The World Financial Center is a complex of four postmodern buildings designed by Cesar Pelli.
What's There?
Situated in Battery Park City, just across the street from the site of the former World Trade Center towers, the World Financial Center (WFC) was built between 1985 and 1988. Designed by Cesar Pelli and overlooking the Hudson River, the center was built on the same landfill that was used to construct the rest of Battery Park City. The landfill included dirt excavated from the site of the World Trade Center, which was cleared to make room for the towers.
World Financial Center
The center consists of four towers. These buildings are considered post-Modernist because they combine new ideas with traditional forms. The polished granite-and-glass towers are each topped with a specific geometrically-shaped crown, which are said to identify the owners of the buildings. (i.e. dome for Merrill Lynch, solid pyramid for American Express) The lobbies are fashioned from shiny black marble and feature tall columns.
WFC seen from Ground Zero
One World Financial Center stands 577 feet tall (176m) and 40 stories high. It boasts more than 1.5 million square feet of leasable office space. This southernmost tower is connected to the rest of the complex through a pedestrian bridge that crosses over Liberty Street. Dow Jones and Co. makes their headquarters here at the first tower.
Two World Financial Center, at 44 stories and 645 feet high (197m), is the second tallest of the buildings in the WFC. Its domed roof is especially attractive. The building has 2.5 million square feet of rentable office space housing companies like Merrill Lynch, Commerzbank, and Deloitte and Touche.
3 WFC
The Winter Garden
Not to be confused with the Broadway theater of the same name, The Winter Garden is a glass domed pavilion that sits between buildings 2 and 3 of the WFC. Built in 1988 this large atrium includes "2,000 panes of glass, sixteen 40-foot tall Washington palm trees, and 60,000 square feet of tricolor Italian marble".The Winter Garden is an impressive 200 ft long, 120 ft wide and 125ft high (61x37x38m). Its westward-facing glass wall provides an unobstructed view of Ground Zero.
Winter Garden
In an effort to promote the arts, the World Financial Center hosts a number of arts-related events at the Winter Garden. Showcasing both visual and performing arts, the center places an emphasis on "commissioned works, site-specific installations and premieres".
After 9-11
Because of its proximity to the World Trade Center, much of the World Financial Center - including the Winter Garden - was damaged extensively on September 11 2001. It is now fully operational again.
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