Museum Marks 2nd Anniversary, Welcomes 5.6 Million Visitors

Museum Marks 2nd Anniversary, Welcomes 5.6 Million Visitors

A monochrome image of the 9/11 Memorial shows one of the reflecting pools lit up at night, with surrounding buildings illuminated in the background. The Twin Towers’ steel, rust-colored tridents are the only colorized object in the photo. They are visible through the windows of the Museum Pavilion.
A view of the 9/11 Memorial and Museum. Photo by Joe Woolhead.

Tomorrow marks the second anniversary of the day the 9/11 Memorial Museum opened its doors to the public. Six days earlier, the museum opened for a special tribute-filled dedication period including a ceremony on May 15, 2014, attended by 9/11 families, 9/11 rescue and recovery workers, active duty first responders, survivors and lower Manhattan residents and business owners.

“Here at this memorial, this museum, we come together," President Obama said at the dedication. "We stand in the footprints of two mighty towers, graced by the rush of eternal waters. We look into the faces of nearly 3,000 innocent souls... Here, we tell their story so that generations yet unborn will never forget." More than five and a half million museum visitors from all 50 states and over 150 countries have been introduced to the stories and lives of the people who died at this sacred site and more than 26 million visitors have come to pay tribute at the memorial.

In the past two years, U.S. and foreign dignitaries have also paid tribute, including former President George W. Bush, the Duke and Duchess of Cambridge, German Chancellor Angela Merkel, Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Australian Prime Minister Tony Abbott, NATO Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg, United States Secretary of Defense Ash Carter and many others.

Additionally, Pope Francis hosted a Multireligious Meeting for Peace in the museum with leaders from various religions, communicating a message which noted that "lives of our dear ones will not be lives which will one day be forgotten."

Educational offerings for members and visitors have expanded to include a variety of public programs including daytime talks that examine 9/11-related topics and 30 nighttime public programs featuring notable speakers such as former British Prime Minister Tony Blair, and former U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger and former New York City Police Commissioner Ray Kelly.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff 

A Visitor Overview of the Museum's Layout

A Visitor Overview of the Museum's Layout

A section of the Museum’s Historical Exhibition is seen without any visitors. A damaged FDNY ambulance sits off to the right, while various images and interactive screens are on a wall to the right.
The Historical Exhibition, one of three main parts of the museum, is divided into three sections. (Photo: Amy Dreher)

The 9/11 Memorial Museum, which has seen more than 1.8 million visitors since opening in May of 2014, hopes to educate visitors from around the world about the attacks of Sept. 11, 2001 and Feb. 26, 1993.

If you are visiting the museum, it is important to note that it is divided into three main exhibitions, located 70 feet underground.

The Historical Exhibition itself is divided into three sections: Events of the Day, Before 9/11 and After 9/11. The first section, Events of the Day, uses artifacts, images, video, first-person testimony and real-time audio recordings from 9/11 to provide insight into the events that unfolded on the hijacked airplanes leading to the attacks and the subsequent tragedy that ensued at the World Trade Center and Pentagon.

The Before 9/11 section provides context for the 1993 and 2001 attacks on the World Trade Center using archival news footage and other primary sources. And the final section, After 9/11, explores the impact of 9/11, from the immediate aftermath through the present day, including the search for the missing, recovery and rebuilding efforts and global responses.

The Memorial Exhibition, In Memoriam, honors those who died in the 1993 and 2001 attacks with walls of individual photographs of the victims. Touchscreen tables also enable visitors to learn more about each person, showing photographs and personal objects and playing recorded audio remembrances. For each victim, a voice recording in the exhibition can be heard playing a sequence that honors their memory.

Foundation Hall is the location of the “slurry wall,” a surviving retaining wall of the original World Trade Center that withstood the devastation of 9/11, as well as the Last Column, which stands 36-feet high and was the final steel beam ceremonially removed from Ground Zero to mark the end of the nine-month recovery effort.

By Jordan Friedman, 9/11 Memorial Research and Digital Projects Associate

Museum Sees 1M Visitors Since May Opening

Museum Sees 1M Visitors Since May Opening

Karen McDaniel, the Museum’s one millionth visitors, stands with 9/11 Memorial Museum Director Alice Greenwald beside the tridents at the Museum.
Karen McDaniel (right), the museum's one millionth visitor, stands with 9/11 Memorial Museum Director Alice Greenwald. (Photo: Amy Dreher)

More than one million visitors from all 50 states and more than 130 countries have come to the 9/11 Memorial Museum since its May 15 opening, the museum announced Tuesday.

"To achieve this milestone after being open for just four months is truly remarkable," 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels said. "We have been honored to welcome thousands of people who are so closely part of the history we present, from 9/11 families, first responders, recovery workers, and survivors, to some of the world's most important political and cultural leaders. Our visitors are demonstrating that the 9/11 Memorial Museum is a place that every American, and people from around the world, simply must see when visiting New York."

The one millionth visitor was Karen McDaniel, from Myrtle Beach, S.C., who was visiting the museum with her husband Earle.

Click here to learn more about visiting the museum.

By Jordan Friedman, 9/11 Memorial Research and Digital Projects Associate

Seeing Eye Dogs Make Visitors Feel Welcome During Chance Meeting

Seeing Eye Dogs Make Visitors Feel Welcome During Chance Meeting

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Courtesy photo

On Christmas Eve, two seeing-eye-dogs-in-training, Celine and Kelly, came with their puppy raisers to the 9/11 Memorial. Prior to training at Seeing Eye’s Morristown, N.J. center, these dogs are cared for in the homes of volunteers from the age of 7 weeks until they are 16 to 18 months. The puppy raisers, Carolyn Finkelstein and Peggy Grow, visited the 9/11 Memorial to honor the memory of the victims of 9/11. Finkelstein explains, “Part of being a puppy raiser is exposing your dog to the world where it will eventually lead a blind person.”

Celine and Kelly had a chance meeting with a group of eight blind adults visiting the memorial from Italy. Not wishing to expose their canine companions to a long airplane voyage, the group decided not to bring their seeing eye dogs. Instead, they were escorted by human guides. Celine and Kelly helped make this group of visitors feel at home. When introduced to the dogs, the Italians wanted to know their names, their breeds, and their colors. They knelt down to pet the dogs and were rewarded with tail wagging and “kisses.”

As service dogs often do, Celine and Kelly erased barriers of language and nationality and reinforced the 9/11 Memorial as a place of global reach and healing.

-Amy Weisser, Director of Exhibition Development for the 9/11 Memorial Museum

 

 

4 Million Visit 9/11 Memorial in First Year

4 Million Visit 9/11 Memorial in First Year

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Photo by Jin Lee

More than 4 million people have visited the National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center since it opened last summer on the 10th anniversary of the terror attacks, the Associated Press reports.

“More than 4 million people visiting the 9/11Memorial in less than one year is a remarkable milestone," said 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels. "It reflects the deeply held belief of the importance of honoring victims of the terrorist attacks that shocked the world almost 11 years ago. These visitors who come to this site and walk this sacred ground are helping to preserve the memory of every man, woman, and child taken from us too soon."

Visitors have come from all 50 states and 170 countries.  Passes to visit the 9/11 Memorial are free and can be reserved here.

By 9/11 Memorial Staff

More Than 1 Million Visit 9/11 Memorial Since Public Opening

More Than 1 Million Visit 9/11 Memorial Since Public Opening

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Visitors at the 9/11 Memorial’s South Pool. Amy Dreher photo

The National September 11 Memorial at the World Trade Center site has reached a major milestone of welcoming more than one million visitors since opening to the general public on Sept. 12, after its dedication for victims' families on the 10th anniversary of 9/11.

In less than four months, people from all 50 states and more than 120 countries have reserved passes to visit the memorial.

"For 10 years, people were only able to walk the perimeter of the World Trade Center site, stealing glances at the progress through construction fences," 9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels said. "As of today, more than one million people have returned to this sacred ground to pay their respects, and are able to witness the rebuilding of the World Trade Center all around them. It humbles us to see that the public's will to commemorate the victims of 9/11 is as strong as ever."

See Good Day New York’s interview with Daniels at MyFoxNY.com

By 9/11 Memorial Staff 

9/11 Memorial Preview Site welcomes millionth visitor less than a year after opening (Updated X2)

9/11 Memorial Preview Site welcomes millionth visitor less than a year after opening (Updated X2)

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Like the hundreds of thousands before her, Vibeke Arensbak traveled to the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site at 20 Vesey St. to pay her respects and learn more about the memorial and museum.   But today Arensbak of Denmark would help the Preview Site achieve an incredible milestone.

Arensbak became the Preview Site's millionth visitor, a landmark reached less than a year after the Preview Site opened its doors on August 26, 2009.

9/11 Memorial President Joe Daniels said, "We are proud to have established a space where a million people have already visited in less than a year’s time and had the opportunity to learn about the lives stripped away on 9/11 and about the Memorial and Museum being built in their honor."

Arensbak was presented with a certificate for a dedicated cobblestone that will be permanently placed on the memorial plaza, joining other supporters in the ongoing cobblestone campaign. She called it an honor to be recognized as the millionth visitor.

Update: Read about it here in artdaily.org or DNAinfo.com.

By Michael Frazier,  Sr. Communication Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

9/11 Memorial Preview Site attracts visitors from around the world

9/11 Memorial Preview Site attracts visitors from around the world

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Travelers across the United States and globe are coming to visit the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, 20 Vesey St.

“It’s part of the New York story and the world story,” said Arturo Cuenca speaking on the events of Sept. 11.  Cuenca, from Spain's Basque Country, stopped by the site June 15 during his first visit to New York City.

The Preview Site was established to show the public the plans and progress of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum currently being built at the World Trade Center site.

Pam Henry, a kindergarten teacher at the time of the Sept. 11 events, came to visit the Preview Site for her first time.  A current resident of Austin, Texas, she lived in New York City years before 9/11. “Having lived here, I felt some connection . . . this could be an important part of the healing process," she said.For some visitors, the Preview Site is a saddening reminder.“I look at the pictures, and I’m finished,” said Klaus Lachner, on holiday from his home country Germany.  He described his emotions in one word, saying he felt “down.”Andrew Graham, a resident of Queensland, Australia, has been living in New York City with his wife for 18 months.  He came to the site because “it was bringing it home.”  He said the events of Sept. 11 “could happen anywhere . . . I felt sorry for Americans.”At the Preview Site, people can view real time images of the construction and participate in the creation of the 9/11 Memorial Museum by sharing their own Sept. 11 stories.

 

By Meghan Walsh, Communications Associate with the 9/11 Memorial

The 9/11 Memorial Preview Site is featured in 'citybuzz'

The 9/11 Memorial Preview Site is featured in 'citybuzz'

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The 9/11 Memorial Preview Site is creating a buzz.

The Preview Site is featured in a video made for Citybuzz, a traveler's broadcast shown in nearly 200 hotels in New York and Chicago, convention centers and aboard commercial flights.

The video highlights places to see and the things to do in New York City, including the Preview Site. At the 28-minute mark of the video, listen to 9/11 Memorial Joe Daniels describe the space as a "preview of what will be in the memorial museum."

Citybuzz joins the Alliance for the Arts, which advocates for New York City’s cultural institutions, to take notice of what the  9/11 Memorial Preview Site has to offer.

The AFTA Journal, the alliance’s publication, said:

"Since opening in Lower Manhattan in late August 2009, half a million people have visited the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, according to the National September 11 Memorial & Museum. Approximately 75 percent of visitors are believed to be international tourists. The site, located at 20 Vesey Street, contains information on the [National] September 11 Memorial & Museum, which is scheduled to open in September 2011."

The Preview Site, an attraction for all ages,  provides visitors with authentic artifacts, detailed architecture models, renderings and an on-site recording booth for collecting 9/11-related stories and remembrances.  Through a partnership with EarthCam, visitors can also view live footage at the WTC construction site through a webcam.

There are electronic kiosks allowing visitors to view this real-time construction, print the images or send them to friends and family.  Special programming  is also taking place at the site. It’s now home to the “9/11, Today and Tomorrow” speakers series.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

Join the 500,000 others, visit 9/11 Memorial Preview Site

Join the 500,000 others, visit 9/11 Memorial Preview Site

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Meet Birgit Weschollek of Herne, Germany.  She's seen here with a yellow arrow pointing her out (The arrow was added by 9/11 Memorial staff).  In late March, Birgit became the 500,000th visitor of the 9/11 Memorial Preview Site, which opened August 2009 on Vesey St.

Until the National 9/11 Memorial & Museum opens, it's the official location for visitor across the globe to peek into the future and see what the Memorial & Museum will look like once completed.  The Memorial opens in 2011, the Museum is to follow about a year later.

The Preview Site sees nearly 3,000 visitors per day. Inside there are renderings and architecture models of the soon-to-be completed Memorial, some artifacts and interactive kiosks. Visitors can also peek down into the construction site at World Trade Center and view the ongoing progress of the 9/11 Memorial using EarthCam's live Webcam.

Recently, a new listening station has been installed allowing visitors to hear memorable 9/11 stories.  The Preview Site will also serve as a venue for public programming.  Click here for upcoming events that you and your family would want to experience.

By Michael Frazier, Sr. Communications Manager for the 9/11 Memorial

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