The National September 11 Memorial and Museum yesterday recognized the completion of the 9/11 Memorial Museum, upholding a commitment to honor the heroes, remember the victims, and preserve the history of the 9/11 attacks, their precursors, and aftermath for generations to come.
A tribute-filled, days-long Dedication Period, which includes a ceremony and Museum previews, begins today and lasts through May 20 for 9/11 families, 9/11 rescue and recovery workers, active duty first responders, survivors, and lower Manhattan residents and business owners.
Keeping the Museum's doors open for 24 hours during this period will also serve as a small tribute to the thousands of Ground Zero rescue and recovery workers who worked around the clock in the aftermath of 9/11 as the city, the nation and the world supported them. The Museum then opens to the public on May 21.
“The opening of the 9/11 Museum is an important milestone for our city and our country,” said Michael R. Bloomberg, Chairman of the 9/11 Memorial & Museum, Philanthropist and Mayor of New York City from 2002-2013. “The Museum tells heartbreaking stories of unimaginable loss, but also inspiring stories of courage and compassion."
As the recovery at the World Trade Center site neared completion, the Last Column, a 58-ton, 36-foot-tall piece of welded plate steel, was removed from the site in a solemn ceremony on May 30, 2002. In the weeks that followed, recovery workers, first responders, volunteers and victims’ relatives signed the column and affixed to it memorial messages, photographs, and other tributes. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Davis Brody Bond is the lead architect on the Museum below the Memorial plaza. The Museum’s entry pavilion was designed by Snøhetta. The museum’s 110,000 square feet of exhibition space tells the story of 9/11 through multimedia displays, personal narratives and a collection of monumental and personal artifacts.
The space includes two core exhibitions at the archeological heart of the site: the memorial exhibition, called “In Memoriam,” and a three-part historical exhibition that explores the day of the attacks, what led to them and their aftermath. The exhibition designers include Thinc, Local Projects, and Layman Design.
“The magnitude of the historic importance of the site and its symbolism made it essential for us to find a balance between the collective and the individual experience,” said Steven M. Davis, FAIA, founding partner of Davis Brody Bond. “We relied on four principles to guide our work: memory, authenticity, scale and emotion, hoping to provide the most sensitive, respectful and informative experience for visitors.”
Recovered from the World Trade Center Site after September 11, 2001, these steel “tridents” once formed part of the exterior structural support of the east façade of 1 World Trade Center (North Tower). Welded to box columns at bedrock, 70 feet below street level, these branched from one column into three prongs at the fifth story. They are located in the Museum’s entry pavilion. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Davis Brody Bond's design essay on the 9/11 Memorial Museum
The 9/11 Memorial Museum was conceived as the global focal point for presenting and preserving the history and memories of the events of 9/11, documenting the impact of the attacks and exploring their enduring significance. The Museum is located beneath the 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center.
Descending nearly 70 feet to the original footprint of the World Trade Center towers, its 110,000 square-foot interior will give visitors access to the monumental underground site where remnants of the Trade Center’s construction and recovery frame the story of the terrorist attacks and the days that followed.
Confronting the physical void left at the end of the recovery process, the spaces of the museum are revealed, progressively disclosing the various elements of collective and personal memory of the event.
Assigned to aid in the evacuation of civilians in the North Tower on 9/11, members of FDNY Ladder Company 3 are known to have reached the 35th floor by 9:21 a.m. All 11 responding members of Ladder Company 3 were killed inside the North Tower when it collapsed at 10:28 a.m. The front cab of this fire truck was shorn off when the North Tower collapsed. The bumper and a door were later removed and displayed as a memorial in Ladder Company 3’s quarters on East 13th Street in Manhattan. The inscription “JEFF WE WILL NOT FORGET YOU!” was painted by a firefighter related to Jeffrey John Giordano, a Ladder Company 3 member who was killed on 9/11. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Given a fixed set of existing geometries at the site, we were faced with the challenge of translating them into a series of coherent spaces that are punctuated by surface, texture and volume. We chose as the space’s main narrative element a gently descending procession (dubbed “the Ribbon”) that guides visitors from the plaza to the bedrock level where the cut columns of the World Trade Center towers are revealed.
The “ribbon” evokes the ramp used to remove debris from the site in the aftermath of the attacks. It also offers multiple views of the slurry wall, the original retaining wall that was built to withstand the lateral forces of landfill and river, and which survived the collapse of the towers.
At the end of the ribbon, the descent continues down along the Vesey Street Stair (“Survivors’ Stairs”), which were used by hundreds to escape to safety on 9/11. It ultimately leads to two exhibition spaces and Foundation Hall, the Museum’s culminating space whose sheer scale conveys a sense of the enormity of the site and reinforces awareness of the absence of what once was there.
The Vesey Street stairs, or Survivors’ Stairs, once connected the northern edge of the World Trade Center Plaza to the Vesey Street sidewalk below. On September 11, 2001, the stairs and an adjacent escalator provided an unobstructed exit for hundreds seeking to escape. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
The Building Team also included:
- Lend Lease – Construction Manager
- WSP - Structural Engineering
- Guy Nordenson and Associates - Structural Engineering: Slurry Wall
- Simpson Gumpertz & Heger, Inc. - Structural Engineering: Slurry Wall
- Weidlinger Associates Consulting Engineers - Blast Design
- Jaros Baum & Bolles - MEP Engineering/Vertical Transportation
- Fisher Marantz Stone - Lighting Designer
- Langan Engineering & Environmental Services - Geotechnical Engineering
- Mueser Rutledge Consulting Engineers - Geotechnical Engineers: Slurry Wall
- Code Consultants Inc. - Code Consulting
- Cerami & Associates, Inc. - Acoustical and Vibration Design
- C&G Partners - Graphics
- Higgins & Quasebarth - Historic Preservation
- ARUP - Security Design
- Viridian Energy & Environmental, LLC - Sustainability Consultant
- Wiss Janey Elstner, Associates - Building Envelope and Waterproofing
- Construction Specifications, Inc. - Specifications
- Faithful + Gould - Cost Estimating
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Lend Lease's statement on the project
Lend Lease is proud to have served as the construction manager for the National September 11 Memorial and Museum. The Memorial part of the structure was opened on September 11, 2011 in commemoration of the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks of September 11, 2001.
The Museum occupies approximately 180,000 gross sf of space spread over three below-grade levels. These levels include lobby, security, visitor services, assembly, administrative, exhibition, education, support service and loading bay spaces. The Museum and Entry Pavilion are located on the western edge side of the Memorial quadrant. Below grade, the Memorial Museum is bound by the Memorial plaza overhead, the Memorial pools, shared support spaces, the central chiller plant, the Port Authority Trans-Hudson (PATH) tracks and terminal and the slurry wall.
Visitors will enter the Museum through the Entry Pavilion which houses an auditorium, a private room for victims’ families and support functions such as information, bathrooms, way–finding, security and elevators. The Museum’s “Memorial Hall,” contains exhibition space located at the first level of the original World Trade Center (WTC) below grade.
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
The lowest level at bedrock features the original west slurry wall which is supported by a counter fort system and the remaining west slurry wall with a concrete reinforced liner. The original tower footprints are defined by the preserved original box column remnants which are visible and accessible to visitors.
The National September 11th Museum is targeting a LEED-NC Gold rating upon project completion. To reduce the impact on the local environment, stay in compliance with the World Trade Center Sustainable Design Guidelines, and Lower Manhattan Environmental Performance Commitments. All diesel-powered construction equipment on the project was retrofitted with diesel particulate filters and used ultra-low sulfur diesel, and all impact equipment was fitted with mufflers or noise blankets. Furthermore, concrete wash-off water was treated before it was discharged to the storm sewer, protecting neighboring water bodies from possible adverse effects from lime.
To reduce resource use and waste to landfill, the project achieved 75% diversion of construction and demolition waste from land fill. To accomplish this goal waste was sorted on site into individual recyclable material categories. This project filtered, dewatered and pumped surface water on site for construction purposes, such as fugitive dust control and wheel washing. To conserve water during operation, the pavilion has a storm water collection and treatment system that allows water to be reused for irrigation.
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
To optimize the quality of the indoor environment, Lend Lease developed and implemented a Construction IAQ Management Plan that protected the HVAC system from dust during construction, protected materials from moisture damage.
The pavilion has a light-colored, highly reflective roof to preclude the “heat island effect” (hot spot) black roofs create. To reduce operating costs and carbon emissions premium efficiency chillers/equipment and occupancy sensor controlled lighting were used. Further, the client hired a third-party Commissioning Authority to validate the performance of the mechanical, lighting and domestic water systems.
Since September 11, 2011, Lend Lease has had the honor of working on the WTC site. Lend Lease and three other contractors were assigned by the City of New York to conduct recovery efforts. As the recovery effort moved into the next phase, Lend Lease was designated the lead contractor overseeing the entire cleanup operation. For 265 days Lend Lease staff lead, coordinated, and worked with the New York Police and New York City Fire Department’s personnel and thousands of volunteers to complete the recovery operation. Over 1.6 million tons of debris was removed from the site during the recovery phase over.
For more on the 9/11 Memorial and Museum, visit 911memorial.org.
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
When hijacked Flight 11 struck the North Tower, it severed elevator cables and trapped hundreds of people above floor 93. Below the impact zone, most on floors lower than 92 were able to evacuate via the stairs. This elevator motor, the largest model in the world when installed, powered one of the express or service cars, which moved at a speed of 1,600 feet per minute. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
This piece of steel, once part of the façade of the North Tower, was located at the point of impact where hijacked Flight 11 pierced the building from floors 93 through 99. A companion piece of façade steel from floors 93 through 96 is displayed in the South Tower Excavation. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
The letters of the quotation from Virgil’s “Aeneid” were forged out of remnant World Trade Center steel by New Mexico blacksmith Tom Joyce (American, b. 1956). Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
This 19.8-foot-long fragment was about one-twentieth of the 360-foot-tall transmission tower atop the North Tower. Six broadcast engineers affiliated with five television stations were working from offices on floors 104 and 110 of the North Tower on 9/11. None of the engineers survived. Transmissions for most stations failed shortly after hijacked Flight 11 pierced the North Tower. All transmissions ceased by 10:28 a.m., when the tower collapsed. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Standing box column. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Steel trident. Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Photo: Jin Lee / Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Courtesy 9/11 Memorial Museum
Related Stories
Cultural Facilities | Aug 21, 2024
Baltimore’s National Aquarium opens 10,000-sf floating wetland that mimics the harbor’s original tidal marsh habitat
The National Aquarium in Baltimore has opened the National Aquarium Harbor Wetland, a 10,000-sf floating wetland that mimics the Inner Harbor’s original Chesapeake Bay tidal marsh habitat. Located between Piers 3 and 4 on Baltimore’s Inner Harbor, the $14 million project features more than 32,000 native shrubs and marsh grasses.
Mixed-Use | Aug 21, 2024
Adaptive reuse of a Sears store becomes luxury mixed-use housing
6 Corners Lofts at 4714 W Irving Park Road, Chicago, Ill., opened in March of 2024 as a 394,000-sf adaptive reuse project born out of a former Sears store.
Building Materials | Aug 19, 2024
Federal 'buy clean' construction materials label program unveiled
The U.S. Environmental Protection Agency announced a plan for implementing a new label program to boost American production of more climate-friendly construction materials and products. The label program will prioritize steel, glass, asphalt and concrete.
Museums | Aug 19, 2024
The Tampa Museum of Art will soon undergo a $110 million expansion
In Tampa, Fla., the Tampa Museum of Art will soon undergo a 77,904-sf Centennial Expansion project. The museum plans to reach its $110 million fundraising goal by late 2024 or early 2025 and then break ground. Designed by Weiss/Manfredi, and with construction manager The Beck Group, the expansion will redefine the museum’s surrounding site.
AEC Tech | Aug 19, 2024
Harnessing AI to revolutionize architectural design and creativity
Architects are wondering if AI will replace us. For Vessel, the gains offset the fear. We believe there is wisdom in the unattributed quote, “You won’t lose your job to AI. You will lose your job to someone using AI.”
Reconstruction & Renovation | Aug 19, 2024
Movement to protect historic buildings raises sharp criticism
While the movement to preserve historic buildings has widespread support, it also has some sharp critics with well-funded opposition groups springing up in recent years. Some opponents are linked to the Stand Together Foundation, founded and bankrolled by the Koch family’s conservative philanthropic organization, according to a column in Governing magazine.
Government Buildings | Aug 19, 2024
GSA posts new RFI for enabling energy efficiency, decarbonization in commercial buildings
The U.S. General Services Administration (GSA), in collaboration with the U.S. Department of Energy, recently released a new Request For Information (RFI) focused on enabling energy efficiency and decarbonization in commercial buildings. GSA wants to test innovative technologies through GSA’s Center for Emerging Building Technologies.
MFPRO+ New Projects | Aug 16, 2024
At 60 stories, the Paramount multifamily development will stand as Nashville’s tallest high rise
When complete, the 60-story Paramount building, at 750 feet high, will be the tallest high rise tower in Nashville, Tenn., surpassing the city’s current record holder, the 617-foot AT&T Building. The $390 million Paramount project recently launched condo sales after securing more than $230 million in construction financing.
Urban Planning | Aug 15, 2024
New York City begins first large-scale porous pavement installation
New York City is installing its first large-scale porous pavement installation along seven miles of roadway in Brooklyn. The project will keep 35 million gallons of stormwater out of the combined sewer system each year, according to a news release.
Urban Planning | Aug 15, 2024
The magic of L.A.’s Melrose Mile
Great streets are generally not initially curated or willed into being. Rather, they emerge organically from unintentional synergies of commercial, business, cultural and economic drivers. L.A.’s Melrose Avenue is a prime example.