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The idea of building a "World Trade Center" in New York's financial district, with the world's two tallest buildings in the form of Twin Towers, was originally lobbied for by influential players within New York State politics, including the Rockefeller family. Development was carried out by the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey in the 1960s. As the old promotional films that open Improbable Collapse show, a low-rise neighborhood of retail shops, known to New Yorkers as the place to buy transistors and TV tubes, was demolished to create a pit almost identical in appearance to today's Ground Zero. |
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1975: Fire spreads to several floors of the North Tower. |
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NOTES ON THE DEMISE OF WTC 7 - The mortgage on WTC 7 was purchased in 2000 by the Blackstone Group, a private equity fund managed by Steven Schwarzman and chaired by banker Peter Petersen (who at the time was also chairman of the New York Federal Reserve Bank and the Council on Foreign Relations). Blackstone Group is heavily invested in the military sector, perhaps appropriate given some of the building's many government tenants. |
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INSURANCE BATTLE After September 11th, Larry Silverstein claimed a double payout from the consortium of insurance companies covering the WTC, saying the two plane crashes were actually two separate occurrences under New York law. By 2006, after a complicated legal battle involving 30 different companies, Silverstein was set to get two payoffs, if at a lower rate. A fight about how to develop the Ground Zero site now rages between the state and city of New York, the Port Authority, and Silverstein. Under an agreement of April 2006, Silverstein is to build the new site using money raised by selling New York State Liberty Bonds. He will hand over the completed "Freedom Tower," once again the world's largest building at a nominal height of 1776 feet, to the Port Authority, and keep for himself a couple of the smaller, more lucrative buildings surrounding the tower. In addition, odds are excellent that Silverstein will walk off with almost the entire insurance payoff of 2.2 billion to 6 billion dollars - compared to a total of less than $1 billion in investments and rent paid out by his limited partnership as of today. |
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For many people, visiting Ground Zero today is akin to a pilgrimage, a search for meaning. |
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