The 9/II Project: Part I
The Building and Life Of The World Trade Center
By Staff Writer, Brian E. Clark
I’ll
warn everyone now, this story, it’s a long one. It has to be, because,
to understand 9/11 properly, a timeline was laid through history, and we
deserve to understand it. No fake news here! And we won’t hold back
information either. The victims of September
11th, the victims of the 1993 Bombing, and every attack in between
deserve for the story to be told, properly. We find ourselves in a very
different world since the inception of the World Trade Center, and we
can only prepare for the future, by understanding the past.
Brian Clark, Staff Writer |
I’ll
come right out and say it to just get it out there immediately, I am
completely enamored by the World Trade Center. Not the new one, though
it’s nice. No, the old one. Rather, the old two. Rather, the old seven. I
grew up in Middletown, Connecticut, and like it seems for most people
in Connecticut; Either you’re a fan of Boston or New York. I was always
sided with New York. And as it goes, usually your sports affiliations go
with you as well. Well, maybe not so much, for me. I wasn’t into sports
that much, but if I was asked, I was prepared to draw blood over the
Yankees, and the Giants. It just came with the territory.
I’m
38 years old right now, so that puts the Golden Age of the World Trade
Center right smack in the middle of my formative years, and I loved them
since first I saw them at 5 years old. They were the sexiest thing I
ever saw! Sexy, that is, for a 5-year-old kid, I suppose. Two, square
steel buildings that rose 1,377 Feet to the Heavens above, telling the
rest of the World, that America does it right. America does it BIG!
Flash forward to the afternoon of September 11, 2001; I was standing in
the grave of my childhood adoration, up to my knees in her debris, a
very, very young Firefighter/ EMT of 22 years old, not knowing the
events from that moment on, for the next 3 days would be the turning
point of my entire life.
You
don’t talk about something you love by talking about its death, first.
My intention of this Project was first to be informative; The first part
being about the planning, construction, & life of the Trade
Center (Including the Bombing of 1993). Secondly, to be educational;
With my story, about what I experienced at the World Trade Center site,
and to talk to survivors and families of victims at the 9/11 Memorial on
September 11th. And lastly, to talk about the Reconstruction, and
Memorial, and speculate on the future of the site. I feel this first
part has become important because the World Trade Center lived in a very
dynamic time. It was born during the Baby Boomer’s, lived among the
Generation X’ers, and is only seen in Movies among Millennials. The
memory of the birth of the buildings we knew as the “Twin Towers” is in
jeopardy.
PLANNING and DEVELOPMENT
Original Site Plan For The WTC |
The
idea of building a World Trade Center was thought of 4 years before my
Mother was born; 1943. The New York State Legislature passed a bill
authorizing New York Governor Thomas E. Dewey to begin developing plans
for the project. World War II put plans on hold until 1949. To help
stimulate urban renewal in Lower Manhattan, David Rockefeller, a
prominent businessman from J.P. Morgan Chase, suggested that the Port
Authority build a World Trade Center in Lower Manhattan. Rockefeller
announced the Billion Dollar Plan. New York Governor Nelson Rockefeller,
David’s brother, pushed hard for the project, insisting it would
benefit the entire city.
The
Port Authority of New York, & New Jersey was founded in 1921 to
manage any Terminal or Transportation Hub within 25 miles of the Statue
of Liberty. Director Austin J. Tobin spearheaded WTC in 1961. The
original plan was for the East Side Of Manhattan. However, after
negotiations stalled with the outgoing N.J. Governor Robert Meyner,
Tobin met with newly elected Governor Richard Hughes and made a proposal
to shift the location to the West Side, where the Hudson Terminal was
located, and the Port Authority agreed to take over the bankrupt Hudson
& Manhattan Railroad as part of the deal. The Port Authority
renamed the Railroad, Port Authority Trans- Hudson, or PATH.
Original Model, On Display At 9/11 Museum |
It
would be an understatement to say that this new plan was mired in
controversy. As is always the case in New York City, the space that the
World Trade Center would someday occupy, was inhabited by what was known
then as, Radio Row. It was store after store that either sold, or
repaired electronics, and in no short order, David Rockefeller, with
help from his Brother, Governor Nelson Rockefeller, took, by eminent
domain, each store, and building, paying $3000 to each owner, with no
regard to how long the business had been there, or how successful it
was. In June 1962, a group representing 325 Shops, and 100 Residents,
filed an injunction, challenging the Port Authority’s right of eminent
domain. Though it made it all the way to the New York Supreme Court, the
court upheld the Port Authority’s right of eminent domain, stating the
project had a “public purpose”. Under N.Y. State Law, the Port Authority
relocating the businesses, though many business owners called the help
as inadequate. Questions continued as the World Trade Center was
constructed as whether the Port Authority should have taken on the
project, described by some as a “mistaken social priority”.
On
September 20, 1962, the Port Authority announced the selection of
Minoru Yamasaki as lead architect and Emery Roth & Sons as
associate architects. The World Trade Center was planned to revitalize
Lower Manhattan and represent a new and improved free world after World
War II. Originally, Yamasaki submitted to the Port Authority a concept
incorporating twin towers, but with each building only 80 stories tall.
The Port Authority had a requirement to build 10 Million Square Feet of
office space, thus requiring the buildings to be 110 Stories. Yamasaki
went back to work, and on January 18, 1964, with an eight-foot model.
The towers had a square plan, 208 feet on each side, and incorporating
building methods not yet used in America.
BUILDING and CONSTRUCTION
There were difficulties from the start. The builders and designers were left to figure out how to dig a
foundation 70 feet deep, and not have the Hudson River come flooding in.
To prevent this from happening, a “Trench/ Slurry” method was employed,
where a trench was dug down 70 Feet to bedrock, and a Bentonite slurry
was pumped in as they went. The slurry was denser than the surrounding
mud, & rock, thus preventing the trench from caving in. 25-ton
cages of rebar were then lowered in, and the concrete was pumped in. The
concrete was heavier than the slurry and displaced it as it went. As
the wall was revealed, workers drilled holes, inserting ties that were
anchored in on the opposite side bedrock, bracing the wall against
external pressure. Ultimately, a 16-acre site, dug down 70 feet, bounded
by Vesey, Church, Liberty, and West Streets. 1 million cubic yards of
dirt was removed from the site, and placed in the Hudson River adjacent
from the site, creating 23 acres of new land. One issue that presented
itself, was the new PATH Train line, coming in from New Jersey crossed
right through the site, had to be excavated around, and supported.
Service was not disturbed during construction. These remained in use
until 1971, when as part of the project, new PATH tubes were built.
The Original Slurry Wall (East Side) |
Original System Design |
The
design of the Twin Towers is often called a "tube within a tube,"
referring to the fact that all of the weight of the building was
supported by the external walls and an internal column. The external
walls supported not only the weight of the Interior floors but also
pressure from the wind. The design that called for the exterior to be
perforated by 18-inch openings for the windows, allowed the buildings to
shift to accommodate the pressure from the wind, from the windward side
to the leeward side. Just inside the walls, at approximately 10,000
locations throughout each tower, Visco elastic dampers were installed.
These were basically large shock absorbers that could bend with wind
pressure and then return to their original form. It was the first time
this technology had ever been used in a high-rise. In all, 200,000 tons
of super-strong steel (which had just recently become available in 1968)
was used to create the two towers.
Kangaroo Cranes From Australia |
The
floors that flowed between the supporting walls and interior columns
were made from 0.5-inch thick steel slabs covered in 4 inches of
lightweight concrete. Overall, 425,000 cubic yards (324935.8 cubic
meters) of concrete were poured, & 43,600 windows were
installed. The floors supported their own weight, as well as “live
loads”, provided lateral stability to the exterior walls, and
distributed wind loads to the exterior walls. A grid of lightweight
bridging trusses and main trusses supported the floors. The trusses had a
span of 60 Feet in the long span, and 35 feet in the short span. The
trusses were connected to the perimeter at alternate columns. Sprayed
Fire- Resistant Materials (SFRM’s) were applied to the trusses and
beams. Though there were previous fires in the World Trade Center, it is
the trusses of the floors, that when exposed to the heat of the jet
fuel burning on September 11th, failed, was the cause of the collapse.
Though the South Tower was hit second, because the impact was so much
lower than the North Tower’s impact site, the extreme weight of the
South Tower, though hit second, collapsed first.
Each Piece Fabricated As Needed |
The
World Trade Center redefined how high rises were built, in so many
ways. However, one obstacle that still amazes me to this day, is the
builders did not have the space on site to store the pieces of the
towers. It was groundbreaking that in the late 60’s, early 70’s, a type
of Computer Aided Drafting was used to manufacture each piece as it was
needed to be installed. Also, because of the new design of having an
inner structural support system, it allowed for a new crane system; A
“kangaroo” crane, imported from Australia, which allowed the crane to
raise itself 36 feet at a time. This enabled workers to average 3 Floors
every 10 days.
An
additional feature, because of their enormous height, the structural
engineers considered that an aircraft could crash into the building. In
1945, a B-25 Bomber that was lost in fog crashed into the 79th and 80th
floors of the Empire State Building. A year later, another airplane
crashed into 40 Wall Street, and there was another close call at the
Empire State Building. In the design of the World Trade Center, designer
Leslie Robertson considered that a Boeing 707 (Not nearly as large as a
767, but one of the largest passenger aircraft at the time), could
crash into the towers, searching for JFK, or LaGuardia lost in the fog.
The study did not consider the amount of jet fuel burning in the key
structural areas of the buildings.
The World Trade Center was no stranger to tragedy when they collapsed on September 11th. During their construction, 60 Workers in total were killed, from various accidents. On February 13, 1975, a fire, set by a custodian turned arsonist, started on the 11th floor and spread to limited portions of six other floors, burning for three hours. Several fire suppression systems that were later installed in the towers were not present at the time, including sprinklers, elevator shaft dampers, and electrical system fireproofing. Also, the bombing that was set off by Radical Jihadists on February 26th, 1993, killed 6 people and injured 1200 others.
The bombing in 1993, surprisingly, was not planned by Osama Bin Laden. Bin Laden had yet to become
a key player. The attack was conceived by Ramzi Yousef, a radicalized
Muslim, who was trained in a terrorist training camp in Peshawar,
Pakistan in 1991. He flew to the United States in September 1992, with
Ahmad Ajaj, a Palestinian from the West Bank. Upon landing at JFK
airport, Ajaj was detained by immigration authorities, as he presented a
blatantly counterfeit Swedish passport. Yousef, who claimed to be
Iraqi, immediately asked for political asylum and was also briefly
detained. Due to overcrowding in INS's holding cells were overcrowded,
Yousef was released pending an asylum hearing. As soon as he was
released, he made contact with radicalized Muslim’s at the Al-Farooq
Mosque in Brooklyn, where he designed the bomb detonated on February 26,
1993, on the B-2 Level of the North Tower of the World Trade Center.
Ramzi Yousef |
Ramzi
Yousef and a Jordanian friend, Eyad Ismoil, drove a yellow Ryder van
into Lower Manhattan and pulled into the public parking garage beneath
the World Trade Center around noon. They parked on the underground B-2
level. Yousef ignited the 20-foot fuse and fled. Twelve minutes later,
at 12:17:37 p.m., the truck bomb detonated below the North Tower of the
World Trade Center in New York City. The 1,336 pounds (606 kg) urea
nitrate–hydrogen gas enhanced device[1] was intended to send the North
Tower (Tower 1) crashing into the South Tower (Tower 2), bringing both
towers down and killing tens of thousands of people. It killed 6 and
injured 1200. The Trade Center was repaired and back open in under a
month.
The B-2 Level After The Bombing |
While
combing through the rubble in the underground parking area, a bomb
technician located some internal component fragments from the vehicle
that delivered the bomb. A vehicle identification number (VIN), found on
a piece from an axle, gave investigators crucial information that led
them to a Ryder truck rental outlet in Jersey City. Investigators
determined that the vehicle had been rented by Mohammed A. Salameh, one
of Yousef's co-conspirators.[26] Salameh had reported the van stolen,
and when he returned on March 4, 1993, to get his deposit back,
authorities arrested him.
In
March 1994, four men were convicted of carrying out the bombing:
Abouhalima, Ajaj, Ayyad, and Salameh. The charges included conspiracy,
explosive destruction of property, and interstate transportation of
explosives. In November 1997, two more were convicted: Ramzi Yousef, the
mastermind behind the bombings, and Eyad Ismoil, who drove the truck
carrying the bomb. When Ramzi Yousef was arrested, and confronted with
the news he already knew, that his plan did not work; That the Trade
Center was still standing, he looked at every law enforcement officer
present, and stated: “We will bring down your buildings.” How right he
was. Khaled Sheikh Mohammed, the “mastermind” behind the 9/11 attacks,
is Yousef’s uncle.
It
was only 7 ½ years from the 1993 Bombing to September 11th,2001. The
United States was attacked 3 Different times and considered Al Qaeda
such a dangerous organization, that they assigned the CIA & FBI,
their own station to track Al Qaeda, and supposedly stop Osama Bin
Laden. The 9/11 Commission found out, after 9/11, that the Clinton
Administration had 9 opportunities to take out Osama Bin Laden, and
never took them. It’s thought in some circles, mostly Ex-CIA, that our
inaction to take down Al Qaeda in response to any of the 3 Attacks
between 1993-2001, only emboldened them to commit the murderous acts of
9/11.
IN CONCLUSION
I’m
afraid to say that Part 1 has come to an end. Part 2 will be
exclusively on 9/11, as we, The Middletown Insider and The south central Buldog, for the first time
ever, go out of Middletown CT and Washington court House OH, to New York, to cover the Remembrance
Ceremony at Ground Zero. We will bring back stories of Survivors, the
Families of those that perished, and the First Responders. One of those
stories includes my own, as a Firefighter/ EMT that responded to New
York on September 11, 2001. As part of this article, however, I’d like
to print the names of those killed in the Bombing on February 26, 1993,
because though they aren’t mentioned, deserve our memory as well as
everyone killed on 9/11. Please, as you read these names, take a moment
of silence, and offer a prayer for these people (If you choose to):
• John DiGiovanni, age 45, a dental products salesperson.
• Robert (Bob) Kirkpatrick, age 61, Senior Structural Maintenance Supervisor.
• Stephen Knapp, age 47, Chief Maintenance Supervisor, Mechanical Section.
• Bill Macko, age 57, General Maintenance Supervisor, Mechanical Section.
• Wilfredo Mercado, age 37, a receiving agent for Windows on the World restaurant.
The Feb. '93 Victims Names On the 9/11 Memorial |
• Monica Rodriguez Smith age 36, a secretary, who was seven months pregnant.
Thank you for reading.
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