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crumb trail: Home >> Whistle Online >> Archives >> Jan. 12, 2004
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Alumnus designs 9/11 memorial

Sean Selman
Institute Communications and Public Affairs

Following an eight-month international competition that drew more than 5,000 entries, a memorial designed by a Georgia Tech alumnus has been chosen as the future World Trade Center Memorial in New York City.

  Southeast aerial view
  Arad’s signature image is a southeast aerial view, where two reflecting pools occupy the footprints of the Twin Towers.

Michael Arad, who graduated from Georgia Tech in 1999 with a master’s degree in architecture, designed “Reflecting Absence: A Memorial at the World Trade Center Site” for the international World Trade Center Site Memorial Competition, launched in April 2003.

His original design includes reflecting pools and waterfalls in the footprints where the former World Trade Center towers once stood. It is to be built in memory of all the victims of terrorist attacks on Sept. 11, 2001, and of the six people killed in the 1993 World Trade Center bombing.

“I am very honored and overwhelmed by the news that the jury has selected my design,” Arad said. “I hope that I will be able to honor the memory of all those who perished and create a place where we may all grieve and find meaning.”

“I will do my best to rise to the enormity of the task at hand. It is with great humility that I regard the challenges that lie ahead — and it is with great hope that I will find the strength and ability to meet them,” he said.

“I think he did a magnificent job of sorting through all the many different interests and requirements needed for this memorial at this site,” said Doug Allen, associate dean of the College of Architecture.

“His is a quiet scheme. It’s a complex and difficult thing to pull off at this particular location, and for someone at his age to design this scheme and have it chosen is truly significant,” Allen said.

Vartan Gregorian, chair of the jury that selected Arad’s design for the memorial, said, “In its powerful yet simple articulation of the footprints of the Twin Towers, ‘Reflecting Absence’ has made the gaping voids left by the Towers’ destruction the primary symbol of loss. While these voids still remain empty and inconsolable, the surrounding plaza’s design has evolved to include teeming groves of trees, traditional affirmations of life and rebirth.”

“The result is a memorial that expresses both the incalculable loss of life and its regeneration,” Gregorian said. “Not only does this memorial creatively address its mandate to preserve the footprints, recognize individual victims and provide access to bedrock, but it also wonderfully reconnects this site to the fabric of its urban community.”

Officials said that Arad’s winning design has evolved significantly since the eight finalists were placed on exhibit at New York City’s Winter Garden this past November, and more changes are expected before it is to be built. A new design will be unveiled in a public presentation to take place this week, officials said.

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