-Caveat Lector-

Manhattan ready to pick Libeskind's jagged towers
http://www.guardian.co.uk/september11/story/0,11209,900610,00.html
Polish-born architect's plan will be pared back to meet competing demands
on WTC site demands

Gary Younge in New York
Saturday February 22, 2003
The Guardian

The design of one of the world's most versatile and celebrated architects,
Daniel Libeskind, is expected to be chosen as the replacement for the
World Trade Centre buildings, although some of its central features are
likely to be either radically altered or left out.

Both the governor of New York state, George Pataki, and the city's mayor,
Michael Bloomberg, prefer Libeskind's jagged towers design to the other
shortlisted proposal, a set of latticework towers designed by a rival
practice, Think.

Libeksind's plans have also gained favour with the New York port authority,
which owns the World Trade Centre site, and the Lower Manhattan
development corporation (LMDC), which is overseeing the rebuilding.

Others on the corporation, including a close associate of President
George Bush and the chairman of the board, are thought to favour Think's
design, but it is unlikely that they will go against the wishes of both the
mayor and governor.

In an increasingly fraught process, which has been dominated by inter-
agency rivalry and public disaffection, Libeskind had to apologise on
Thursday for voicing sharp criticism of his rival's plans in a live internet
forum.

"There is a dramatic and urgent need to repair the skyline," he had said. "I
do not believe that two skeletons in the sky asserts the vitality of New
York or the courage of America. I do believe that a distinctive and
economically viable skyline has to be built."

Libeskind's other works include the fêted Jewish museum in Berlin and the
Imperial War Museum North in Salford, and he has been commissioned to
make the spiral extension to the Victoria & Albert museum.

His design for the WTC is likely to be approved on Thursday, partly
because it received considerable popular support for the amount of space
devoted to the memorial, and for its striking use of light. "You look down,
you see the void, you look up, you see light. In order to heal, you've got to
have a scar," said one participant in a Municipal Art Society workshop last
month, convened to encourage public participation in the process.

Another factor in its favour is that it will cost half as much to build. And
Think's 85-floor towers have raised understandable security fears.

Officials are keen to point out that whichever design is selected will
provide only a blueprint for whatever is finally built.

"These are plans that are to provide an inspiration for future
development," the port authority's executive director, Joe Seymour, said
earlier this week.

Some of the distinctive elements of Libeskind's design, such as a towering
vertical garden, a series of jagged-edged office towers and the exposed pit
to be left under the building as a memorial area, are unlikely to feature in
the final stages.

"It's at this point when the plan collides with reality," the architect Craig
Whitaker said. "The next phase in this journey is one that's going to be
very difficult."

'Not cast in stone'

At this stage there have been demands for the pit to be made shallower,
because the port authority would
like to use some of it as a car park. The trade centre's leaseholder, Larry
Silverstein, has openly questioned whether businesses want to rent space
next to a hole that reminds them of their vulnerability.

Libeskind's proposal for a narrow 540-metre (1,776ft) tower, which would
be the world's tallest building, topped by six enclosed botanic gardens
representing different ecosystems, is unlikely to see the light of day.

"I think what people have got to understand is what comes out of this is
suggestions," Mr Bloomberg said. "The buildings will be decided not on this
plan necessarily, but by who wants to build them and where the money
comes from and who wants to rent them, or live in them, or shop in them.
It's not cast in stone."

Next week's announcement will mark the end of almost nine months of
public debate about what should replace the World Trade Centre,
balancing the interests of commerce with the need for a fitting memorial
and the demands of residents in the Lower Manhattan area.

The first six proposals, unveiled in July, were so underwhelming that LMDC
began all over again. It returned with a far more encouraging shortlist of
nine models, including one by the British architect Norman Foster, which
was ruled out last month as they whittled the competition down to two.

Central to the public and political discussions has been the issue of
ownership. Responsibility for the site is divided between the governors of
New York and New Jersey, who own the land, and Mr Silverstein who
leased the space.

Although the LMDC is overseeing the process, it has no legal authority, and
while the public's views have been taken into account, there is no
structure to make their voices count.

The result has been a litany of both public and private rivalry between the
various interest groups.

Guardian Unlimited © Guardian Newspapers Limited 2003
Forwarded for your information.  The text and intent of the article
have to stand on their own merits.
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