World Trade Center
Clog Issue 12
World Trade Center
Fifty years ago, in 1964, Minoru Yamasaki’s proposed design for the World Trade Center was first revealed to the public. Rising far above the Lower Manhattan skyline, the Twin Towers—centerpieces of the original World Trade Center complex—were intended, in the words of their architect, to “become a living representation of man’s belief in humanity.”
From the beginning, the project was not without controversy. Positioned at the confluence of several transportation routes, an entire district known as “Radio Row” would be claimed through eminent domain and demolished to make way for the new center of commerce. The abstract—arguably overpowering—design invited fierce criticism. Nevertheless, Yamasaki and associate architects Emery Roth & Sons would devote over a decade to the design and construction of the World Trade Center, which proved significant not only as an urban renewal project, but also as an architectural and engineering marvel.
By the time of their destruction, the Twin Towers were one of New York City’s most prominent icons. With the new World Trade Center slowly approaching completion, the importance and irreplaceability of the original becomes more evident. CLOG will therefore critically examine that which has forever been lost: the World Trade Center, Dedicated April 4, 1973.
Contributors
Michael Arad, Pep Avilés, Dorin Baul, Ashley Bigham, Kyle Branchesi, Shane Reiner-Roth, Jing Yan, Karla Cavarra Britton, Archie Lee Coates IV, Carlos Diniz, Adam Frampton, Jeffrey Franklin, Richard Garlock, Christina Gray, Donna Grunewald, Henry Guthard, Dale Allen Gyure, Matthew Hall, Erik William Herrmann, Robert Herrmann, Adam Himes, Julia van den Hout, José Antonio Tallón Iglesias, C.B. Johnson, Rennie Jones, Joss Kiely, James Klauder, Stephanie Lee, Eric Lipton, Thomas Lozada, Osyp Martyniuk, Isaac Mathew, Kyle May, Guy Nordenson, Alex Pasternack, Jacob Reidel, Leslie E. Robertson, Anthony W. Robins, Jonathan A. Scelsa, Brett H. Schneider, Seth Weine, Human Wu