WTC memorial reopens to public after storm

 
No Author Published: November 6, 2012    Comment on this article Leave a comment

NEW YORK (AP) — The 9/11 memorial reopened to the public Tuesday a week after Superstorm Sandy flooded the World Trade Center site as it roared into New York, but another temporary closure was planned for Wednesday in anticipation of an approaching Nor'easter.

photo -   A 9-11 Memorial worker wheels clean-up equipment through the World Trade Center Memorial visitor center late Monday as work continues to get it up and running after it was damaged by flooding from Superstorm Sandy, Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, in New York. The World Trade Center Memorial will re-open to the public Tuesday. Parts of the visitor center and a special room for victims' families were damaged by four feet of water, as was some of the museum that is being built. But "the most sacred" point of the memorial remains intact the reflective fountains ringed by the names of the dead. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)
A 9-11 Memorial worker wheels clean-up equipment through the World Trade Center Memorial visitor center late Monday as work continues to get it up and running after it was damaged by flooding from Superstorm Sandy, Monday, Nov. 5, 2012, in New York. The World Trade Center Memorial will re-open to the public Tuesday. Parts of the visitor center and a special room for victims' families were damaged by four feet of water, as was some of the museum that is being built. But "the most sacred" point of the memorial remains intact the reflective fountains ringed by the names of the dead. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens)

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City parks were also scheduled to shut, from noon Wednesday through noon Thursday, because of potentially high winds.

The earlier news from the memorial about its post-Sandy reopening was that the superstorm — which claimed at least 40 lives in the city — spared the core of the memorial: the reflective fountains ringed by the names of those who died in the terrorist attack.

"My worst fear on the night of the storm was, 'What was going to happen to the memorial, and the names that millions of people have come and touched?'" Joe Daniels, president of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, told The Associated Press.

As he walked through the memorial site late Monday afternoon — he called it "a sacred place" — Daniels pointed to a tree that miraculously had made it through the Sept. 11 terrorist attack and also survived the storm.

Also spared were 9/11 artifacts that are to be displayed in the museum still under construction — from a piece of the north tower's antenna to an elevator motor that once propelled workers into the skyscrapers.

When Daniels first entered the memorial on Oct. 30, the morning after the worst of the storm devastated lower Manhattan, "the water was pouring in with force," he said, carrying huge pieces of wood and other debris along the south side of the memorial where visitors enter. Some screening facilities temporarily housed in a tent there also were damaged, he said.

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