Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

World Trade Center reopens, 13 years after Sept. 11 attacks

- By Verena Dobnik

NEW YORK » The silvery, 1,776-foot skyscraper that rose from the ashes of 9/11 to become a symbol of American resilience opened for business Monday, as 175 employees of the magazine publishing giant Conde Nast settled into their first day of work in their new offices.

One World Trade Cent er ’s of f icia l opening marked a symbolic return to some sense of normalcy for the site where the towers toppled more than 13 years ago.

“The New York City skyline is whole again,” says Patrick Foye, executive director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, which owns both the building and the 16acre World Trade Center site.

Steps away from the new tower are two memorial fountains built on the footprints of the decimated twin towers, a reminder of the more than 2,700 people who died in the terrorist attack.

Conde Nast, publisher of Vogue, The New Yorker and Vanity Fair, is expected to move in about 3,000 more employees by early next year, eventually occupying 25 floors of the $3.9 billion, 104-story tower, the nation’s tallest building.

Amid Monday’s celebrator­y tour of parts of 1 World Trade Center, Conde Nast officials declined to comment on employees’ possible fears about working in the new building.

Foye counters that it’s “the most secure office building in America.” And its chief architect, T.J. Gottesdien­er, said the high-rise was built with steel-reinforced concrete that makes it as terror attack-proof as possible — much stronger than the original towers that collapsed on themselves when the hijacked planes hit.

The stairwells are built with a hardened concrete core, and wider to allow firefighte­rs to move while people exit. The building’s mechanical systems are also encased in hardened concrete.

“If my son told me he had a job in the trade center Tower 1, I would have no qualms about him being there,” Gottesdien­er said.

After 9/11, he said, architects took pains to fig- ure out new ways to make a high-rise safer, working with the New York Fire Department, buildings officials and police, while learning from new techniques from constructi­on in cities worldwide.

Finally, computeriz­ed simulation­s were used to calculate what would happen with people in the building.

One World Trade Center is 60 percent leased, with another 80,000 square feet going to the advertisin­g firm Kids Creative, the stadium operator Legends Hospitalit­y, the BMB Group investment adviser, and Servcorp, a provider of executive offices.

The government’s General Services Administra­tion signed up for 275,000 square feet, and the China Center, a trade and cultural facility, will cover 191,000 square feet.

The space is at the top of the global price range, at $69 per square foot below the 63rd floor, and $80 to $100 going up.

The eight-year constructi­on of the skyscraper came after years of political, financial and legal infighting that threatened to derail the project.

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 ?? AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN ?? People gather in the lobby of One World Trade Center, Monday, in New York. Thirteen years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, the resurrecte­d World Trade Center is again opening for business, marking an emotional milestone for both New Yorkers and the...
AP PHOTO/MARK LENNIHAN People gather in the lobby of One World Trade Center, Monday, in New York. Thirteen years after the Sept. 11 terrorist attack, the resurrecte­d World Trade Center is again opening for business, marking an emotional milestone for both New Yorkers and the...

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