Houston Chronicle Sunday

The new downtown: Lower Manhattan reborn 15 years after 9/11

- By Beth J. Harpaz Beth Harpaz is the Associated Press travel editor.

NEW YORK — Fifteen years after the Sept. 11 attacks, Lower Manhattan has been reborn.

The revitaliza­tion of the city’s downtown, powered by $30 billion in government and private investment, includes not just the reconstruc­tion of the World Trade Center site but two new malls filled with upscale retailers, thousands of new hotel rooms and dozens of eateries ranging from a new Eataly to a French food hall, Le District.

The statistics alone are stunning. There are 29 hotels in the neighborho­od, compared to six before 9/11. More than 60,000 people live downtown, nearly triple the number in 2000. And last year, the area hosted a record 14 million visitors, according to the Alliance for Downtown New York.

And though there’s plenty to do downtown for free, including seeing the 9/11 memorial park, visitors have also shown a willingnes­s to pay relatively steep prices for certain attraction­s. The 9/11 museum, which charges $24, has drawn 6.67 million visitors since its May 2014 opening. The observator­y atop One World Trade Center, which charges $34, has drawn 3 million people in the 15 months since it opened. In comparison, the Statue of Liberty gets about 4 million visitors a year.

“I don’t think anyone would have expected that we would have rebounded so robustly, so quickly,” said Jessica Lappin, president of the Alliance for Downtown New York. “There’s the physical transforma­tion at the site itself, but there’s also the neighborho­od. There’s an energy here. People could have given up after 9/11, and nobody would have blamed them. Instead there has been a tenacity, a dedication that is inspiring.”

The Alliance for Downtown New York was founded before 9/11, in 1995, when the “neighborho­od was on its heels,” Lappin recalled. “The vacancy rate was going through the roof.” At the time, downtown was a strictly 9-to-5 area, keyed to the workday rhythms of Wall Street and City Hall, deserted at night and on weekends. Revitaliza­tion efforts were just getting underway “when 9/11 hit and changed everything.”

But as government funding for disaster recovery began to pour in, private investment followed, spurring a massive rebuilding that continues to this day. For blocks surroundin­g One World Trade, half-built towers and cranes still clutter the sky, barricades and scaffoldin­g line the streets, and the whine and clatter of jackhammer­s fill the air. Constructi­on workers in hardhats are as ubiquitous as tourists. The recession hampered efforts to bring businesses back, but Lappin says area employment — 266,000 workers — is finally nearing pre-9/11 numbers. Condé Nast and Time Inc. have relocated downtown. Group M, one of the world’s biggest advertisin­g firms, will move into Three World Trade Center when it’s complete.

So far, three towers have been built with plans for more.

The neighborho­od is also becoming a shopping destinatio­n. Brookfield Place opened last year with luxury retailers including Gucci and Diane von Furstenber­g. It also houses Le District, a French food hall with a creperie, cafe, bar and more, as well as Hudson Eats, with outposts of popular local eateries such as Mighty Quinn’s BBQ and Num Pang’s Cambodian sandwiches.

A second shopping center, Westfield, opened in August inside the Oculus, a striking white structure designed by famed architect Santiago Calatrava. The curves of the Oculus’ two ribbed wings are silhouette­d by One World Trade rising behind it. Inside the Oculus, retailers are as varied as Apple, Kate Spade and The Art of Shaving. The complex connects to Four World Trade, where the new Eataly NYC Downtown offers a bounty of bread, cheese, coffee, produce, pasta and more. Below ground, a massive transit center houses subways and a New Jersey PATH train station.

Elsewhere in Lower Manhattan, a Tom Colicchio restaurant is planned for the just opened Beekman Hotel; the soon-toopen Four Seasons hotel will host a Wolfgang Puck restaurant, and the storied Nobu restaurant will move downtown from Tribeca. Other downtown attraction­s include Alexander Hamilton’s tomb in the graveyard of Trinity Church, the National Museum of the American Indian and the SeaGlass Carousel, which opened last year near where boats leave for the Statue of Liberty and Ellis Island.

But near the top of many visitors’ New York itinerarie­s these days is a pilgrimage to the place where planes turned the twin towers into smoking piles of twisted steel and rubble. The tranquil park formally known as the National September 11 Memorial features tree-lined walkways and reflecting pools in the footprints of the twin towers. Bronze parapets around the pools bear the names of the nearly 3,000 dead.

On a recent Monday, park visitors included three siblings from Barcelona, Spain — Arantxa, Meus and Pau Saloni — on their first trip to New York. “It’s really sad to see all the names, but it’s nice to remember them,” Meus said.

Also visiting on that day were Su-Ting Fu and his family, in town from suburban Westcheste­r. “We lived in New York City when 9/11 happened,” he said. “But we hadn’t come to see this until today. It’s nice to see everything they’ve done to memorializ­e it, but I also love the greenery and how it feels very much like a living type of memorial.”

Lappin said the neighborho­od’s rebirth is a fitting tribute to the 9/11 tragedy. “We honor those who were lost, but we also celebrate life and move forward.”

 ?? Associated Press photos ?? Constructi­on cranes on top of 3 World Trade Center reflect the continued rebirth of Lower Manhattan.
Associated Press photos Constructi­on cranes on top of 3 World Trade Center reflect the continued rebirth of Lower Manhattan.
 ??  ?? Westfield opened last month inside the Oculus, housing a variety of retailers and a transporta­tion hub.
Westfield opened last month inside the Oculus, housing a variety of retailers and a transporta­tion hub.
 ??  ?? Freshly baked breads are displayed at the entrance to Eataly in downtown’s new Westfield shopping center.
Freshly baked breads are displayed at the entrance to Eataly in downtown’s new Westfield shopping center.
 ??  ?? The revitaliza­tion includes the Beekman, which is being renovated into a luxury hotel.
The revitaliza­tion includes the Beekman, which is being renovated into a luxury hotel.
 ??  ?? The National September 11 Memorial & Museum honors the victims of the terrorist attacks.
The National September 11 Memorial & Museum honors the victims of the terrorist attacks.

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