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Word: plazas (lookup in dictionary) (lookup stats)
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...schemes, jurors engaged them in conversation, attempting to bring out the best of each design. “Reflecting Absence” was at that time the work of Michael Arad, a young architect for the New York City Housing Authority. Arad’s design featured a barren plaza, with two voids where the World Trade Center towers once stood. Streams of water poured into the voids. Names of the victims were to be located in a space in the memorial itself, which visitors could descend into...

Author: By Brian D. Goldstein, | Title: Remembering and Rebuilding | 2/25/2004 | See Source »

...walking down Main Street and suddenly a horse-drawn trolley pauses and a half-dozen kids jump off and start dancing as a showtune plays. At the castle several times a day, Cinderella and friends act out a lively tableaux for the edification of those in the plaza below. The cumulative effect, over a couple of days, is to convince the children that they are in another country - on another planet - where, at any given moment, something extraordinary might happen. ?I want to live in Disney World,? said Jack. Who wouldn...

Author: /time Magazine | Title: Coasters, Big Games and Big Game | 2/21/2004 | See Source »

...schemes, jurors engaged them in conversation, attempting to bring out the best of each design. “Reflecting Absence” was at that time the work of Michael Arad, a young architect for the New York City Housing Authority. Arad’s design featured a barren plaza, with two voids where the World Trade Center towers once stood. Streams of water poured into the voids. Names of the victims were to be located in a space in the memorial itself, which visitors could descend into...

Author: By Brian D. Goldstein, | Title: Remembering and Rebuilding | 2/20/2004 | See Source »

...front of the Science Center, which has become a part of the quotidian at Harvard. This insistence on the role of nature in public life was initially missing from Arad’s entry, Van Valkenburgh says, and was recaptured when Walker added legions of trees to the plaza that created an urban sanctuary in the middle of downtown Manhattan...

Author: By Brian D. Goldstein, | Title: Remembering and Rebuilding | 2/20/2004 | See Source »

...Valkenburgh believes the addition of the landscape component has made a compelling idea that much stronger. “What happened for me was when Arad added Peter Walker, he turned the upper level into a place with civic responsibility. I mean it was an austere and mean plaza initially. But Walker made it a very humane place,” he says...

Author: By Brian D. Goldstein, | Title: Remembering and Rebuilding | 2/20/2004 | See Source »

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