Saturday, September 10, 2011
WTC 1997
I've already written about my experience of 9/11 on this blog -- but I haven't gone back even further, to a visit I made to the World Trade Center in 1997.
There's not much to the story. At the time, I was living in Florida, and visiting New York with a friend. We went to the WTC and took photos on the plaza, looking up at the twin monoliths and Fritz Koenig's sculpture "The Sphere" in the center of the plaza's fountain.
A lot of people griped about the World Trade Center's architecture when the buildings were first erected -- that they were too big and too boxy. The most elegant element of their design, I think, was the way they were offset against each other on that open plaza -- not parallel or at a right angle, but just slightly askew. I also liked the arches formed by the building's converging lines on the lower floors.
We went into the lobby so we could go up to the viewing deck on the top of the building, but the line was really long. So we decided to skip it. Even after I moved to New York in 2000 I never went up in the World Trade Center, and after 9/11 I regretted not visiting it more thoroughly.
We did go to the underground shopping mall beneath the WTC. In fact, the only pertinent comment in my journal about that trip is: "We didn't go into the Trade Center, but we did stop at Structure, where I got a great shirt!"
My friend and I did go up in the Empire State Building, though, and I shot this photo of lower Manhattan from that vantage point. Manhattan never looked right to me after 9/11. The twin towers, as monolithic and boxy as they were, helped balance the skyline -- as if you could put the whole city on a teeter-totter with its fulcrum in Chelsea, and it would stay level. Now Midtown looks overly heavy.
On Labor Day weekend 2001, I walked beneath the World Trade Center with my stepmother and her mother, both visiting. We didn't go up in the building then, either, and certainly could never have imagined what would happen just a week later.
I still miss the towers, too. I remember people complaining about the architecture, but I always thought they were beautiful, stark and impressive.
ReplyDeleteGlad you got a good shirt there! Do you still have it?
I only went up to the very top, the roof, once when I was going to NYU. When I first moved to NYC and would pass them at night I was always amazed by their size. I was forever looking up when I got to NYC anyway but looking up at those made me dizzy.
ReplyDeleteWe had dinner at Windows on the World just a few months before 9/11 and I remember standing by the window feeling a bit queasy becuase they didn't stop at the floor, they just kept going. And it felt like I wasn't safe. I was glad to take the elevator down.
I love that jounal entry!