New World Trade Center skyscraper opens 16 years after 9/11 attacks

NEW YORK – A new World Trade Center skyscraper in New York City opened for business yesterday, after years of delay and a lack of funding.

The 80-story office building, known as 3 World Trade Center, rises to 1,079 feet (329 meters), marking the fifth-tallest building in New York City.

The tower, designed by Pritzker Prize-winning British architect Richard Rogers, becomes the second-to-last building to open on the 16-acre site where about 2,700 people were killed when hijacked airplanes crashed into the World Trade Center twin towers in the Sept. 11, 2001 terrorist attacks.

New York Governor Andrew Cuomo called the 3 World Trade Center “a soaring symbol of revitalization of downtown New York City and a testament to the enduring spirit of New Yorkers after 9/11.”

Around 40 percent of the office spaces in the building, which features column-free stories equipped with full-height glass windows, have been leased, Larry Silverstein, Chairman of trade center developer Silverstein Properties, said at the ribbon-cutting ceremony.

Tenants include media investment firm GroupM, stock exchange company IEX, and management consulting firm McKinsey.

Since the Sept. 11 attacks, efforts to rebuild the World Trade Center have been stalled by disputes among government agencies, the developer, insurers and the victims’ families who wanted the entire site to be preserved as a memorial.

CEO of Silverstein Properties, Marty Burger, called this new tower “phenomenal” as it is sitting on one of the best transportation systems in the world.

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