Population near New York City's ground zero doubles since 2000, according to Census

2011-03-29-ap-Wall-street.JPGView full sizeA businessman walks his son to school past the New York Stock Exchange in New York City in this photo from Oct. 10, 2008. The Financial District was once a ghost town in the evenings, after workers left for the day. Now a number of former corporate office towers on Wall Street have converted to apartment buildings, grocery stores have opened, three new schools have opened up in four years and briefcase-carrying stockbrokers share sidewalk space with kids in strollers.

NEW YORK (AP) — After the Sept. 11 attacks, there were grim questions about the future of the shaken, dust-covered neighborhoods around the World Trade Center. Would residents flee uptown or to the suburbs? Would the epic job of rebuilding lower Manhattan be too much to bear? Who would want to live so close to a place associated with such horror?

As it turns out, plenty of folks. Census figures released last week show that the number of people living near ground zero has swelled by about 23,000 since 2000, making it one of the fastest-growing places in the city.

Virginia Lam, a publicist and former City Hall operative who moved into a newly converted residential building on Wall Street in 2006, said the site is a source of inspiration, rather than fear or gloom.

“It’s pretty amazing,“ she said of the new towers rising from the 16-acre hole created by the attacks. “I feel like, being a New Yorker who was here on 9/11, and who has worked for the Fire Department and for the city, I think it is always in the back of my mind, but it’s not something that dominates my thinking. I go about living my life.“

About 45,750 people now live in the part of Manhattan south of Chambers Street, which encompasses ground zero. That is more than twice as many as there were during the last census.

There was also significant growth a little farther uptown. In all, 82,137 people were counted as living south of Canal Street, 15 blocks north of the trade center. That is an increase of 43 percent from 2000 in an area that includes the Financial District, Battery Park City, a section of tenement-packed Chinatown and the celebrity-studded streets of TriBeCa, which is short for “Triangle Below Canal.“

The change around Wall Street has been especially remarkable given the area’s history as a financial hub, rather than a residential district.

One by one, bank headquarters have moved elsewhere, and millions of square feet of office space have been converted to homes — a change spurred partly by government incentives intended to help revive downtown after Sept. 11.

“It’s astounding,“ said Julie Menin, head of the local community board. “Many people thought after 9/11 that people wouldn’t remain in Lower Manhattan. Not only did people stay, they came in droves.“

2011-03-29-ap-NYC-skyline.JPGView full sizeThe new Frank Gehry skyscraper joins the Manhattan skyline near the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge in this photo from July, 26, 2010. The 76-story, 900-unit skyscraper is the tallest apartment tower in the Western hemisphere and may put to rest the questions rasised after the Sept. 11 terror attacks about whether anyone would want to live so close to a place linked to that much disaster and despair. Already new census figures show show that the number of people living near ground zero has swelled by about 23,000 since 2000, making it one of the fastest-growing places in the city.

New Yorkers have been well aware of the change. In the shell-shocked months after the attacks, the Financial District became a ghost town when workers left for the day. Now it is teeming with people around the clock.

Grocery stores have opened. Three new schools have opened up in four years. Briefcase-carrying stockbrokers now share sidewalk space with kids in strollers. A string of new apartment towers has been built along West Street, a short distance from the trade center site.

The area isn’t finished growing, either. Near the foot of the Brooklyn Bridge, work was recently completed on the tallest apartment tower in the Western Hemisphere, a 76-story, 900-unit skyscraper designed by the architect Frank Gehry.

Growth downtown has far exceeded the rate elsewhere in the city. The 2010 census put the city’s population at 8.18 million, up 2.1 percent from 2000.

People have been lured to Manhattan’s southern tip by a number of things. Battery Park City, the planned community created on landfill at the edge of the Hudson River in the 1980s, is cut off from the car traffic that surges through the rest of Manhattan and is ringed by playgrounds and esplanades with exhilarating views of the harbor.

Before the attacks it was a work in progress, with a large section still unbuilt. Over the past decade, though, it has matured and filled up, finally becoming the community its designers envisioned in the 1970s.

Several of the area’s public schools have a solid reputation. The area still isn’t on par with other parts of the city when it comes to amenities like street parking or places to buy fresh vegetables, but things have been improving.

New Battery Park City resident Theresa Purcell said its isolation — it is one of the few places in the city that really feels as if it is on an island — is one of the things that attracted her. “It is like a hidden little community,“ she said. “You are in the big, bad city,“ but still a “little world away.“

Across much of the area, there are few remaining signs of the damage done by the terror attacks. Even the tumult of construction at the trade center site barely interrupts the daily flow of residents, office workers and tourists through the neighborhood.

“People should be proud of the fact that we rebuilt this neighborhood,“ Menin said. New Yorkers could have abandoned their experiment in downtown living after 9/11, but it didn’t happen. “I think just the opposite happened. It proved our resilience.“

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