Each Staten Island victim is honored with a 9-by-11-inch (23 cm × 28 cm) granite plaque bearing their name, birthdate, and place of work on September 11, 2001, as well as their profile in silhouette.[3]
The centerline between the two walls (postcards) points directly at Ground Zero, thereby referencing the twin towers of the World Trade Center destroyed on 9/11. The individual silhouettes all look in the same direction, toward Ground Zero. The effect of standing between the walls can be quite powerful—some have experienced a kind of "oneness" with those who were lost represented in silhouettes as all look together toward the site of the missing towers.[4]
The attack on the towers created such massive burning and destruction that few identifiable remains were recovered for burial. According to James Molinaro, Borough President of Staten Island, "Maybe 60 percent of those of the people whose profile is here, their next of kin, their loved ones, didn't receive any remains. This is their cemetery."[5]
History
The memorial was designed by New York-based architect Masayuki Sono, who won the design competition held in early 2003.[6] It was commissioned for this site, along the North Shore Waterfront near St. George Terminal, and overlooking the New York Harbor, Lower Manhattan, and the Statue of Liberty.[7] Construction began on September 11, 2003 at New England Boatworks.[8] The opening and dedication took place on September 11, 2004.[9]
^Jeffrey Karl Ochsner, "The Staten Island September 11 Memorial: Creativity, Mourning and the Experience of Loss," in Adele Tutter and Léon Wurmser, eds., Grief and Its Transcendence: Memory, Identity, Creativity (London: Routledge, 2015): 30-47. ISBN978-1138812871