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Wednesday, 6 March, 2002, 12:18 GMT

Tribute in light to New York victims

Tribute in Lights - artist's impression ( Copyright - The Municipal Art Society)

Two columns of light will pierce the New York skyline

Two vertical mile-high shafts of light will beam into the night sky near the World Trade Center from Monday 11 March.

The "Tribute in Light" to the victims of the 11 September attacks will be unveiled exactly six months to the day since the attacks occurred, the mayor of New York City, Michael Bloomberg, announced on Tuesday.

Nearly 3,000 people died in the terror attacks on New York, when two hijacked airliners were crashed into the twin towers of the World Trade Center, creating a massive fireball and causing the building to collapse under the impact.

World Trade Center attacks on 11 September

Nearly 3,000 people died in the World Trade Center attacks

The Tribute in Light will be installed in a vacant space next to the wreckage of the World Trade Center.

Two searchlights will send 88 high-powered beams of light vertically upwards to light up the Manhattan skyline, beginning each evening at dusk and continuing until 2300 EST.

The columns of light, designed to evoke the destroyed twin towers, will be one of two temporary memorials to be unveiled on Monday.

The other, The Sphere, is a sculpture of steel and bronze that once stood in the plaza between the twin towers.

The Sphere will be unveiled at the exact time the first plane hit - 0846 EST. It is a battered sculpture, badly damaged during the attacks, but remains structurally intact.

It will now be framed by trees and benches in Battery Park in lower Manhattan as a place for contemplation.

Remembering the dead

These two memorials are the first official tributes to the victims, but both will be temporary until the highly controversial decision is taken about what to do with the site - to keep it all as a memorial or to rebuild it.

I want to stress that both of these are temporary, but they give us a place to go and to reflect and to remember and to pray
Mayor Michael Bloomberg

They will highlight the six months which have passed since the attack, but they will also highlight the sensitive issue of how to remember the dead.

The light column was originally to have been called Towers of Light, but protests from victims' families forced a name change. They felt Tribute in Light better reflected the lives rather than the property lost.

Mayor Michael Bloomberg emphasised the importance of the memorials, saying: "I want to stress that both of these are temporary, but they give us a place to go and to reflect and to remember and to pray."

But with the site expected to be cleared by May, pressure is growing for a decision on what it will become.

Families largely want the land left as a memorial park. But business leaders are already campaigning for rebuilding, to boost the local economy.

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