Tribute in Light

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Image:Wtc-2004-memorial.jpg The Tribute in Light was a temporary art installation of 88 searchlights placed next to the site of the World Trade Center from March 11 to April 14, 2002 to create two vertical columns of light in remembrance of the September 11, 2001 attacks. The tribute was launched again in 2003, to mark the second anniversary of the attack, and is done every year since on September 11, to mark the anniversary.

The various people who ended up working together on the project simultaneously came up with the idea in the week following the attack.

Architects John Bennett and Gustavo Bonevardi of PROUN Space Studio distributed their "Project for the Immediate Reconstruction of Manhattan's Skyline".

Artists Julian LaVerdiere and Paul Myoda, who before September 11 were working on the 91st floor of the World Trade Center north tower on a proposed light scupture on the giant radio antenna with Creative Time, conceived the project "Phantom Towers", and were commissioned by The New York Times Magazine an image of the project for its September 23 cover.

Richard Nash Gould, a New York architect, went to the Municipal Art Society with the concept. Gould, a March 1972 graduate of Yale, was part of a firm whose SoHo office looked on the World Trade Center. Other projects by Gould include Howard, Darby & Levin in New York City and Polo Sport, Ralph Lauren in New York City.

On September 19, chairman Philip K. Howard wrote to Mayor Rudy Giuliani, asking him "to consider placing two large searchlights near the disaster site, projecting their light straight up into the sky."

On clear nights, the lights can be seen for over 25 miles in either direction, clearly visible in all of New York City and most of suburban Northern New Jersey and as far away as Huntington, New York on Long Island, Greenwich, Connecticut and Rockland County, New York. Pilots have claimed to have seen the beams from their cockpits in the sky over Cleveland, Ohio. [1]

The project was originally going to be named Towers of Light until some people complained that the name emphasized the buildings destroyed instead of the people killed.

Other 9/11 Memorials

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