On Sept. 10, I purchased a birthday card for my grandmother and a bottle of Herbal Essence shampoo in the Duane Reade in the WTC mall. I sat in the plaza and wrote the card and mailed it. Then I crossed over to the corner deli, purchased a tuna and veggie sandwich with provolone on a roll and a coffee. I drank the coffee as I walked home and ate the sandwich.
@@TwesomEI first visited NYC Xmas 2000, second time was September 2001, 2 weeks after 9/11. I remember the towers from the first visit, and definitely remember the rubble of the second visit. The whole area looked completely different. I couldn't imagine if that change had happened in one morning
Ginger, you really need to consult with me on anymore WTC videos. I actually worked there and can provide you with way more info than you can find on Google.
There was a sign from the Warner bros store that said “that’s all folks” that’s now at the museum. But I remember going to that mall all the times when my dad worked in the towers. The Warner brothers store had huge detailed displays in the front where the looney tunes characters were in work settings.
I remember that. The characters were all dressed like stock brokers out of the 1920's with candlestick phones and ticker tape. It's was a great design.
@@pacmancdii remember hearing they're kept in a warehouse somewhere now with some other scattered intact bits of the towers, or they may have simply been returned to Warner Bros. themselves.
It is interesting that you selected this subject for your video. From 1978 to 1983 I worked at 22 Cortlandt Street in NYC. I walked through the mall every day to access the PATH trains to New Jersey where I lived. Many evenings I stopped at the restaurant in the mall to get something to eat before catching the train. They had the best chili. And seeing those long escalators gave me a laugh. Sometimes none of them were working and I had to climb out of the bowels of the WTC to get to the mall level. I have often wondered what I would have done on 9/11/2001 had I been working there. No doubt I would have not realized the danger after the first plane hit the north tower. I probably would have been an interested onlooker. And suppose I tried to catch a PATH train to get out of there? It is crazy to think about. Maybe I was just lucky that my job moved out of NYC in 1983.
If you tried catching a path train and the towers collapsed while you were walking through the mall to get there you could've died. Or do you think you wouldve went to the path above ground after the 2nd plane hit?
@@RichieD_21 I just don't know. It would have been crazy for me. The city shut down all the mass transit systems after the second plane. The bridges and tunnels were closed. I would have had to walk uptown and get a hotel room somewhere or sleep in a lobby. Tens of thousands of people were walking that day. Glad I missed it.
@georgesealy4706 you're right I remember that now. Seeing videos of the bridges into queens and Brooklyn full of thousands of people walking across was surreal
Did NYC and surrounding areas change, not in a security level but how hoodlums and street gangs united for a moment? In this time most people united and fear for safety. Just interesting to me how NYC was then, compare to now.
It’s always weird to me that I was born into this world with the twin towers and all of this standing but only 9 months later it was all gone and I was unaware of it’s existence and 9/11 until I was older. Every time I see these kinds of videos, I desperately wish I could’ve been to the original WTC.
i was in kindergarten when it happened and all i remember was getting to go home early and hearing about the attack on the radio with my dad in a store parking lot. im not even american so thinking back i have no idea why my country reacted the way it did
What's all so eerie for me is that the last time I was there was as a little boy in 2000 or I think it may have been early 2001. I remember it was very cold. But I stayed in the Marriott 3WTC. The hotel room is what I remember the most, but I think I'm starting to recollect memories of the mall. But the eerie part is that my last memory of New York City is still stuck in time when the Towers were still there. So in my mind, it feels strange that none of this is there anymore. That's the best way I can explain it, it's kind of hard to explain the feeling I get. Anyways, interesting video. I never knew that the mall was actually still there during the collapse although it was still damaged. I thought everything was completely destroyed.
Yeah, I was there as a little boy too but much earlier. Probably around 1994 so I would have been 7 or 8. Main thing I remember is the vaulted ceilings, and the huge bookstore. Pretty sure it was a Barne's and Noble. It was the only time I ever visited the WTC. I'm from PA but my parents are from NYC and I had to go to Manhattan with them to get a copy of their marriage license for a house they were buying. When we were done we went to the WTC mall. I've always wondered about it's fate and it's very interesting to me that it helped a lot of people escape.
I visited the WTC in the mid 1970s. It was an exsperience I will never forget. I went up to the very top floor where the restaurant was . People walking on the sidewalk outside looked like ants. The building swayed with the wind. Very scary.
Calatrava is such a controversial person, he's designed great things but also other ones made with poor materials or absolutely ugly and devoid of significance.
I started working in 2 WTC in 1989. The mall was really just the underground concourse that connected the buildings of the complex with the subway & PATH stations as well as the local streets. During rush hour the concourse was a blizzard of people heading to/from work in the neighborhood. The retail element was pretty dull (several major bank branches, Woolworths, and a not so good food place, The Big Kitchen.) The mall vibe with a broad mix of national stores came several years later.
Honestly I’m glad the Mall was one of the things that managed to get rebuilt at The World Trade Center, a sacred and special place that’ll make memories for generations to come.
I remember the Shops at WTC well. I worked at the then Vista International Hotel when it opened in the early 80s and would walk through the mall nearly daily. Those stores did good business. In fact, a friend of mine who worked for The Limited (corporate) told me they did a huge trade in pantyhose from all the female workers at the WTC!
It somberly reminded me of the pictures inside reactor 4 of chernobyl where the upper biological shield lays on its side. Or well also the city of Pripyat.
Westfield destroys everything it touches. They acquired 4 different malls in my area in the 90's. They made plans to renovate, asked for TIF money to do so, jacked up rent causing great stores like Disney and top clothing stores to close. Those spaces were never leased again. They basically killed off 3 different malls BEFORE on line shopping became so popular. The original WTC mall was doomed either way. It doesn't sound like it's doing much better today.
I went an interview on my 21st bday on 07/18/01 at Everything Yogurt by the escalator for the PATH train. My interviewers name was Rashida and I will never for get that. The mall was beautiful and unlike anything I've seen living in the Hudson Valley. I was supposed to move with my best friend and my son to the Bronx and live with her husband (at the time) and mother in law in a beautiful house in The Bronx. My Mother told me that something was going to happen there and I told my mom she was worrying to much and nothing was going to happen. I was supposed to get a callback sometime during the week of September 10. Part of my job was to deliver orders to the offices
Bro I really like your videos👍Please bro tell me in the next video about the technical floors in the WTC twin towers. I was always interested to know what they were for and why they didn’t have windows. Please like so the author can see) Thank you)
you basically answered your own question. The mechanical floors were for supporting the infrastructure of the building, plumbing HVAC and local elevator systems . The building was basically 3 skyscrapers on top of each other separated by mechanical floors and local elevator scheme repeated 3 times. Mechanical floors 41-42 74-75 and 108-110. These floors were non office floors so there were vents instead of windows. The highest office occupied floor in both towers was 105
@@JP-uu2rwit would still be interesting to hear about the mechanical floors on 9/11. How the mechanical systems held up after the planes hit, such as the sprinkler systems, electric, elevators, the fire systems such as the venting system the towers had for fires that were suppose to suck out the smoke. Especially the mechanical floors that were directly impacted by the planes. Alot of these systems obviously failed after the plane collisions but some did stay functioning and firefighters were even able to get one elevator in the south tower running that they used to get from the lobby to dozens of floor up. You wouldn't be interested in a video about these mechanical floors and how they fared on 9/11?
There is a lot of footage of an air flow evaluation which much of it happens on these infrastructure floors. Many large blower fans and the elevator equipment rooms. I am most interested myself in the transmitter room floors where WPIX among others had their high powered television transmission equipment for the big tower. In another OTIS related video you could see the hard coaxial lines going to the roof for the antenna, but that was only a video covering the elevator machinery modernization in the north tower WTC1...
You should look into the part of the subway entrance coming from the new mall that retains the same floors, signage, stairs, doors etc from the old WTC.. very cool that they saved that
Yes, that is interesting to see that there. When I visited Oculus and the WTC site in 2018, I think, I saw that bit from the old structure with the door that still had the markings from when they were doing the search and rescue. For some reason it felt comforting to see that there was something that remained from before - that corridor, the sphere, the tree, and not much else.
I was familiar with the original mall since the late 1970's to shortly before 9/11/01 as access to the subways. I often used the 'new' mall to access the subway and PATH too. The old mall had a range of stores from discounters (Alexanders had a branch there) to luxury brands. It had a wide variety of food vendors, including a large central 'The Kitchen' by the PATH escalators. The new mall is mostly higher end stores and food services, not much as to the 'lower' end. Sadly there are, like most malls, high turnover of retail tenants, a lot of empty storefronts. The Pandemic and shift to Work From Home has badly hurt the success of the new mall. It also gets a lot of visitors, has public rest rooms, something difficult to find in the city.
Did they ever mention if anybody was killed in the mall from debris or anything else? I often wondered if people were trapped down there or if they were able to get out at all. Over the years. I’d think about that tragic day, hoping that people down on the street when the towers came down and that smoke and debris dust that they were breathing in, didn’t give them all respiratory problems and cancer. What an awful time.😔
The "flooding" wasn't bad and was mostly over the escalators going down to the PATH trains. It was like a few broken pipes spraying, not a torrential amount of water. I would say overhead sprinkler pipes. I did not get wet going from Tower II to the northwest corner of Borders books exit. Nice video but basically zero information new to me. (Survivor Tower II Fiduciary Trust, 97th Floor).
First time I visited WTC in person was 2018. I was able to take in the breathtaking architecture of this mall. I didn’t have context to it being destroyed 9/11, but the newness and modern design clearly suggested a rebuild. The structure is probably one of the most amazing structures that I have ever been in.
The thing is, there are tens of thousands of people going through there everyday as part of their daily commute. This is in the financial district. People buy stuff on their way home. I know, I used to do that in the old mall. So, it is not going to die.
@@georgesealy4706 I'm not saying this mall will but in general the mall industry just isn't quite what it used to be since many opt to do all their shopping online these days.
Mall near me is full of people but there’s another mall that is empty near me and I walked through it and no stores open only things in there is a employment office and some city offices
So I never knew until today, there was an underground mall at the WTC! I saw the plaza in person in June of 2001. I think we went inside for a minute too. I knew there was a WB store right there that got destroyed, but I never knew it was at that mall.
I remember watching a scene from a 2006 movie that shows the police officers in the shopping mall and they were standing near the entrance to the South Tower when the tower collapsed. Three of them managed to run into the elevator shaft before the building collapsed on them.
Thanks for this video, it was a bittersweet trip down memory lane. I spent many weekends traveling through here and always stopped at the mall. If just to window shop and dream or sometimes to pick up a slice of pizza before getting on the PATH train over to Jersey to visit relatives. It wasn't until I was much older and back in NYC as a sort of native tourists that I actually went UP in the towers and not DOWN as all the many times before.
You'd think an underground shopping mall would be fairly safe. But Malls in general aren't that safe. About 10 miles from where I am right now we had a sniper at a mall. Killed 5 or 6 people. I always avoid them because I don't like crowds. Last time I went was to a mall near downtown Portland to watch Tonya Harding practice skating. I'd met her at a club that my friends draged me to. She was a lot nicer and smarter than the media puts out. That was 20 years ago.
My trip up to the observation deck and restaurant was in Feb 1979. It was wild that the elevator that took my friends and I up had a speedometer on it! The guy that operated the elevator had disheveled hair and tie constantly.
part of it is still there, but badly damaged so isn't open and most of it was demolished for the memorial. Part of the current occulus is also where part of the mall used to be
Having the largest shopping mall in New York City was like having the the largest chemical waste dump in New Jersey - it was nothing to brag about. One thing I remember about the subterranean concourse at the World Trade Center was the bank of long, long, long escalators - shown at 1:32 - that went up from the PATH station. The last time I used the PATH station at the World Trade Center was to bring my bicycle into the city from Hoboken on Sunday, September 2, 2001. It was Labor Day weekend. (I returned to Manhattan to go cycling in the city on Labor Day itself, September 3, and one distinct memory I have of that day was seeing a Volkswagen Sharan minivan parked on Park Avenue. The Sharan was never officially offered for sale in the U.S.)
How old are you? You look young :) Im just saying that I am 33 and I was a kid when it happened.
Před 15 dny
I worked in the Twin Towers in 83. I trained there for Manufacturers Hanover Trust as a bank teller. Left NYC months later for the USAF. Worked on the 45 th floor. Would take the express elevator to 44 and up the escalator for one flight. The sounds of the wind shifting the building took a few days to get used to. Was quite an experience working there.
I take the PATH from NJ everyday through the new concourse. I’m an early Gen Z, meaning 9/11 was around the time I was “gaining consciousness” and becoming self aware. My memories of this place is more of the temporary PATH station and maze of construction walls before the permanent station and Oculus mall opened. It still gives me the creeps how the physical place can change but the idea of a train station and mall being here was always around since the 70s.
The old mall was never particularly liked, what with its low ceiling and rather dark lighting. People mostly went there only because it was convenient.
Every time I went to the city with my dad or nana to accompany them at their job I’d ask them to take me to the WB store. Seeing the mangled sign in the museum was surreal. My nana was in the Duane Reade when the first plane hit. She kept that receipt for years but it got lost in a move.
Thank you for the 9/11/WTC videos. Santiago Calatrava is the architect for the oculus mall. He has interesting designs around the world. The structure had problems with leaks previously but now the floor marble type seems to be too fragile for the heating system underneath or something like that.
You're severely under-estimating the abilities of cameras in 2001. If your camera shot on film, your footage would have been even higher quality than 4k nowadays. The footage would just have to be rescanned with today's technology. That's why we have so many 80s and 90s shows in HD nowadays. Because they were shot and stored on film. And scanning technology made a huge leap in the last 20 years. So they took the old film and just rescanned it. There might be even some unreleased HD-footage of the attacks out there, but most video cameras used tape, which works differently than film. But still, tons of cameras from 2001 used film.
dude awesome work, I remember the food court and the Radio Shack in the mall, those pictures are crazy didn't know they existed or that the mall was under wtc 4-5 I just thought it was under the towers
I remember going into Manhattan to tool around the city out of boredom one Saturday in July 2001, and this was one of my stops that day. On 9/11, as I watched in horror, my mind immediately shot back to how someplace that I had been recently was now destroyed in the worst terrorist attack on the US.
Were there people in the mall when the towers collapsed? I would guess so. Must have been an insane rumble like a freight train followed by a dust cloud.
There actually were people in there. There is a story about a group of people who had to climb through loads of rubble after the collapse of the towers caused the mall and subway stations to partially collapse as well.
There probably weren't too many retail shops open that time of day but the food court would have been open because of commuters coming in from the subway and PATH into WTC. That said, I'm sure they were all evacuated pretty quickly and they definitely stopped the subway traffic from continuing to come in before the buildings collapsed. But, because the police and fire were guiding people to evacuate through the mall area there were definitely a lot of people in there still when they came down.
Sometime around 1999 or 2000, I visited that mall on my way back to San Francisco on a business trip. There was a small luggage store in which I bought a big tall black leather credit card wallet (maybe a Tommy Hilfiger). When opened at a 90° angle, it always reminded me of the twin towers. Where was that luggage store on the map? EDIT: I think it must have been Innovation Luggage.
I still have and wear my jacket from the Structure store there. I was just thinking about how that jacket wouldn’t mean much to me if I hadn’t gotten it there. Hopefully, it’ll last me the rest of my life as a reminder of the towers.
I would be interested in seeing the survivor stairs from the plaza if there is any footage . the only pictures seem to be from street level and a little grainy
Hey depressed Ginger I have been a fan of your channel because you made a lot of these twin Tower videos that are very interesting and some of these I actually didn't know about the twin towers. But I have a video idea what will happen if the truck bombs actually took down towers in 1993?
The damage, the collapsing towers did to the subway doesn't speak for it's design. A subway is always also a bomb shelter. And a bomb shelter shouldn't be damaged, when the building above it collapses.
Some answers to your considerations : The fountain water would have turned into mud from the dust and debris falling into it but at some point, the entire concourse collapsed. The building core that juicy standing for a few Second in those photos is likely from the north tower. After the bombing of 93 some of that was rebuilt with concrete reinforced walls, which is why it stood just a little bit longer
I don't really think that the mall at the Oculus would really die. Seeing as how it's located in a transport hub were it's literally active all year long.
I always just assumed that the mall was crushed under the collapse. If it wasn't, then I wonder were there people trapped down there after the collapse?
It sucks & it’s sad that the World Trade Center never got to open the McDonald’s & you’re right the mall would still be there today idk if the McDonald’s would still be there now though I’m thinking it likely would not have as many stores now
NO. The ones in the museum were located outside on the northend middle . They were open air and led to the plaza. Those are internal stairs. I know the people who worked to save them. They were largely undamaged and the damage you see in the museum was caused by the contractors attempting to destroy them so they would not have to "save" them. It was a huge deal and fight over them. You could walk by and see them for months after most of the ground level demo was over. I am Ed Schmitt-Survivor, Tower II. I lost 87 coworkers that day.(Fiduciary Trust 97th Floor Tower II. I watched the first plane hit from my floor.@@josephbennett3482
On Sept. 10, I purchased a birthday card for my grandmother and a bottle of Herbal Essence shampoo in the Duane Reade in the WTC mall. I sat in the plaza and wrote the card and mailed it. Then I crossed over to the corner deli, purchased a tuna and veggie sandwich with provolone on a roll and a coffee. I drank the coffee as I walked home and ate the sandwich.
What did you do the next day
Imagine to walk there before this big disaster strikes and see it the next day like that,saying to your self i walked by this place yesterday!
You must’ve gotten soaked that evening as the massive thunderstorm and rain soaked most of manhattan.
@@TwesomEI first visited NYC Xmas 2000, second time was September 2001, 2 weeks after 9/11. I remember the towers from the first visit, and definitely remember the rubble of the second visit. The whole area looked completely different. I couldn't imagine if that change had happened in one morning
@@cameronl1859I was there the same time and I went to the top of the south I think
Ginger, you really need to consult with me on anymore WTC videos. I actually worked there and can provide you with way more info than you can find on Google.
Really interesting you actually worked there! Glad you are okay ✅
That’s awesome man! If you don’t mind sharing, which of the buildings did you work in? Most likely either the North or South Tower.
@@Wrestling316 South Tower. Approximately 10 floors below the impact zone.
@@indyracingnut That’s a miracle man, hopefully you weren’t working the day of the attacks.
@Wrestling316 I was supposed to be. I didn't have to be at my desk till about 9am. Attack happened before that.
There was a sign from the Warner bros store that said “that’s all folks” that’s now at the museum. But I remember going to that mall all the times when my dad worked in the towers. The Warner brothers store had huge detailed
displays in the front where the looney tunes characters were in work settings.
I remember that. The characters were all dressed like stock brokers out of the 1920's with candlestick phones and ticker tape. It's was a great design.
this would have a link but it was deleted so you have to build it on your own
Where are the statues now? I know at least a few survived.
@@pacmancdii remember hearing they're kept in a warehouse somewhere now with some other scattered intact bits of the towers, or they may have simply been returned to Warner Bros. themselves.
FINALLY someone covered the forgotten mall.... and with pictures i havent seen before.... keep the WTC vids coming
I mentioned about it ☺️
@@tylermanzi2190 who are you?
@javelin5975 someone who is not afraid of speaking my mine that needs to be told
@@tylermanzi2190 ok
Haha, what
It is interesting that you selected this subject for your video. From 1978 to 1983 I worked at 22 Cortlandt Street in NYC. I walked through the mall every day to access the PATH trains to New Jersey where I lived. Many evenings I stopped at the restaurant in the mall to get something to eat before catching the train. They had the best chili. And seeing those long escalators gave me a laugh. Sometimes none of them were working and I had to climb out of the bowels of the WTC to get to the mall level. I have often wondered what I would have done on 9/11/2001 had I been working there. No doubt I would have not realized the danger after the first plane hit the north tower. I probably would have been an interested onlooker. And suppose I tried to catch a PATH train to get out of there? It is crazy to think about. Maybe I was just lucky that my job moved out of NYC in 1983.
If you tried catching a path train and the towers collapsed while you were walking through the mall to get there you could've died. Or do you think you wouldve went to the path above ground after the 2nd plane hit?
@@RichieD_21 I just don't know. It would have been crazy for me. The city shut down all the mass transit systems after the second plane. The bridges and tunnels were closed. I would have had to walk uptown and get a hotel room somewhere or sleep in a lobby. Tens of thousands of people were walking that day. Glad I missed it.
@georgesealy4706 you're right I remember that now. Seeing videos of the bridges into queens and Brooklyn full of thousands of people walking across was surreal
Did NYC and surrounding areas change, not in a security level but how hoodlums and street gangs united for a moment? In this time most people united and fear for safety. Just interesting to me how NYC was then, compare to now.
I just noticed that the time stamp on this video is 9:11
Nicely done 😅
Interesting, shows 9:10 for me.
Huh.
@@EpicATrain Same.
Why? I don’t get it.
@@mondoseguendo6113 ...Because it's a video about 9/11.
It’s always weird to me that I was born into this world with the twin towers and all of this standing but only 9 months later it was all gone and I was unaware of it’s existence and 9/11 until I was older. Every time I see these kinds of videos, I desperately wish I could’ve been to the original WTC.
It’s hard to believe there’s kids who are in college now who were babies or not even born yet during 9/11. I was 12.
Dude seriously. Exactly my thought. A month before I turned 11. @@stevarino1989
i was in kindergarten when it happened and all i remember was getting to go home early and hearing about the attack on the radio with my dad in a store parking lot. im not even american so thinking back i have no idea why my country reacted the way it did
wow so you were born in January 2001 just like me!
What's all so eerie for me is that the last time I was there was as a little boy in 2000 or I think it may have been early 2001. I remember it was very cold. But I stayed in the Marriott 3WTC. The hotel room is what I remember the most, but I think I'm starting to recollect memories of the mall. But the eerie part is that my last memory of New York City is still stuck in time when the Towers were still there. So in my mind, it feels strange that none of this is there anymore. That's the best way I can explain it, it's kind of hard to explain the feeling I get. Anyways, interesting video. I never knew that the mall was actually still there during the collapse although it was still damaged. I thought everything was completely destroyed.
Yeah, I was there as a little boy too but much earlier. Probably around 1994 so I would have been 7 or 8. Main thing I remember is the vaulted ceilings, and the huge bookstore. Pretty sure it was a Barne's and Noble. It was the only time I ever visited the WTC. I'm from PA but my parents are from NYC and I had to go to Manhattan with them to get a copy of their marriage license for a house they were buying. When we were done we went to the WTC mall. I've always wondered about it's fate and it's very interesting to me that it helped a lot of people escape.
I visited the WTC in the mid 1970s. It was an exsperience I will never forget. I went up to the very top floor where the restaurant was . People walking on the sidewalk outside looked like ants. The building swayed with the wind. Very scary.
One of the world's most expensive malls to construct but it's amazing. Santiago Calatrava really designed a great, airy replacement...
Calatrava is such a controversial person, he's designed great things but also other ones made with poor materials or absolutely ugly and devoid of significance.
Calatrava's building looks like a bleached skeleton in a post-apocalyptic hellscape.
I started working in 2 WTC in 1989. The mall was really just the underground concourse that connected the buildings of the complex with the subway & PATH stations as well as the local streets. During rush hour the concourse was a blizzard of people heading to/from work in the neighborhood. The retail element was pretty dull (several major bank branches, Woolworths, and a not so good food place, The Big Kitchen.) The mall vibe with a broad mix of national stores came several years later.
My boy George sealy in the comments gotta word to speak with you ab the disrespect to his chili and the big kitchen LMAO
@@davidmoore9357😂😂
i haven't heard anybody talk about woolworth in 30 yrs.
Honestly I’m glad the Mall was one of the things that managed to get rebuilt at The World Trade Center, a sacred and special place that’ll make memories for generations to come.
Yeah
I remember the Shops at WTC well. I worked at the then Vista International Hotel when it opened in the early 80s and would walk through the mall nearly daily. Those stores did good business. In fact, a friend of mine who worked for The Limited (corporate) told me they did a huge trade in pantyhose from all the female workers at the WTC!
A lot of the imagery from the mall after 9/11 reminds me of those first few times venturing into the underground areas of Fallout 3 back in the day.
Good ol ghoul infested metro
What was it like down there
@@tiffprendergastabsolutely horrifying
It somberly reminded me of the pictures inside reactor 4 of chernobyl where the upper biological shield lays on its side. Or well also the city of Pripyat.
Westfield destroys everything it touches. They acquired 4 different malls in my area in the 90's. They made plans to renovate, asked for TIF money to do so, jacked up rent causing great stores like Disney and top clothing stores to close. Those spaces were never leased again. They basically killed off 3 different malls BEFORE on line shopping became so popular. The original WTC mall was doomed either way. It doesn't sound like it's doing much better today.
Almost as if it was deliberate sabotage imo
I went an interview on my 21st bday on 07/18/01 at Everything Yogurt by the escalator for the PATH train. My interviewers name was Rashida and I will never for get that. The mall was beautiful and unlike anything I've seen living in the Hudson Valley. I was supposed to move with my best friend and my son to the Bronx and live with her husband (at the time) and mother in law in a beautiful house in The Bronx. My Mother told me that something was going to happen there and I told my mom she was worrying to much and nothing was going to happen. I was supposed to get a callback sometime during the week of September 10. Part of my job was to deliver orders to the offices
Man those pictures are so haunting - real liminal space vibes
Bro I really like your videos👍Please bro tell me in the next video about the technical floors in the WTC twin towers. I was always interested to know what they were for and why they didn’t have windows. Please like so the author can see) Thank you)
you basically answered your own question. The mechanical floors were for supporting the infrastructure of the building, plumbing HVAC and local elevator systems . The building was basically 3 skyscrapers on top of each other separated by mechanical floors and local elevator scheme repeated 3 times. Mechanical floors 41-42 74-75 and 108-110. These floors were non office floors so there were vents instead of windows. The highest office occupied floor in both towers was 105
@@JP-uu2rwit would still be interesting to hear about the mechanical floors on 9/11. How the mechanical systems held up after the planes hit, such as the sprinkler systems, electric, elevators, the fire systems such as the venting system the towers had for fires that were suppose to suck out the smoke. Especially the mechanical floors that were directly impacted by the planes. Alot of these systems obviously failed after the plane collisions but some did stay functioning and firefighters were even able to get one elevator in the south tower running that they used to get from the lobby to dozens of floor up. You wouldn't be interested in a video about these mechanical floors and how they fared on 9/11?
The Mechanism floors were basically for controlling and maintaining the structure and functions of the buildings/towers.
There is a lot of footage of an air flow evaluation which much of it happens on these infrastructure floors. Many large blower fans and the elevator equipment rooms. I am most interested myself in the transmitter room floors where WPIX among others had their high powered television transmission equipment for the big tower. In another OTIS related video you could see the hard coaxial lines going to the roof for the antenna, but that was only a video covering the elevator machinery modernization in the north tower WTC1...
Yo bro! Like totally bro….dude.
bro knows the ways to make the videos 9/11 mins long
Wow the design of the inside of the new mall is so beautiful and errie at the same time.
You should look into the part of the subway entrance coming from the new mall that retains the same floors, signage, stairs, doors etc from the old WTC.. very cool that they saved that
Yes, that is interesting to see that there. When I visited Oculus and the WTC site in 2018, I think, I saw that bit from the old structure with the door that still had the markings from when they were doing the search and rescue. For some reason it felt comforting to see that there was something that remained from before - that corridor, the sphere, the tree, and not much else.
Thanks for these videos! Please don’t stop, very very interesting content!
I have a idea that he will stop at the 911 video
I was familiar with the original mall since the late 1970's to shortly before 9/11/01 as access to the subways. I often used the 'new' mall to access the subway and PATH too.
The old mall had a range of stores from discounters (Alexanders had a branch there) to luxury brands. It had a wide variety of food vendors, including a large central 'The Kitchen' by the PATH escalators. The new mall is mostly higher end stores and food services, not much as to the 'lower' end. Sadly there are, like most malls, high turnover of retail tenants, a lot of empty storefronts. The Pandemic and shift to Work From Home has badly hurt the success of the new mall. It also gets a lot of visitors, has public rest rooms, something difficult to find in the city.
Did they ever mention if anybody was killed in the mall from debris or anything else? I often wondered if people were trapped down there or if they were able to get out at all. Over the years. I’d think about that tragic day, hoping that people down on the street when the towers came down and that smoke and debris dust that they were breathing in, didn’t give them all respiratory problems and cancer. What an awful time.😔
Same
I enjoy the look of the new mall, the balconies of the main area look somewhat like the ‘trident’ bases of the old towers.
Ikr veegaana awesome
Yes that’s the tridents
The "flooding" wasn't bad and was mostly over the escalators going down to the PATH trains. It was like a few broken pipes spraying, not a torrential amount of water. I would say overhead sprinkler pipes. I did not get wet going from Tower II to the northwest corner of Borders books exit. Nice video but basically zero information new to me. (Survivor Tower II Fiduciary Trust, 97th Floor).
But its a bunch of great and interesting info to others...
It is a lot of information for the rest of us that are here
@@macwyllExactly, why are people so upset 😭
Do you have more stories , if your ok with sharing
First time I visited WTC in person was 2018. I was able to take in the breathtaking architecture of this mall.
I didn’t have context to it being destroyed 9/11, but the newness and modern design clearly suggested a rebuild.
The structure is probably one of the most amazing structures that I have ever been in.
Big shopping malls like this are becoming quite a dying breed these days :(.
The thing is, there are tens of thousands of people going through there everyday as part of their daily commute. This is in the financial district. People buy stuff on their way home. I know, I used to do that in the old mall. So, it is not going to die.
@@georgesealy4706 I'm not saying this mall will but in general the mall industry just isn't quite what it used to be since many opt to do all their shopping online these days.
Idk man, Malls are still thriving these days.
Mall near me is full of people but there’s another mall that is empty near me and I walked through it and no stores open only things in there is a employment office and some city offices
Not in Australia
You're feeding my wtc special interest. Good work 👍
same
This video being 9 minutes and 11 seconds is not coincidence.
So I never knew until today, there was an underground mall at the WTC! I saw the plaza in person in June of 2001. I think we went inside for a minute too. I knew there was a WB store right there that got destroyed, but I never knew it was at that mall.
I miss the WB store and the statues (Taz Devil, Bugs, Daffy, Yosemite)
I remember watching a scene from a 2006 movie that shows the police officers in the shopping mall and they were standing near the entrance to the South Tower when the tower collapsed. Three of them managed to run into the elevator shaft before the building collapsed on them.
Yeah ive seen that one too, its called World Trade Center
YEEEES!!! I thought I was going cray .....Wasnt whats his name in it as well?
World Trade Center
Thanks for this video, it was a bittersweet trip down memory lane. I spent many weekends traveling through here and always stopped at the mall. If just to window shop and dream or sometimes to pick up a slice of pizza before getting on the PATH train over to Jersey to visit relatives. It wasn't until I was much older and back in NYC as a sort of native tourists that I actually went UP in the towers and not DOWN as all the many times before.
You'd think an underground shopping mall would be fairly safe. But Malls in general aren't that safe. About 10 miles from where I am right now we had a sniper at a mall. Killed 5 or 6 people. I always avoid them because I don't like crowds. Last time I went was to a mall near downtown Portland to watch Tonya Harding practice skating. I'd met her at a club that my friends draged me to. She was a lot nicer and smarter than the media puts out. That was 20 years ago.
I don't think a shopping centre at the original wtc would be like that in the 90s or 2000s tho
Was she in da club, or holding da club!!!😮😮😮⛸️
Yeah well I waited on her and found her to be a snob!😂
My trip up to the observation deck and restaurant was in Feb 1979. It was wild that the elevator that took my friends and I up had a speedometer on it! The guy that operated the elevator had disheveled hair and tie constantly.
part of it is still there, but badly damaged so isn't open and most of it was demolished for the memorial. Part of the current occulus is also where part of the mall used to be
I still remember going to the mall three days before the towers went down
The Oculus is more high end compared to the old mall
I worked at the Alexander's Department Store there starting the day it opened. Some wonderful people.
All of the stores closed by 1992. I had worked at the 59th St flagship for awhile long ago.
I was waiting for you to do an analysis on this, and well done as always too!
Really good post. I would like to see a piece on the handling of the subway collapse and rebuild.
the fact tht this vid has is 9 minutes and 11 seconds is weird…
I went to NYC last Winter and was amazed at the new underground Mall, I didn't even realize it was a thing prior to 9/11.
Reminds me of tower city in cleveland, mall at the base of a tall tower, they also had a warner brothers store at one point just like the wtc
Wow very interesting! Thanks for posting.
Having the largest shopping mall in New York City was like having the the largest chemical waste dump in New Jersey - it was nothing to brag about. One thing I remember about the subterranean concourse at the World Trade Center was the bank of long, long, long escalators - shown at 1:32 - that went up from the PATH station. The last time I used the PATH station at the World Trade Center was to bring my bicycle into the city from Hoboken on Sunday, September 2, 2001. It was Labor Day weekend. (I returned to Manhattan to go cycling in the city on Labor Day itself, September 3, and one distinct memory I have of that day was seeing a Volkswagen Sharan minivan parked on Park Avenue. The Sharan was never officially offered for sale in the U.S.)
How old are you? You look young :) Im just saying that I am 33 and I was a kid when it happened.
I worked in the Twin Towers in 83. I trained there for Manufacturers Hanover Trust as a bank teller. Left NYC months later for the USAF. Worked on the 45 th floor. Would take the express elevator to 44 and up the escalator for one flight. The sounds of the wind shifting the building took a few days to get used to. Was quite an experience working there.
I take the PATH from NJ everyday through the new concourse. I’m an early Gen Z, meaning 9/11 was around the time I was “gaining consciousness” and becoming self aware. My memories of this place is more of the temporary PATH station and maze of construction walls before the permanent station and Oculus mall opened. It still gives me the creeps how the physical place can change but the idea of a train station and mall being here was always around since the 70s.
I didnt know people fled through the mall. Very informative. I went there once when i was young, dont remember much.
These are the kind of photos I always wanted to see but never found on google. Google doesn’t show much of the interior of the former towers
I absolutely love your videos, dude. Especially the WTC videos! 😊
We saw a recreation of the mall in the movie World Trade Center during the collapse scene
The old mall was never particularly liked, what with its low ceiling and rather dark lighting. People mostly went there only because it was convenient.
People went through the mall to and from work to catch the trains.
It was brightly lit for it's time-no LED fixtures yet really.
All malls were like that back then
It was a beautiful mall. I shopped at the Strawberry’s and the Banana Republic.
Every time I went to the city with my dad or nana to accompany them at their job I’d ask them to take me to the WB store. Seeing the mangled sign in the museum was surreal. My nana was in the Duane Reade when the first plane hit. She kept that receipt for years but it got lost in a move.
is it intentional that these videos are always about 9:11 long?!
$$$
The length of this video cannot be an accident…
Who knows when else people said ‘it cannot be an account’?
I remember the long escalators that would take you us to the PATH platforms. I miss that 60s architecture style
Thank you for the 9/11/WTC videos. Santiago Calatrava is the architect for the oculus mall. He has interesting designs around the world. The structure had problems with leaks previously but now the floor marble type seems to be too fragile for the heating system underneath or something like that.
In 2016 i was in the oculus stores and fulton center 🎉and the freedom tower.
Its very different from the original mall and trade centers.
5:00 That's absolutely freakin beautiful.
Haha I recommended this in your livestream. Thanks for listening
You're severely under-estimating the abilities of cameras in 2001. If your camera shot on film, your footage would have been even higher quality than 4k nowadays. The footage would just have to be rescanned with today's technology. That's why we have so many 80s and 90s shows in HD nowadays. Because they were shot and stored on film. And scanning technology made a huge leap in the last 20 years. So they took the old film and just rescanned it.
There might be even some unreleased HD-footage of the attacks out there, but most video cameras used tape, which works differently than film. But still, tons of cameras from 2001 used film.
dude awesome work, I remember the food court and the Radio Shack in the mall, those pictures are crazy didn't know they existed or that the mall was under wtc 4-5 I just thought it was under the towers
I was there in 1993 and thought that as well. Until watching this I assumed it had been destroyed when the towers fell on top of it.
It was
The basement levels covered the entire complex! It was the entire area that was excavated out after 9/11.
I remember going into Manhattan to tool around the city out of boredom one Saturday in July 2001, and this was one of my stops that day. On 9/11, as I watched in horror, my mind immediately shot back to how someplace that I had been recently was now destroyed in the worst terrorist attack on the US.
We were there in late June of 01. I remember as soon as we heard the announcement in class, I immediately thought “holy fuck we were just there!”
When the planes hit, were the employees of the mall and customers evacuated immediately?
Were there people in the mall when the towers collapsed? I would guess so. Must have been an insane rumble like a freight train followed by a dust cloud.
There would have been only employees inside getting ready to open for the day.
There actually were people in there. There is a story about a group of people who had to climb through loads of rubble after the collapse of the towers caused the mall and subway stations to partially collapse as well.
Started at 8:43 so they weren't open yet-security grates were still down.
There probably weren't too many retail shops open that time of day but the food court would have been open because of commuters coming in from the subway and PATH into WTC. That said, I'm sure they were all evacuated pretty quickly and they definitely stopped the subway traffic from continuing to come in before the buildings collapsed. But, because the police and fire were guiding people to evacuate through the mall area there were definitely a lot of people in there still when they came down.
this video is exactly 9 minutes and 11 seconds long
Certainly not by accident
Sept 10 on my way back from vacation in Jamaica
Is there anything still underground from the original mall? Or was literally everything redone, demolished, or taken out by the attack?
Didn't they dig a giant hole there? Just remembering from the newspaper pics. It also took like a decade to dig it all up.
As someone whose furthest trip east was Nebraska, I never knew it took that long to clear the site.
Sometime around 1999 or 2000, I visited that mall on my way back to San Francisco on a business trip. There was a small luggage store in which I bought a big tall black leather credit card wallet (maybe a Tommy Hilfiger). When opened at a 90° angle, it always reminded me of the twin towers.
Where was that luggage store on the map? EDIT: I think it must have been Innovation Luggage.
I still have and wear my jacket from the Structure store there. I was just thinking about how that jacket wouldn’t mean much to me if I hadn’t gotten it there. Hopefully, it’ll last me the rest of my life as a reminder of the towers.
I would be interested in seeing the survivor stairs from the plaza if there is any footage . the only pictures seem to be from street level and a little grainy
Go into the 9/11 memorial museum website because the survivor stairs are in the museum and the might have pictures of it.
The duration of how long the video is insane
Hey depressed Ginger I have been a fan of your channel because you made a lot of these twin Tower videos that are very interesting and some of these I actually didn't know about the twin towers. But I have a video idea what will happen if the truck bombs actually took down towers in 1993?
I was there in Dec ‘99, and got a Cinnabon for the first and only time in my life. Then went to the roof of the South Tower…
Video idea: Survivor's Tree that was in the WTC Plaza. :)
Did the people in the mall felt the planes hitting the towers? Like the shaking or the noise?
The damage, the collapsing towers did to the subway doesn't speak for it's design. A subway is always also a bomb shelter. And a bomb shelter shouldn't be damaged, when the building above it collapses.
The work in progress McDonald's in the rubble is pretty eerie
Keep pushing these out and I'll keep watching them.
Me, too!
Some answers to your considerations :
The fountain water would have turned into mud from the dust and debris falling into it but at some point, the entire concourse collapsed.
The building core that juicy standing for a few Second in those photos is likely from the north tower. After the bombing of 93 some of that was rebuilt with concrete reinforced walls, which is why it stood just a little bit longer
I purchased my first set of glasses from there, the store was called “Eyes on the World”.
I don't really think that the mall at the Oculus would really die. Seeing as how it's located in a transport hub were it's literally active all year long.
I always just assumed that the mall was crushed under the collapse. If it wasn't, then I wonder were there people trapped down there after the collapse?
"The Commuter Cafe" bar was 100% intact-it was halfway down to the PATH on the right-a tiny bar. At the bottom of the escaltors.
it was early so there wouldn't have been too many.
You could also enter the mall through 6, near the PATH escalators.
I always wondered if there was a pharmacy there. I work in a pharmacy as a technician and I always wonder about that. Nice video too
There was a Duane Reade drug store there which had a pharmacy.
I hope you don’t stop making thee 9/11 and WTC videos. They are fascinating and like your channel.
I got a pearls before swine and baby blues book from the borders that was once there. And a few Garfield books
Can you do more videos about the planes that hit the WTC I feel like there so much to talk about
the underground area in fallout 3 was based on this mall. Its half subway stations half mall
Wow didn't know there was a mall. I dont even think wiki mentions it or briefly.
That Bugs Bunny statue looks scary in that picture.
It sucks & it’s sad that the World Trade Center never got to open the McDonald’s & you’re right the mall would still be there today idk if the McDonald’s would still be there now though I’m thinking it likely would not have as many stores now
This was an amazing mall. I was there many times.
Are those the survivor stairs? 5:40
Yes.
You Can See them in The 9/11 Museum.
NO. The ones in the museum were located outside on the northend middle . They were open air and led to the plaza. Those are internal stairs. I know the people who worked to save them. They were largely undamaged and the damage you see in the museum was caused by the contractors attempting to destroy them so they would not have to "save" them. It was a huge deal and fight over them. You could walk by and see them for months after most of the ground level demo was over. I am Ed Schmitt-Survivor, Tower II. I lost 87 coworkers that day.(Fiduciary Trust 97th Floor Tower II. I watched the first plane hit from my floor.@@josephbennett3482
I walk through that place every single morning in the late 1980s .
Great video.
This video is coincidentally 9 minutes and 11 seconds long.
They had a Boarders bookstore at either 4 or 5 wtc.
Borders