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    larry silverstein

    Explore " larry silverstein" with insightful episodes like "9-14-22 -- Return To 9/11 Part II - Back To The Gritty", "Episode 11 – Reflecting Absence- Michael Arad, 9/11 Memorial architect; Bill Dacunto, Silverstein Properties", "Episode 10: The Final Project: Completing the Vision Robert Whitlock, KPF; Maria Masi, Brookfield Properties; Marty Burger, Silverstein Properties; Dawanna Williams, Dabar Development Partners", "Episode 9: The Artists: Capturing History Through Creativity, Marcus Robinson, Kerry Irvine, Joohee Park, Lady Aiko, Risa Boogie, Cristina Martinez, Komikka Patton" and "Episode 8: The Tastemakers: Culture on Campus Leslie Koch, President, Perelman Center for the Performing Arts" from podcasts like ""15 Minutes Ov Flame With Robert Phoenix", "Top of the World- Lessons from Rebuilding the World Trade Center", "Top of the World- Lessons from Rebuilding the World Trade Center", "Top of the World- Lessons from Rebuilding the World Trade Center" and "Top of the World- Lessons from Rebuilding the World Trade Center"" and more!

    Episodes (13)

    9-14-22 -- Return To 9/11 Part II - Back To The Gritty

    9-14-22  -- Return To 9/11 Part II - Back To The Gritty

    Bernard Mendik was Larry Silverstein's former, brother-in-law. He and Silverstein were in a bidding war for the WTC complex. Mendik dropped out but his former company, Vornado actually bid $50 million over Silverstein's offer which was turned down by the Port Authority. Mendik, born on 5/29/29 died suddenly of a heart attack, one day short of his of his 72nd birthday. In a strange sequence of dates, Mendik died on the 28th, was born on the 29th and Larry Silverstein was born on the 30th, all in May. That's just one of the anomalies on 911. There's a lot more in this episode.

    Episode 11 – Reflecting Absence- Michael Arad, 9/11 Memorial architect; Bill Dacunto, Silverstein Properties

    Episode 11 – Reflecting Absence- Michael Arad, 9/11 Memorial architect; Bill Dacunto, Silverstein Properties

    How do you create a place of remembrance in the heart of a bustling city? Michael Arad was a young, unknown architect when he beat out 5,200 others to win a competition to design the National 9/11 Memorial at the World Trade Center. He talks about what inspired him, changes he was forced to make to his design, the opening of the Memorial on the 10th anniversary of 9/11, and his thoughts on a national memorial to the victims of Covid-19. Silverstein Properties long-time head of operations Bill Dacunto talks about surviving the 9/11 attacks. 

    Episode 10: The Final Project: Completing the Vision Robert Whitlock, KPF; Maria Masi, Brookfield Properties; Marty Burger, Silverstein Properties; Dawanna Williams, Dabar Development Partners

    Episode 10: The Final Project: Completing the Vision Robert Whitlock, KPF; Maria Masi, Brookfield Properties; Marty Burger, Silverstein Properties; Dawanna Williams, Dabar Development Partners

    Architect Robert Whitlock, and developers Maria Masi, Marty Burger and Dawanna Williams talk about 5 WTC, the only residential tower proposed for the WTC site. Featuring 1,325 apartments, including 330 that will be permanently affordable, this will be the country’s most significant and anticipated energy efficient and sustainable apartment building when it opens in 2026. 

    Episode 9: The Artists: Capturing History Through Creativity, Marcus Robinson, Kerry Irvine, Joohee Park, Lady Aiko, Risa Boogie, Cristina Martinez, Komikka Patton

    Episode 9: The Artists: Capturing History Through Creativity, Marcus Robinson, Kerry Irvine, Joohee Park, Lady Aiko, Risa Boogie, Cristina Martinez, Komikka Patton

    Before any companies moved into the new World Trade Center towers, a small group of artists set up makeshift studios in raw space overlooking the site. From this rare perch, they began to capture and document the massive construction project below. These artists tell their personal stories of passion, hope, renewal and perseverance from their studios in the sky, and the important role that art and creativity continues to play in Lower Manhattan.

    Episode 8: The Tastemakers: Culture on Campus Leslie Koch, President, Perelman Center for the Performing Arts

    Episode 8: The Tastemakers: Culture on Campus Leslie Koch, President, Perelman Center for the Performing Arts

    Leslie Koch offers a guided tour of the under-construction performing arts center, which will be the next building to open at the WTC site. She discusses the importance of arts and culture to Lower Manhattan and to a city that is just now beginning to recover from the pandemic. We witness the very first musical performance in the new building with violinist Gregory Harrington and cellist Eleanor Norton.  

    Episode 7: The Reporters: Naysayers and Supporters Joe Woolhead, WTC photographer, “Once More to the Sky,” Judith Dupré, author, “One World Trade Center,” Mike Marcucci, producer, “16 Acres,” Grace Capobianco, publisher, “Downtown” magazine

    Episode 7: The Reporters: Naysayers and Supporters Joe Woolhead, WTC photographer, “Once More to the Sky,” Judith Dupré, author, “One World Trade Center,” Mike Marcucci, producer, “16 Acres,” Grace Capobianco, publisher, “Downtown” magazine

    As the unofficial chroniclers of the World Trade Center rebuilding, Joe Woolhead, Judith Dupré and Mike Marcucci talk about the obstacles and highlights of documenting - through film, photography and books - the 16-acre site on a daily basis over the past 20 years, and what is next for New York City. They are joined by Grace Capobianco who has been reporting on the rebirth of Lower Manhattan for 20 years. 

    Episode 6: The Design Team: How It’s Built Sean Johnson, Carlos Valverde, and Duan He, 3 WTC project executives; Michiko Ashida, 4 WTC design director

    Episode 6: The Design Team: How It’s Built Sean Johnson, Carlos Valverde, and Duan He, 3 WTC project executives; Michiko Ashida, 4 WTC design director

    The people who built the new office towers for Larry Silverstein offer a behind-the-scenes look at the design, engineering and construction challenges of overseeing 3,000 daily construction workers build a $20 billion project in the heart of America’s oldest and most iconic business district. They discuss the sustainable design and security features in the new buildings, and how their work inspired high-rise design and construction all over the world. 

    Episode 5: The Residents: 24/7 Live, Work, and Play Neighborhood Jessica Lappin and Catherine McVay Hughes

    Episode 5: The Residents: 24/7 Live, Work, and Play Neighborhood Jessica Lappin and Catherine McVay Hughes

    Jessica Lappin, President of the Alliance for Downtown New York, and Catherine McVay Hughes, a 33-year resident of Lower Manhattan and former chair of Manhattan Community Board One discuss their experience living and working in Lower Manhattan as their community recovered from the 9/11 attacks. They talk about the challenges of attracting new companies, businesses, residents and visitors back to the area, and offer insight on how Downtown can recover from the pandemic, and once again become one of the most popular, successful 24/7, mixed-use neighborhoods in the country. 

    Episode 4: The Mayor: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton

    Episode 4: The Mayor: New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg and Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton

    Michael Bloomberg was sworn in as Mayor of New York City just four months after 9/11, and for the next 12 years, he oversaw much of the area’s and the city’s remarkable recovery. He was one of the earliest proponents of Downtown’s transformation from a 9-5 business center into a vibrant mixed-use 24/7 neighborhood. Mayor Bloomberg shares his thoughts on how the city can recover from the pandemic, and the lessons we can draw from the World Trade Center rebuilding. Port Authority Executive Director Rick Cotton talks about transforming the new World Trade Center into a vibrant campus, with food, drinks, music and art.

    Episode 3: The Tenants: “To Leaders with Vision, Your Office is Ready” Mary Ann Tighe, CEO of CBRE’s New York Tri-State Region

    Episode 3: The Tenants: “To Leaders with Vision, Your Office is Ready” Mary Ann Tighe, CEO of CBRE’s New York Tri-State Region

    Over 15 million square feet of New York’s newest office space were destroyed on 9/11, forcing a mass exodus of office tenants from Downtown to other parts of the city. Mary Ann Tighe talks about what it took to convince companies to return to the new World Trade Center, and how the area became the media, communications and technology capital of New York, home to Condé Nast, Spotify and Uber, as well as luxury brands including Moet Hennessy and Diageo. She discusses the future of office space after more than a year of working remotely, and what the recovery from the pandemic means for the World Trade Center, Downtown Manhattan and cities across America.

    Episode 2: The Architects: The Master Plan Daniel Libeskind, WTC Master Plan architect

    Episode 2: The Architects: The Master Plan Daniel Libeskind, WTC Master Plan architect

    How do you rebuild a city within a city after the devastation of the worst terror attacks on American soil? Architect Daniel Libeskind won a star-studded international competition to lead the design process for the world’s most emotionally charged site. He talks about what inspired him as a young immigrant to the United States, the enormous challenges he faced, the magnificent place he created, and how it can help shape the future of cities in a post-pandemic world.

    Episode 1: The Developer: Never Bet Against New York Larry Silverstein, World Trade Center developer

    Episode 1: The Developer: Never Bet Against New York Larry Silverstein, World Trade Center developer

    Larry Silverstein purchased the Twin Towers at the age of 70 on July 24, 2001, only to see the complex destroyed in the 9/11 terror attacks. He has devoted the rest of his life to rebuilding the Trade Center. Despite many major obstacles over the past two decades, he has convinced some of the world’s leading companies to move into his new office buildings, and helped transform Lower Manhattan into a vibrant live-work neighborhood. A year into the pandemic that has temporarily brought the neighborhood, the city and the country to a halt, Silverstein reflects on his experience, and the road to recovery for New York and the nation.

    TMR 092 : Tony Szamboti : On NIST's 9/11 Sins of Omission

    TMR 092 : Tony Szamboti : On NIST's 9/11 Sins of Omission
    For this important interview we welcome Tony Szamboti, mechanical engineer and 9/11 researcher, who joins us for a detailed discussion on crucial evidence that, in the words of his research group, "clearly demonstrate(s) that the reports produced by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) on the destruction of the World Trade Center (WTC) were unscientific and fraudulent." With the group's recently-published white paper as our focus, "Areas of Specific Concern in the NIST WTC Reports" which lists 25 Points seriously challenging NIST's work in this area, we discuss striking new evidence demonstrating that NIST intentionally omitted significant structural components from its analysis of Building 7, and explore the almost inescapable conclusion that this was done in order to avoid the explanation of controlled demolition. We also discuss the potential these findings might have for legal action. (Tony Szamboti is a U.S. Navy Veteran, he holds a Bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from Villanova University, and has worked predominantly in the Aerospace industry for the last 28 years.) (For show notes please visit http://themindrenewed.com)