Rebuilding the World Trade Center
This article has a reply.
VIEW THE REPLYThis article has a reply.
VIEW THE REPLYThis article has a reply.
VIEW THE REPLYPublication: Practice Periodical on Structural Design and Construction
Volume 8, Issue 3
Abstract
The Construction Institute’s Committee on Social and Environmental Concerns in Construction has examined 24 items of social and environmental concerns in construction that will have to be considered by those who are going to be involved in the reconstruction of the World Trade Center. These topics include the economic aspects of the reconstruction, the planning and design, the environmental issues, the transportation challenges, the contractual problems, the memorial, and the security requirements. During the drafting of this report, the Committee received assistance and guidance from the engineering staff of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey. Some Committee members visited the World Trade Center site at Ground Zero during the preparation of the report. Also consulted by the Committee were some well-known, highly qualified engineers on various aspects of the report. These contributions from nonmembers of the Committee made the report richer. It is the intent of this report to serve as a starting point for planning and redevelopment.
Get full access to this article
View all available purchase options and get full access to this article.
References
Bagli, C. V. (2001). “Too tall? Not at all, tenants say.” New York Times, Nov. 5, F-1.
Blair, J. (2002a). “Amex coming back to Lower Manhattan.” New York Times, Mar. 1, B-3.
Blair, J. (2002b). “Near Ground Zero, street surgery starts with a shovel.” New York Times, Mar. 14, B-3.
Bloomberg News. (2002). “Office vacancies in downtown surge.” New York Times, Jan. 12, C-2.
Cardwell, D. (2002a). “Developer briefs Bloomberg on plans to rebuild towers.” New York Times, Feb. 10, B-1.
Cardwell, D. (2002b). “Hearing brings more debate over Ground Zero air quality.” New York Times, Feb. 24, B-31.
Cardwell, D. (2002c). “Battery Park likely to get a memorial to victims.” New York Times, Mar. 3, B-5.
Cardwell, D. (2002d). “Next stop, Lower Manhattan: more ferries on the Hudson.” New York Times, Mar. 15, B-3.
Chartock, D. S. (2002). “Repair work underway on 1 and 9, PATH stations.” New York Construction News, May 1, 41.
Dunlap, D. W. (2002). “From 88 search lights, an ethereal tribute.” New York Times, Mar. 4, B-3.
Eaton, L. (2002). “Looking to suburbs to map 9/11 reach.” New York Times, Apr. 16, 10-1.
Finn, R. (2002). “Undaunted and planning the next great skyline.” New York Times, Feb. 15, B-2.
Glanz, J. (2002). “Buildings: air pressure and fine filters—biowarfare.” New York Times, Mar. 28, A-15.
Glanz, J., and Lipton, E. (2002). “Sweeping changes pushed for code on city high-rises.” New York Times, Aug. 2, A-1.
Haberman, M., and Neuman, W. (2002). “Architects construct plan for 110 story ‘memorial’ tower.” New York Post, June 7, 2.
Herbert, B. (2002). “Ground Zero diagnosis.” New York Times, June 3, A-15.
Holusha, J. (2002). “More attention to security in designing buildings.” New York Times, Mar. 10, A-6.
Jezer, R. (2002). “Sierrans’ input can shape a green WTC vision.” Sierra Atlantic, 4.
Kennedy, R. (2002). “It’s all aboard, if they’ll fit, as September 11th jolts mass transit.” New York Times, Jan. 3, A-1.
Lueck, T. J. (2001). “3 stations of subway in Lower Manhattan will not reopen for at least 3 years.” New York Times, Nov. 29.
Pogrebin, R. (2002). “City Opera seeks partners for move to Ground Zero.” New York Times, Feb. 28, B-4.
Port, B. (2001). “No fast track to subway fixes.” New York Daily News, Sept. 14, 60.
Sollar, A. (2002). “The outlook for business downtown.” ABO Developments, Winter, 15–17.
Wyatt, E. (2002). “Low offices are suggested for towers site.” New York Times, June 6, B-4.
Information & Authors
Information
Published In
Copyright
Copyright © 2003 American Society of Civil Engineers.
History
Received: May 14, 2002
Accepted: Oct 4, 2002
Published online: Jul 15, 2003
Published in print: Aug 2003
Authors
Metrics & Citations
Metrics
Citations
Download citation
If you have the appropriate software installed, you can download article citation data to the citation manager of your choice. Simply select your manager software from the list below and click Download.