A quote from Virgil fills a wall of the museum prior to the dedication ceremony at the National September 11 Memorial Museum on Thursday, May 15, 2014 in New York
The Sept. 11 museum opens to the public on May 21. A dedication ceremony on Thursday included President Barack Obama, families and other officials. Five things to know about the museum:
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ITS MISSION
The exhibits tell the stories of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 2001 attacks and the 1993 trade center bombing, as well as of survivors and first responders. Museum Director Alice Greenwald said the museum is "about understanding our shared humanity," while former mayor Michael Bloomberg called it a reminder "that freedom is not free."
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MUSEUM'S SIZE
The museum occupies 110,000 square feet (10,219 square meters) on the 16-acre (6.5-hectare) trade center site, tracing the foundations of the twin towers 70 feet (21 meters) underground.
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CONSTRUCTION AND FOUNDATION
Below the Sept. 11 memorial plaza, with its two fountains outlining the footprints of the towers, the museum reaches down to bedrock, where the towers' steel columns were anchored. It's bounded by a slurry wall that kept back the Hudson River after the attack.
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COSTS
The plaza and museum together cost $700 million to build, subsidized with $390 million in tax-funded grants; officials hope the $24 museum entrance fee expected to generate about $40 million a year will help cover operating costs, expected to be about $60 million a year. Fundraising will cover the rest, for now.
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SPECIAL ARTIFACT
Among the more than 10,000 artifacts, 23,000 still images and 500 hours of video and film, plus 1,970 oral histories, one special item is what Patricia Reilly looked for among the displays during an earlier tour for families: her sister's picture ID card from the 101st floor office in the south tower where she died.
___
ITS MISSION
The exhibits tell the stories of the nearly 3,000 people killed in the 2001 attacks and the 1993 trade center bombing, as well as of survivors and first responders. Museum Director Alice Greenwald said the museum is "about understanding our shared humanity," while former mayor Michael Bloomberg called it a reminder "that freedom is not free."
___
MUSEUM'S SIZE
The museum occupies 110,000 square feet (10,219 square meters) on the 16-acre (6.5-hectare) trade center site, tracing the foundations of the twin towers 70 feet (21 meters) underground.
___
CONSTRUCTION AND FOUNDATION
Below the Sept. 11 memorial plaza, with its two fountains outlining the footprints of the towers, the museum reaches down to bedrock, where the towers' steel columns were anchored. It's bounded by a slurry wall that kept back the Hudson River after the attack.
___
COSTS
The plaza and museum together cost $700 million to build, subsidized with $390 million in tax-funded grants; officials hope the $24 museum entrance fee expected to generate about $40 million a year will help cover operating costs, expected to be about $60 million a year. Fundraising will cover the rest, for now.
___
SPECIAL ARTIFACT
Among the more than 10,000 artifacts, 23,000 still images and 500 hours of video and film, plus 1,970 oral histories, one special item is what Patricia Reilly looked for among the displays during an earlier tour for families: her sister's picture ID card from the 101st floor office in the south tower where she died.
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