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Up from Zero

Politics, Architecture, and the Rebuilding of New York

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1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
In Up from Zero, Paul Goldberger, winner of the Pulitzer Prize, tells the inside story of the quest to rebuild one of the most important symbolic sites in the world, the sixteen acres where the towers of the former World Trade Center stood. A story of power, politics, architecture, community, and culture, Up from Zero takes us inside the controversial struggle to create and build one of the most challenging urban-design projects in history.
What should replace the fallen towers? Who had the courage and vision to rise to the task of rebuilding? Who had the right, finally, to decide? The struggle began soon after September 11, 2001, as titanic egos took sides, made demands, and jockeyed for power. Lawyers, developers, grieving families, local residents, politicians, artists, and architects all had fierce needs, radically different ideas, strong emotions, and boundless determination. How could conflicting interests be resolved? After hundreds of hours of often rancorous meetings, the first sets of plans were finally revealed in the summer of 2002–and the results were staggeringly disappointing.
Yet, as Goldberger shows, the rebuilding process recovered and began to flourish. Rather than degenerating into turf wars, it evolved in ways that no one could have predicted. From the decision to reintegrate the site into the dense fabric of lower Manhattan, to the choice of Daniel Libeskind as master planner, to the appointment of a memorial jury, the process has been marked by moments of bold vision, effective community activism, and personal instinct, punctuating the often contentious politics of public participation.
Up from Zero takes in the full sweep of this tremendous effort. Goldberger presents a drama of creative minds at work, solving seemingly insurmountable clashes of taste, interests, and ideas. With unique access to the players and the process, and with a sophisticated understanding of architecture and its impact on people and on the social and cultural life of a city, Paul Goldberger here chronicles the courage, the sacrifices, and the burning passions at the heart of one of the greatest efforts of urban revitalization in modern times.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 9, 2004
      Renowned architecture critic Goldberger (Above New York
      ) has undertaken the Herculean task of describing the three years of proposals, counterproposals, chaos and compromise that resulted in a plan for the redevelopment of the World Trade Center site. Unlike many post-9/11 books, this careful, detailed analysis is sure to remain a valuable reference work for future generations, who will wonder how the redevelopment took the shape it did. Goldberger provides a blow-by-blow, yet always readable, account of the myriad interest groups, meetings, press conferences, backroom negotiations and public forums that led to the selection of a plan for the site and designs for the Freedom Tower and memorial, "Reflecting Absence." While displaying a deep understanding of history, urban planning, human psychology and power politics, Goldberger remains a largely neutral reporter of events. At the end, however, he mourns the lost opportunity to diverge from New York's traditionally commercial approach to real estate development. He concludes, "What played out through 2002 and 2003 was the use of architecture for political ends, not the use of politics for architectural ends—that is the key moral of the story.... Idealism met cynicism at Ground Zero, and so far they have battled to a draw." Agent, Amanda Urban.

    • Library Journal

      December 15, 2004
      Without question, the nation's highest-profile architectural project today is rebuilding the 16 acres at Ground Zero. The New Yorker 's architecture critic and a Pulitzer Prize winner, Goldberger (The World Trade Center Remembered) has the qualifications to unravel the extremely complex planning, selection, and design processes that the city of New York has faced. The story starts in December 2002, when seven master-plan proposals were unveiled at the Winter Garden before the Lower Manhattan Development Corporation. Designs and personalities intermingle, and particular attention is paid to proposals advanced and modified by Daniel Libeskind, Sir Norman Foster, Richard Meier, and the other finalists. After a succinct chapter on the original trade center, the book delves deeply into the aesthetical and memorializing qualities of the various visions; the competition's intense political jockeying, frictions, and compromises; and the challenges of adapting diverse ideas to myriad and at times conflicting purposes. The book reads like a multipart magazine article--alternately informative, judgmental, chatty, and, on occasion, prone to grand pronouncements. The concluding chapter uses Ground Zero as a case study to delineate the limits and ultimate dissatisfaction of most memorial architecture. As lawsuits proliferate and conflicting forces continue to swirl at Ground Zero, one senses that resolution and renewal remain fugitive. Highly recommended as an interim report for all libraries.--Russell T. Clement, Northwestern Univ. Lib., Evanston, IL

      Copyright 2004 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      September 1, 2004
      As we mark the third anniversary of the terrorist attacks of 9/11, the future of the 16 acres known as Ground Zero remains a subject of intense debate. Recognizing that the attempt to both memorialize those who perished and bring life back to Lower Manhattan is a historic challenge deserving of careful documentation and analysis, Goldberger, a Pulitzer Prize-winning architectural critic currently at the " New Yorker," offers just that in this avidly detailed account of the messy process by which government officials, developers, architects, family members of the victims of 9/11, and community activists struggled through grueling public hearings to formulate and select a master plan. Fluent in the complicated aesthetic, political, and financial issues involved, keenly attuned to the deep emotions aroused, incisive in his profiling of major players, and refreshingly candid in elucidating the failings of the original World Trade Center (for more on this, see " City in the Sky" [BKL N 1 03]), Goldberger asks, Can a powerful and realizable vision emerge from so much wrangling and compromise? Stay tuned.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2004, American Library Association.)

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