Sixteen Acres: The Rebuilding of the World Trade Center Site

Sixteen Acres: The Rebuilding of the World Trade Center Site

by PhilipNobel (Author)

Synopsis

On the morning of September 12, 2001, the sixteen acres of the World Trade Center site lay in ruins. They were wrecked and they were burning; they were the scene of an unprecedented crime. But they were not exactly 'erased' or 'wiped off the map' as some newspapers would claim: under the pile dominating what had already been named Ground Zero, the land remained, the space remained, the deeds and leases remained, signed and countersigned, gruesomely intact among the waste. The towers were gone, but their troubled redemption was already taking shape: it would come in the boilerplate of deals, in the exchange of memoranda, in handshakes and whispers and white papers, and soon in the form of architectural fancy. Tracing the redevelopment of the World Trade Center site from graveyard to testing ground for high design, critic Philip Nobel strips away the hyperbole to reveal the secret life of the century's most charged building project. Tragic and comic by turns, full of low dealings and high dudgeon, Sixteen Acres takes us behind the scenes at the site itself, exposing the reconstruction as the flawed product of a complicated city: driven by money, hamstrung by politics, burdened by the wounds it is somehow supposed to heal.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 304
Edition: First Edition
Publisher: Granta Books
Published: 10 Mar 2005

ISBN 10: 1862077134
ISBN 13: 9781862077133

Media Reviews
Among the smartest architecture critics around, and one of the best writers of the bunch, Philip Nobel also has a reporter's eye for telling details and jaw-dropping gossip. In Sixteen Acres he chronicles the impossible project-of-the-century lucidly and sharply, armed with common sense, unfailing humor, a good moral compass and no particular axe to grind. --Kurt Andersen, author of Turn of the Century
Author Bio
Philip Nobel studied architecture at Columbia University. He writes regularly for The New York Times, Vogue, Artforum, The Forward, Metropolis, Architectural Digest and The Nation. He has also appeared as a commentator on CBS and MSNBC. He lives in New York City.