Looking Around, Art, Architecture, TIME

Smalltiming at Ground Zero

transportationFSTC_STPAULSVIEWcrop.jpg
Proposed Fulton Street Transit Center /Photo: METROPOLITAN TRANSPORTATION AUTHORITY

They're doing it again. Every time you turn around the grand vision for Ground Zero is ground down another notch. This time it's a two-fer — why not screw up two of the still unbuilt portions of the project at one time? One of those would be the performing arts center that Frank Gehry is designing — one of the last of the cultural venues that was supposed to keep Ground Zero from being rebuilt as nothing more than a clutch of office towers around a memorial. The other is the sizeable subway station that's supposed to provide a unified hub for the tangle of 12 subway lines that pass through the area. (Not to be confused with the much larger PATH train station nearby, designed by Santiago Calatrava, which is still going forward.)

While I was on the road, Avi Schick, who heads the Empire State Development Corporation, the New York State body that channels funding to big projects, and who also heads the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation, which has a role in overseeing the re-emergence of the World Trade Center neighborhood, "suggested" that the theater might be moved out of the Trade Center site and plunked on top of the subway station, which was supposed to be an above-ground glass structure that would culminate in a glass dome — you know, something nice. As you would expect, it's all about budget, which is another way of saying priorities. Moving the theater would mean reducing the subway station to a standard dark hole in the ground while ensuring that Ground Zero lives up to its name.

New York State is asking New York City to examine the idea for 30 days and get back to them. So for now it's still just a trial balloon. Who's got a pin?

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Reader Comments (2)

Tan Boon Tee:

It appears that what is to be erected at Ground Zero has become more and more contentious. Different people have different concepts about things (buildings and structures included), especially when it comes to a place where almost three thousands lives vaporized due to a heinous act of terrorism – an extreme human folly unsurpassed in man’s history.

Ground Zero must be viewed as sacred, indeed it is sacred. Perhaps it ought to be kept as vacant as possible, with only a simple memorial so that those who are still alive could pay respect to the perished, any time, any day of the year.

To deliberate on what to be built and who to build on Ground Zero could well be superfluous. That said, one would least wish to see another skyscraper that tends to bring back the awful and sad memory of the WTC. (Tan Boon Tee)


Jimmy:

12 subway lines? Wow. That will be frightening moving through that one.

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About Looking Around

Richard Lacayo

Richard Lacayo writes about books, art and architecture at TIME Magazine, where he arrived in 1984. He is the co-author, with George Russell, of Eyewitness: 100 Years of Photojournalism and has won various lesser known journalism prizes, which he keeps in his desk drawer. Read more

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