Ceremony Ends Search for WTC Remains
      July 15, 2002 2:50 PM EST
      By: Karen Matthews Associated Press



      NEW YORK (AP) - Sixty to 70 story office buildings, stores, cultural centers
      and a memorial to the dead are included in six alternative proposals for the
      World Trade Center site that will be released on Tuesday.

      Officials familiar with the proposals said that all six would replace the 11 million
      square feet of office and retail space lost in the Sept. 11 attack with a cluster
      of buildings much shorter than the 110-story twin towers.

      The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity, also said that each version
      includes a substantial memorial to the victims. But they said only four of the plans
      set aside the "footprint" of the towers for a memorial - a key demand of many
      victims' families.

      The six plans are rough drafts, not detailed architectural renderings, and represent
      the first in what could be a contentious series of steps to redevelop the 16-acre site.
      A final design is set to be selected in December.

      "This is the starting point for dialogue," said Matthew Higgins, spokesman for the
      Lower Manhattan Development Corp., the city-state agency charged with
      redeveloping the site. "The next step is to actively engage the public through as
      many different forums as possible."

      Although only a few developers, planners and government officials have seen
      the plans, they have already stirred some response.

      Mayor Michael Bloomberg called them "a start."

      "I've got my own ideas, which I will certainly write to them," said Bloomberg,
      who encouraged others to do the same.

      While some victims' relatives initially called for the entire site to be set aside as a
      memorial, many now say they will be satisfied with a memorial covering several acres,
      including the footprint of the towers.

      "Where Tower 1 and Tower 2 stood is sacred ground," said Joseph Maurer, a retired
      firefighter whose daughter, Jill Campbell, died in the trade center.
      "It's the same as Gettysburg or Pearl Harbor."

      One official said the proposals also include space for cultural uses, such as theaters
      and museums. These preliminary plans do not specify particular tenants, but there
      has been speculation already that the Museum of the City of New York and the
      New York City Opera could find new homes at the site.

      While none of the plans calls for housing on the 16-acre tract itself, they do suggest
      that damaged office buildings along the periphery be razed for housing or converted
      to apartments. Several large office buildings near the trade center were so damaged
      that they remain vacant.

      The proposals are to be released by the development corporation and the
      Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns the land. They will be on
      public display for several weeks and posted on the development corporation's website.

      An expected 5,000 people will discuss the plans at a meeting on Saturday.

      The development corporation and the Port Authority will narrow the six land-use
      proposals down to three by September and then down to one.

      Allen Morrison, a spokesman for the Port Authority, said the final plan could include
      elements of all six of the early drafts.

      "This is not a process of elimination," he said. "It's more a process of evaluating
      what are the best attributes of all six of the preliminary plans, and we'll try with our
      consultants to come back with three new plans based on the comments we get,
      and then we'll do it again."

      The plans were prepared by the architectural firm of Beyer Blinder Belle.
      Among the firm's better known projects was the renovation of
      Grand Central Terminal.





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