JFK Hangar Which Housed 9/11 Relics to Close

JFK Hangar Which Housed 9/11 Relics to Close

A view inside Hangar 17 at John F. Kennedy International Airport shows damaged FDNY fire trucks and other relics from the 9/11 attacks.
Over 2,500 9/11 artifacts were housed in Hangar 17 at JFK Airport. Photo by Amy Dreher.

From the mangled first responder’s emergency vehicles to shafts of broken metal, some 2,500 relics from 9/11 have been held in Hangar 17 at John F Kennedy International Airport.

Now, Hangar 17 is slated to close permanently at the end of the summer once the last of the final few relics--including concrete sections from the parking garage, a mangled elevator motor and a section of the North Tower antenna--are cleared out.

The artifacts that were once housed there have been adopted and put on display by more than 1,400 groups and foundations both within the United States and internationally, according to a recent LA Times article.

“Because it was such a unifying event, I think that a lot of smaller towns, emergency services and schools really want to create a continuing knowledge about what happened and find a way of connecting it to US history,” Amy Passiak, the archivist supervising the dissemination project.

For Passiak, who has served on the project since 2010, the goal has been to keep the memory of 9/11 alive. Photographs of some of the artifacts in Hangar 17 are featured in the book Memory Remains: 9/11 Artifacts at Hangar 17 by Spanish installation artist Francesc Torres.

Items previously housed in the hangar include the steel tridents from the façade of the North Tower and a mangled fire truck crushed from the fall of rubble on 9/11. Today, both are on display in the 9/11 Memorial Museum.

By Madeline Lipton, 9/11 Memorial Communications Intern

Video: WSJ Columnist Visits Hangar Filled with WTC Steel

                                 

Good Day NY interviews Ralph Gardner, a Wall Street Journal columnist, about his trip hangar 17 at JKF International Airport.  World Trade Center remnant steel, crushed emergency vehicles and other artifacts recovered from ground zero have been housed there since 2001. Some of the artifacts will be part of exhibits at the 9/11 Memorial Museum.  

Read Ralph's column, Urban Gardener, browse the Hangar photos from the WSJ article.  The steel beams have been sent across the country for use in local memorials. A batch of steel was relocated  to New Jersey in October.

By Norm Dannen, Public Affairs Associate 

WTC Steel Being Used in NJ Memorial

WTC Steel Being Used in NJ Memorial

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About 60 miles west of New York City, a piece of World Trade Center steel will serve as the anchor for a memorial to Warren County resdients who died in the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, according to a report by lehighvalleylive.com.

The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey is donating the steel for the memorial that is being proposed for a location near the county's fire academy in Franklin Township. Supporters hope the memorial is completed in time for the 10th anniversary of the terror strikes.

The memorial is to honor three Warren County residents who died on Sept. 11, 2001. It will also honor first responders from the town who died in the line of duty between 1911 and 1997, including three firefighters and six police officers, the report said.

The Port Authority, which is building the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, is seeking proposals from public and city agencies and not-for-profit groups interested in acquiring a piece of 9/11 World Trade Center steel for public display. Tons and tons of WTC steel are being stored at a JFK airport hangar and  pieces of the steel are being shipped nationwide.

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

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