Lower Manhattan revival nears culmination 13 years after attacks
Building at the trade center site is set to be substantially completed in the next year
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[NEW YORK] Anthony Gardner had sworn off high floors of skyscrapers until his guides on a tour of New York's 1 World Trade Center offered to take people to the 83rd storey. That's the same floor his brother, Harvey Gardner III, was on 13 years ago when the first plane hit the site's North Tower.
"That was a sign that I needed to go up there, and I was so glad and grateful that I did," said Mr Anthony Gardner, 38, who left a public relations career after his brother's death in the Sep 11, 2001 attacks to work on behalf of victims' families.
The World Trade Center site's integration of memory with commerce creates "a very powerful experience for visitors while also contributing to the economic revitalisation of lower Manhattan," said Mr Gardner, now the executive director of the New Jersey State Museum in Trenton. "You're really seeing that take form now today."
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