ABSTRACT

The terrorist attacks of September 11 have created an unprecedented public discussion about the uses and meanings of the central area of lower Manhattan that was once the World Trade Center. While the city sifts through the debris, contrary forces shaping its future are at work. Developers jockey to control the right to rebuild "ground zero." Financial firms line up for sweetheart deals while proposals for memorials are gaining in appeal. In After the World Trade Center, eminent social critics Sharon Zukin and Michael Sorkin call on New York's most acclaimed urbanists to consider the impact of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center and what it bodes for the future of New York. Contributors take a close look at the reaction to the attack from a variety of New York communities and discuss possible effects on public life in the city.

chapter 2|9 pages

Our World Trade Center

chapter 3|10 pages

Manhattan at War

chapter 4|12 pages

Whose Downtown?!? 1

chapter 5|11 pages

The First Wall Street Bomb

chapter 7|17 pages

Insecurity by Design

chapter 8|9 pages

The Janus Face of Architectural Terrorism

Minoru Yamasaki, Mohammed Atta, and Our World Trade Center 1

chapter 9|12 pages

Scales of Terror

The Manufacturing of Nationalism and the War for U.S. Globalism 1

chapter 11|10 pages

The Odor of Publicity

chapter 12|12 pages

Letter to a G-Man

chapter 13|9 pages

From Jackson Heights to Nuestra America

9/11 and Latino New York

chapter 14|9 pages

What Kind of Planning After September 11?

The Market, the Stakeholders, Consensus-or…?

chapter 15|9 pages

Spaces of Reflection, Recovery, and Resistance

Reimagining the Postindustrial Plaza

chapter 17|7 pages

Enduring Innocence

chapter 18|11 pages

The Center Cannot Hold

chapter 18|15 pages

New York, New Deal