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Here are some interesting statistics about the WT.:

 

1. The WT. opened in 1970 after 8 years of construction.

 

2. The WT. was the dream of David Rockefeller, chairman of the Chase

Manhattan Bank, and Nelson Rockefeller, former Governor of New York.

 

3. The Rockefellers wanted to name the towers after themselves, but the

mayor of NY, John Lindsay, insisted on the World Trade Center.

 

4. The city chose to build the WT. instead of building a new tunnel and

large bridge over the Hudson River.

 

5. The World Trade Center was designed by architect Minoura Yamasaki.

 

6. According to Yamasaki, downtown Manhattan was the perfect place to

erect the towers because there wasn't "a single building worth saving in

the neighborhood."

 

7. Owners of nearby buildings disagreed, and delayed demolition by

three weeks with their protests.

 

8. Sixteen blocks were cleared to house the completed WT..

 

9. More than 10,000 workers involved in building the complex.

 

10. More than 60 of them died during construction.

 

11. The excavation work displaced enough soil to create Liberty Park,

where four 60-floor towers and four apartment buildings were

constructed.

 

12. The WTC's foundations were laid at 60 feet below ground level.

 

13. The complex covered 16 acres when finished.

 

14. In addition to the towers, five other office buildings made up the

WT. complex.

 

15. The WT. had 12 million square feet of space.

 

16. Each floor was 50,000 square feet.

 

17. The buildings had their own ZIP codes - 10047 and 10048.

 

18. The towers were designed to look like a futuristic sculpture.

 

19. The structure was revolutionary. Its main supports were external,

lining the four corners of each tower.

 

20. Critics condemned the completed buildings as "boring."

 

21. When completed, the towers were 100 feet taller than the Empire

State Building.

 

22. Until the construction of Chicago's Sears Tower and the Petronas

Towers in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, the twin towers were the world's

tallest buildings.

 

23. The North Tower's 347 foot radio tower technically allowed the WT.

to still call itself the world's tallest building.

 

24. The towers were different heights. The South tower was 1,362 feet

tall, and big brother North tower was 1,368.

 

25. Sixty-eight miles of steel were used in the construction of the

buildings.

 

26. The concrete poured was enough to build a road from New York to

Washington, D.C.

 

27. The steel inside the WT. could have made three more Brooklyn

Bridges.

 

28. The Twin Towers had more than 16 miles of staircases.

 

29. There were 43,600 windows.

 

30. The windows were kept small to reduce the amount of heat or cold

entering the building. Regular size windows would have made the heat

unbearable in the summertime.

 

31. The building's 600,000 square feet of glass was cleaned by an

automatic machine.

 

32. The building had 20,000 elevator doors.

 

33. The WT. housed 239 banks of elevators, including one known as the

fastest in the U.S.

 

34. The main elevators traveled at 27 feet per second and could reach

the top in under a minute.

 

35. There were 828 emergency exit doors.

 

36. 23,000 fluorescent lightbulbs lit the interior.

 

37. Originally, there were no light switches in the towers, because

energy prices were one-third less than they are today. In 1982, switches

were installed.

 

38. 12,000 miles of electrical cable snaked through the building,

supplying power to 15 trading floors for stockbrokers.

 

39. The 75,000 telephones were maintained by

19,600 miles of cable.

 

40. There were more than 300 computer mainframes on site.

 

41. The WT. used more power in one day than most small American cities.

 

42. Steam supplied by a plant on New York's East River was used to heat

the buildings.

 

43. The buildings housed 49,000 tons of air-conditioning equipment.

 

44. More than 250,000 cans of paint were needed every year for upkeep

of the Towers.

 

45. The surrounding shopping center complex included 3,250,000 square

feet of restaurants and stores.

 

46. Six banks, five investment firms and three insurance companies

called their headquarters there.

 

47. The Port Authority of New York and New Jersey had its headquarters

in the building.

 

48. American Express had three floors in the WT..

 

49. The WT. was home base for Bank of America.

 

50. The trade center housed two top restaurants - the Windows on the

World and Wild Blue.

 

51. Windows on the World had one of the best vintage wine collections

in the United States.

 

52. More than 50,000 people worked in the twin towers.

 

53. By 9 a.m. each weekday morning, the buildings had an average of

35,000 employees at their desks.

 

54. More than 200,000 people - half of them tourists - moved through the

buildings each day.

 

55. The South Tower had an observation deck that was visited by more

than

26,000 people a day.

 

56. An information sign at the top assured visitors that the buildings

had been designed to withstand airplane crashes.

 

57. The towers could be seen from at least 20 miles away.

 

58. On a clear day, it was possible to see for 45 miles in every

direction from the observation deck.

 

59. The express elevator to the observation deck was the largest in the

U.S. with a 55-person capacity.

 

60. Every president since 1973 paid a visit to the landmark.

 

61. President Ronald Reagan watched July 4th fireworks celebrations

from the WT. on two occasions.

 

62. Superstars Frank Sinatra, John Lennon, Mick Jagger and Liza Minelli

all sang in WT. restaurants.

 

63. Two New York TV stations incorporated the twin tower image into

their logos.

 

64. The towers served 10 New York TV stations with 10 antennas on the

top.

 

65. More postcards of the WT. were sent each year than any other

building in the world.

 

66. In 1974, a Frenchman, Phillipe Petit, strung a tightrope between

the two towers and walked across.

 

67. Three men successfully parachuted from the top of the towers.

 

68. More than a dozen mountain climbers had scaled the building.

 

69. In 1975 a jobless construction worker parachuted from the South

Tower to publicize the plight of the unemployed.

 

70. The most famous man to climb the building was George Willig - who

was arrested at the top.

 

71. Willig was fined one penny for each of the

110 floors he scaled.

 

72. Last year, a man in a micro-light aircraft crashed into the North

Tower.

 

73. In the concourse beneath the towers, there were more than 75

stores.

 

74. Each day, over 150,000 commuters passed through the three subway

stations there.

 

75. Eighty seven tons of food was delivered to the building each day.

 

76. Over 30,000 cups of coffee were poured daily in the basement cafes.

 

77. Twenty-two doctors had practices there.

 

78. Seventeen babies were born on the site.

 

79. Irv Silverstein recently bought the WT. for almost $3.2 billion.

 

80. The WT. generated $110 million a year in profit.

 

81. More than three dozen movies have been filmed there.

 

82. The best known film to use the WT. as a location was the 1976

remake of King Kong.

 

83. The 1993 bombing of the WT. killed six people and injured 1,000

more.

 

84. 1,300 pounds of explosives ripped through the garage in the 1993

attack.

 

85. That bomb created a crater 16 feet deep and badly damaged inner

support beams.

 

86. Before the 1993 attack, there were three closed circuit television

networks for security.

 

87. After the bombing, the cameras were increased to 300 monitored by

computers.

 

88. More than 300 security guards worked there.

 

89. The WT. featured security centers on 14 different floors and its

own police station.

 

90. The entrance lobbies had 16 concierge desks and 12 X-ray machines.

 

91. After the first bombing, no one could get inside the buildings

without an I.D. check.

 

92. It took an average of five minutes for a visitor to pass through

security checks.

 

93. Before the 1993 bombing, there were more than

1,000 parking spaces beneath the buildings, 600 remained afterward.

 

94. All vehicles using the parking lot had to show FBI security passes.

 

95. On Sept. 11, the building was 95 percent full, with over 400

tenants.

 

96 New York Gov. George Pataki had an office in the WT., but wasn't

there when the disaster struck.

 

97. Both the Secret Service and the FBI rented office space there.

 

98. $110.3 million in gold and 120.7 million in silver is buried in the

rubble.

 

99. The combined weight of the towers was more than 1.5 million tons.

 

100. Each tower was built to safely sway about three feet during strong

wind storms.

 

101. Blue Cross-Blue Shield, New York's largest health insurance

company, moved into the building 3 years ago.

 

102. Nine chapels serving six different faiths called the WT. home.

 

103. Twenty-nine countries had trade mission offices in the buildings.

 

104. Every major U.S. airline had ticket offices inside the WT..

 

105. It is the first skyscraper in the world destroyed by terrorists.

 

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Do Not Forget - Nor be Weak !!!!