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As for moving the object in one piece, “I
don’t think it’s feasible to pick up something like this with
a crane,” Rinaldi said. “So that means we would have to jack
it up somehow, find something you could roll it on to, and
then you’d have to know where you’re going to transport it and
store it.”
Rinaldi said it might be possible to
disassemble and save the upper portion of the structure, which
has the only pieces that are in their original state.
CB1 passed a resolution in July urging the
Port Authority to avoid any action on the stairs that would
delay reconstruction of the site or reduce the retail space
planned for Tower 2.
Before the vote, board members and other
speakers expressed differing opinions on the value of the
stairs and the cost of preserving them.
“This has the potential to slow things
down,” said board member Bill Love. “It’s right within the
footprint of Tower 2, and it would be in place of the retail
on Tower 2.” When preservationists call for saving the
remnant, Love said, they fail to mention the price. John
Delaportas, founder of the Coalition to Save West Street, a
Battery Park City residents group, was more blunt. “It’s no
more significant than any other debris that was hauled off,”
he said.
CB1 member Marc Ameruso disagreed. “We’re so
caught up in the economics and the retail and what stores are
going to be there,” he said. “To label it as not historic or
significant, I think we lose our perspective.” “If economic
value trumps all concerns over that staircase, if that’s the
sense of this community right now,” Zimbler said to the
community board, “then shame on us.”
For some of those in the World Trade Center
Survivors Network, the value of the stairs is both personal
and priceless. Tom Canavan, a securities specialist who worked
on the 47th floor of the north tower, walked down to the lobby
concourse after the first plane struck and was buried in
rubble there when the south tower was attacked. Freeing
himself, he walked toward Church Street to escape raining
debris and plunging bodies. But that side of the plaza had
caved in.
“I just looked to the left and I remembered,
here was the escalator going down to Vesey Street. I made my
way over there and two Port Authority employees waved me over
and I ended up going down those steps.”
By the time Canavan got to the street,
possibly the last person to make it down the stairs, Tower 2
collapsed. “Without those stairs being there, I’d be gone,” he
said.
The fate of the stairs lies in the hands of
the Port Authority and Silverstein Properties.
A statement issued by Dara McQuillan, a
spokesman for Silverstein, offered encouragement to those who
want to save the stairs in some way. But it did not say how it
would be done. “We would like to see the staircase preserved
and believe that it can be,” the statement said.
Zimbler noted that the architect of the new
Tower 2, Norman Foster, has found ways to incorporate
historical elements in other buildings he has designed, and
insisted that Foster can do it again here. “Somebody that
brilliant can think of something,” he said. For Zimbler,
the reasons for making the effort were vividly clear as he
stood with a reporter at the fence on Vesey Street. Nearby, a
middle-aged woman in a blonde ponytail gazed in the direction
of the remnant, and quietly wept.
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