In Lower Manhattan, where police crews removed a recently discovered wing fragment from one of the airliners piloted into the World Trade Center towers on 9/11, builders hoisted a 22-ton, 408-foot spire to the top of One World Trade Center. “It’s a pretty eerie feeling,” said a forensic investigator of the fragment. “We are back and we are better than ever,” said a construction worker of the spire.
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
Weekly Review
In Lower Manhattan, where police crews removed a recently discovered wing fragment from one of the airliners piloted into the World Trade Center towers on 9/11, builders hoisted a 22-ton, 408-foot spire to the top of One World Trade Center. “It’s a pretty eerie feeling,” said a forensic investigator of the fragment. “We are back and we are better than ever,” said a construction worker of the spire.