings creating at least a "cityscape"
(without charisma) before, and all the WTC was mess it up more. They
were out of proportion among the other boxes. I don't think any artistic
sense was used in their construction.
bdh3
response 7 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 05:42 UTC 2002

Yes, I believe you are right, they were a government project.
orinoco
response 8 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 06:21 UTC 2002

I agree that the Trade Center had no charisma.  But come on, Rane -- if the
Empire State Building leaves you cold, you're missing out.
mynxcat
response 9 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 07:14 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

oval
response 10 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 07:17 UTC 2002

i miss the skyline, sure. i think no matter *what* they build, it's not really
going to withstand an airplane crashing right into it. they've mentioned
moving the UN to the location, but it doesn;t have a lot of support.

i was down at the site the other day, and it's really HUGE. ...whole lot of
shit is missing - more than i thought. it was weird. so i think they could
really build a variety of different things there - i don't see why it has to
be one big project. i have ideas, but there's no way in hell they'd happen.

oval
response 11 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 07:26 UTC 2002

9 slipped. let me put it this way: when i looked out my window and there was
no WTC, i was angry at american foreign policy and the fucked up mess that's
been going on in the rest of the world who's ass we've been raping for quite
sometime, making tons of enemies with the ignorant supprt of our citizens.
i knew it would mean war, i knew it would mean a loss of the rights of
americans and immigrants, as well as a move towards a police state so easily
while everybody's waving their stupid flags. so, i would like to see more
projects based on informing the public, spreading diverse cultural and
political knowledge somehow. but that's not really beneficial to the powers
that be, now is it.

mdw
response 12 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 07:46 UTC 2002

I think a subway station might be a good start.
oval
response 13 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 08:00 UTC 2002

they, like, already have one of those, dewd.

mdw
response 14 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 08:16 UTC 2002

They've already replaced the one that was under WTC?
oval
response 15 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 08:43 UTC 2002

maybe richard knows better than i, but i think i've taken all the trains that
go through there, and the only thing i've noticed is the WTC/Cortland st stop
that was damaged has been fixed, although the trains go through the station
without stopping. 

mary
response 16 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 10:47 UTC 2002

One of the projects being considered is essentially a Seattle tower.  It
would stand taller than the towers did, include all the necessary
communications antennas, have an observations deck, and not much else. 
From the picture I saw it had a splendid design, more like sculpture than
building. 

gull
response 17 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 14:59 UTC 2002

The funny thing is, from what I've heard, no one *liked* the WTC when it
went up.  It was seen as out of balance with all the buildings around it,
and evidence of the Port Authority's conceit and ability to ignore building
codes.  It was widely considered a firetrap. Given that history, it's funny
to see people waxing nostalgic about the WTC towers and talking about a hole
in the skyline now.  They were ugly buildings, and the fact that they were
destroyed in a horrible way doesn't really change that.

I guess it's all about what people are used to, but I wouldn't want to see
an identical-looking structure replace them.

Re #16: That Seattle tower is called the "Space Needle".  (A friend of mine
from out there was surprised I'd heard of it.)


One thing we may have to consider is that possibly we're just building too
big.  Is there any real reason we need to have buildings that tall, other
than to show off?  The history of fires and accidents in skyscrapers is not
an encouraging one -- it's starting to look like there is no way to evacuate
a tall, skinny building effectively, and they're all basically firetraps.
md
response 18 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 15:39 UTC 2002

"But the [WTC] buildings remain an occasion to mourn: they never should 
have happened, they were never really needed, and if they say anything 
at all about our city, it is that we retreat into banality when the 
oppurtunity comes for greatness."  -- Paul Goldberger, NYTimes 
architecure critic, in his book _The City Observed: New York_, Random 
House, 1979.  

Nobody had anything good to say about the WTC when it was first built.  
People got used to it.  A entire generation never knew the pre-WTC 
skyline except in pictures, and many of them no doubt feel nostalgia 
for the buildings now that they're gone.  But Goldberger's comments 
still stand, like it or not.
mynxcat
response 19 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 16:07 UTC 2002

This response has been erased.

oval
response 20 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 20:01 UTC 2002

i never liked them either, but when you live here, you just get used to them
without realizing it. you see them from everywhere in a place where there are
so many buildings you often can't see past a couple of blocks.

we all aim our antennae toward the empire state building now.

<retreats into her shell>

jep
response 21 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 20:45 UTC 2002

I thought the World Trade Center was beautiful.  I've only visited 
Manhattan once, but will always remember seeing the two towers jutting 
out above the rest of the city as I rode on the Staten Island ferry 
past the Statue of Liberty, out to Staten Island and then back into 
Manhattan.

The Sears Tower is ugly.  The WTC was not.
michaela
response 22 of 51: Mark Unseen   May 31 22:11 UTC 2002

Re #17:  Skyscrapers came into existence when there wasn't much room left for
building level...they had to build upwards since they had to fit x amount of
people into a tiny area.  I like skyscrapers (the Chicago skyline at night
is my favorite view), but the idea of being near the top during a fire is
unsettling.
russ
response 23 of 51: Mark Unseen   Jun 1 01:42 UTC 2002

Re #16:  And another proposal is for four 50-story office towers,
to replace the office space.

I still think the two ideas should be combined with a 19th-century
theme, and the New York skyline should someday sport a tower with
a strong Eiffel-esque look.  Four towers would rise from the earth
and unite into one, which would rise and taper into the sky.  The
splay-footed stance would handle most loads as compression, cutting
the amount of steel required; the taper would keep the ratio of
structure to floor space much more constant as the tower rose; and
the relative rarity of floor space up high would all but guarantee
that there would be *someone* to rent it.

Fire protection systems and other features need to be re-thought.
Plenty of other designers have done it right; the Port Authority
really screwed the pooch by doing it wrong when they should have
known better.

Definitely a restaurant, observation decks and antennas on top.
And an anti-aircraft missile battery or two; there's no telling if
someone might not try to hit buildings in NYC again, and the top
of a tower with a commanding view is the best place to site the
city's defenses.
scg
response 24 of 51: Mark Unseen   Jun 1 06:10 UTC 2002

I like big city skylines, and I like a lot of sky scrapers, but I thought the
WTC was pretty ugly.  I don't object to the height, although I question the
wisdom of rebuilding something that would be an attractive target, but I've
seen a lot of buildings that have been a lot nicer than just being big black
boxes.

What I don't remember well, from when I visited several years ago, was what
the WTC was like at the base.  I have a dim recollection of the being a
somewhat daunting trek to get around the outsides of, but I'm not sure if I'm
remembering that correctly.  I have been noticing rather vast differences in
the feel of the neighborhoods around different types of sky scrapers, between
the very nice part of the San Francisco Financial District my office moved
out of a month or two ago, and the area a few blocks away where we are now.
In the old neighborhoods, the fronts of the sky scrapers came out to the
sidewalks, and generally had nice storefronts on them.  They were quite
pleasant to walk past.  The new neighborhood tends to have the outer edges
of the buildings on stilts with much narrower lobbies, creating a rather
intimidating tunnel effect to get to the doors, and destroying the pleasant
sidewalk effect.  I hope, whatever gets built there, they'll make it pleasant
and convenient to walk around them, and make them part of a neighborhood
rather than their own intimidating structure.
 0-24   25-49   50-51        
Response Not Possible: You are Not Logged In
 

- Backtalk version 1.3.30 - Copyright 1996-2006, Jan Wolter and Steve Weiss