Towering symbol: The fog rolls out across downtown Manhattan, captured from the 80th floor of One World Trade Center
Ninety floors... and counting: The breathtaking views from One World Trade Center (and there's still 14 storeys to go)
When it is completed, it will be the tallest building in Manhattan and one of incredible poignancy for New York City. 
One World Trade Center
 reached its 90th floor this week - with just 14 more floors to go until
 the top. The structure can now be seen from all five boroughs of the 
city. 
Stunning 
pictures showed how the area has been reborn since the 9/11 attacks more
 than a decade ago where almost 3,000 people lost their lives in the 
worst ever terrorist attack on American soil. 
One World Trade Center is on track to be
completed by 2013 with construction workers approximately finishing a floor
a week in downtown Manhattan.
Electrical
 contractors at the tower agreed to give it a festive feel and wrapped 
the exterior lamps they use with coloured cellophane in time for 
Christmas.  
The site will be a place
 of reflection and contemplation for many and The National September 11 
Memorial And Museum, designed by the winning team of Michael Arad and 
Peter Walker, was opened for the 10th anniversary of the terrorist 
attacks.
One World Trade Center, designed by 
renowned architect David Childs, standing in the north-west corner, is 
the site’s centrepiece. The first cornerstone was laid down on July 4 2004 and as the building rose it was known as Freedom Tower.
Christmas spirit: Exterior lights at One WTC were covered in coloured cellophane by electrical contractors for a festive feel
It stands in the footsteps of
 the original twin towers among a small forest of oak trees in an 
eight-acre plaza. It features two 50ft-deep pools, each containing 
fountains, along with a museum with exhibitions and artefacts to teach 
visitors about the events of September 11.
At
 One World Trade Center, there is almost 3million square feet of office 
space - half of which had already been leased. There is also an 
observation deck planned more than 1,241ft above ground, fine-dining 
restaurants and a sprawling public lobby boasting 50ft ceilings. There 
will be eventually be six skyscrapers on the site altogether. 
Breathtaking: Looking east from the 77th floor as construction work carries on below 
The heart of New York City: One World Trade 
Center, from the 80th floor looking North, is due for completion in 2013
 and will be the city's tallest building 
Place of remembrance: The eight-acre plaza 
features a small forest of oak trees and a museum to teach visitors 
about the events of September 11 
 
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