|
Posted: 14 May 2012 08:27 PM PDT
In the days and weeks
after September 11 hardly a day would go by without another homemade design
for the World Trade Center showing up in my inbox. Some were crude, some were
obscene, some were impossible to construct and some were genuinely visionary.
Even those most familiar with the crusted workings of New York state and city
government, not to mention the bi-state beast of the Port Authority, could
hardly have imagined that eleven years later one far smaller tower would still
be under construction.

One World Trade
Center, formerly the Freedom Tower before that name was deemed too showy and
patriotic, is a faintly shiny presence on the skyline, glass slowly sliding
over stories of naked steel, overshadowed by Frank Gehry's strikingly surreal
Beekman Tower with its rippling lines. If you didn't know what you were
looking at, you would hardly notice it was there.
Now One World Trade Center will lose a radome enclosure due to budget cuts,
which means very little except that the building's ridiculous 400 foot spire
risks being classified as an antenna and OWTC will no longer be recognized as
the tallest building in the country. The death of the radome is one of the
many redesigns to the building that have made it the forgettable structure
that it is today. And the difference in those 400 feet is the difference
between a 1,368 foot skyscraper and a 1,776 foot skyscraper.
Having lost the Freedom Tower designation, losing the symbolic 1,776
height seems almost an afterthought. The 1,776 number was an artifact of
Daniel Libeskind, the original architect, and his vision for the site. That
vision was mostly discarded, along with its "sky gardens" and
windmills. The "1,776" height is about all that remains of the
German-Jewish architect's proposal. And regardless of whether we count the
antenna as a spire or not, it will not be the tallest building in the world.
Those can be found in the places that funded the terrorists, Saudi Arabia and
Dubai, which have used slave labor to build glass and steel pyramids to the
glory of their own pharaohs.
The Empire State Building, the Grande Dame of New York skyscrapers, has a
roof height of around a 100 feet or 30 meters lower. The difference between a
skyscraper built during the Great Depression and one built during the 21st
Century Depression is around 100 feet and about a century of aesthetics.
Where the spire of the Empire State Building is an organic extension of it,
the one atop OWTC is awkwardly placed, it's just there making time and
filling up the space.
In its defense, One World Trade Center is graceful enough compared to the
Sears Tower or the Dubai Burj, which pile blocks and needles together in a
cluster of alien geometry. It will be better looking than the New York Times
Building and the Bank of America Tower, which both have that made- by-IKEA
look. It will also be completely unremarkable and that is a feature, not a
bug.
Its blandness of name and design convey that it is an apolitical structure.
Its only ambition is to embody a post-American bigness made possible by a
large antenna. Its unexceptional nature is an antidote to the American
exceptionalism sparked after the September 11 massacre. Much like welcoming
in a mosque near Ground Zero or incorporating Islamic elements into the
Flight 93 Memorial, it says that there is nothing especially American here.
One World Trade Center will need to fill all that office space, and many
international renters may do business in America, but they don't like us very
much. And ever since September 11, American political and business leaders
have tried to be as inoffensive as possible, to avoid stepping on anyone's
toes with our jingoism and our flags so that next time we don't get bombed.
The former Freedom Tower will be a properly post-American building. It will
be large, but vague. It will be big, but not too big. It will be smaller than
the towers put up by our enemies so that they will have no reason to feel
jealous. It will not stand for anything in particular. It will just be office
space, like the city and the country, a place that people can come to do
business without making any commitment to it.

"A skyscraper
rises above its predecessors, restoring the spiritual peak of the city,
creating an icon that speaks to our vitality in the face of danger and our
optimism in the aftermath of tragedy," Libeskind had said of his design.
One World Trade Center cannot be accused of doing any of that. There is no
spiritual peak, not even the one at the top of its no-longer-1,776-foot
height.
The rapid construction of the Empire State Building in a year's time during
the Great Depression made a statement about the ability of a nation to do
great things even in its darkest hour. The slow pace, the perpetual redesigns
and the bland final product of One World Trade Center make the opposite
statement. A reminder that inept and timid leadership can rob a nation of its
exceptionalism.
In 1910 the eleven tallest buildings in the world were in New York City. Now
the city doesn't even make it into the top eleven and barely makes it into
the top twenty. And the majority of today's top eleven buildings went up
after the World Trade Center was destroyed. When One World Trade Center is
completed, and, if its antenna is counted as part of its height, it will
qualify as the third-tallest building in the world, until the latest
monstrosities in Shanghai and Dubai topple it off that list.
A building is not a nation, but there are certain parallels to the diminution
of national ambition, and there are undeniable parallels between the stumbling
makeshift design process of One World Trade Center and the fumbling War on
Terror. A great work can be done in a short time if you know what it is you
want to accomplish. The blueprints for the Empire State Building were drawn
up in two weeks and the structure was completed in a year. One World Trade
Center has suffered from revisions and redesigns because it never had a clear
purpose. Most people agreed that something had to go up, but they no longer
knew why except that it was empty space and empty space has to be filled.
The Post-American America is a place unsure of its identity, whose new
conceptions of American values all too often serve only to negate the old,
creating an empty space in which nothing is forbidden and everyone is
welcome, but that has no structure, only emptiness.
The New York of 1910 was a unique place, but now most cities are smaller
scale versions of it, big, ambitious and empty. Full of skyscrapers designed
by the same international firms, stocked with chain stores that are the same
all over the world, and full of the same immigrants from around the world.
Everyone lives in New York now and no one lives there. Everyone has
vicariously walked its streets through a hundred movies and television shows
which use it because it is the city. It is the Everycity where we all meant
to live.
One World Trade Center is a building for that Everycity, that global city of
glassy office buildings and glassy consumers all shopping for the same brands
made in the same place. They all speak English, but it's a rough English,
except when it's a rough French or a rough German, argot languages, argot
designs and argot nations. Everything, politics, movies, buildings and
nations, is reduced to its simplest elements, communicating its simplicity to
everyone.
Obama came out of that Everycity, a vague blur on an atlas, eating dogs and
snakes, before settling in the States for some cocaine and community activism
and a run at the White House. A reminder that anyone can do anything here, so
long as it's environmentally friendly and not too overtly American. It is a
different notion of the American Dream, one that has little in common with it
except the grandiosity of its opportunities.
America has lost most things but its bigness. Its buildings may no longer be
as big as they used to be, and the bigness is no longer a national ambition,
but it is the last thing that the Everycity has retained. It is still the
place where you can get rich, where you can get famous, where a boy from
Indonesia can make it to the highest office in the land, where anyone with a
good story or a good jump shot still has a shot at the big time.

It's not a tower of freedom, because freedom implies too much
individual agency. The Everycity has too many people, too much mass and too
much tension to have freedom. It has opportunities for those who pursue them
hard enough. It does not however have a future. Only the eternal present of
buildings that, for all their futurism, are hardly any taller than they were
a hundred years ago.
Futures arise from national destinies. In the post-destiny world, there is no
future and no past, only a slow decline and decay into a nothingness
without shape, substance or form. A nation unmoored from its past has nowhere
to go. It cannot make anything new, because there are no new things. Its
horizons are limited to its geometry, it experiments with shapes and colors,
it digs through the trash of earlier eras for things it can use, reviving
trends, dumpster diving through history while feeling that other eras were
more exciting and more interesting than this.
During the days of the city's decline, there was a plan to replace Grand
Central Station with I.M. Pei's Hyperboloid, a skyscraper shaped like an
industrial part that would have towered over the Empire State Building, for
the ultimate Everycity monument. Though Penn Station was destroyed and may
see the rise of the Vornado Tower in its place and the Singer Building was
smashed to make way for 1 Liberty Plaza, Grand Central survived. The
Hyperboloid was reborn in China as the Canton Tower, the tallest structure in
China. A fitting place for the land driven to become the new Everycity of the
world.




|
No comments:
Post a Comment