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New York City Audiotour: Helden, Hoop en Wolkenkrabbers in het Financial District

Audiogids2 stops

Duizend verhalen razen door deze stalen canyons waar fortuinen werden gemaakt, torens ooit vielen en de geschiedenis steeds van gedachten verandert. Het Financial District van New York verbergt meer dan beurskoersen en haastige voetstappen – hier bewaart elk blok een geheim dat het waard is om ontdekt te worden. Tijdens deze zelfgeleide audiotour ontgrendel je de kracht van onvertelde verhalen en dwaal je door achterafstraatjes die de meeste bezoekers nooit opmerken. Vind de ware hartslag van Manhattan, laag voor laag. Wat stortte Wall Street op een bittere ochtend in totale chaos? Welke symbolen, gehouwen in de Liberty Tower, bevatten aanwijzingen voor onopgeloste mysteries? Waarom verschijnen er elke maand mysterieus bloemen op dezelfde plek naast het 9/11 Memorial? Volg politieke gevechten vermomd als architectuur, volg de schaduwen van rebellie en zie eeuwen botsen aan de waterkant. Ervaar het drama, het verborgen verdriet en de hoop van de buurt bij elke stap. Ben je klaar om door de geheimen te wandelen die New York nooit volledig onthult? Jouw verhaal begint nu.

Tourvoorbeeld

map

Over deze tour

  • schedule
    Duur 30–50 minsGa op je eigen tempo
  • straighten
    0.5 km wandelrouteVolg het geleide pad
  • location_on
  • wifi_off
    Werkt offlineEén keer downloaden, overal gebruiken
  • all_inclusive
    Levenslange toegangOp elk moment opnieuw afspelen, voor altijd
  • location_on
    Start bij Liberty Tower

Stops op deze tour

  1. Rising above the narrow streets at 55 Liberty Street, the Liberty Tower is easy to spot by its striking white terracotta facade, completely adorned with whimsical creatures and…Meer lezenToon minder

    Rising above the narrow streets at 55 Liberty Street, the Liberty Tower is easy to spot by its striking white terracotta facade, completely adorned with whimsical creatures and capped by a soaring, castle-like top-just look up for a narrow, 33-story skyscraper that gleams differently from the neighboring stone buildings. Standing here, you’re right at the foot of a legend-a tower that, when it first opened its doors in 1910, was declared the world’s tallest building with such a slender footprint, like a sword thrusting into the Manhattan sky. Imagine the early 1900s, noisy with construction all around and the city’s skyline changing before your eyes. This tower, designed by Henry Ives Cobb, was both a feat of engineering and artistry. Not only did it rise with a steel skeleton-the latest modern marvel-but Cobb decided to dress it entirely in white terracotta, giving the building a dazzling, almost fairy-tale appearance, covered in birds, alligators, gargoyles, and fantastical ornament. Even now, if you glance along the upper walls, you can sometimes catch a glint of sunlight off a dragon or an eagle perched in the masonry. Back when the building was brand new, one of its very first tenants was a young Franklin Delano Roosevelt, whose law office sat on the second floor-before he ever dreamed of the presidency. But behind those storied doors, intrigue simmered. In 1917, as World War I brewed, this building hosted German spies using a rented office as a cover while they plotted to draw the United States into a war with Mexico and Japan. The scheme unraveled with the dramatic revelation of the Zimmermann Telegram, changing the course of world history right from these very corridors. Within a decade, the entire skyscraper was snapped up by the Sinclair Oil Company. Imagine the flurry of business in the smoky boardrooms, where deals for oil rights made here would echo all the way to Washington D.C. and erupt into the infamous Teapot Dome Scandal-a tale of bribery and political intrigue that rocked the 1920s. And when the financial power shifted Midtown and companies like Sinclair moved north, the Liberty Tower changed hands again and again, sometimes bustling with over a hundred busy tenants. But by the late 1970s, as Wall Street’s fortunes flickered, the glory days of the Liberty Tower seemed to flicker with them. At one point, the building stood two-thirds empty, abandoned, and hardly anyone believed it could revive. Enter architect Joseph Pell Lombardi, who saw possibility where others saw decay. He bought the tower for under a million dollars, launching one of the city’s first office-to-residential transformations. Picture the dusty, echoing offices ripped out and reborn as New York’s tallest co-ops south of Canal Street-the start of a whole new way to live downtown. Take a step back and look up-the base, shaft, and castle-like crown rise in perfect columns, each section with its own details. Try to pick out the vertical piers, or the rows of small windows as the stories climb higher. At the very top, green copper roofs recall the turrets of a storybook castle. Below your feet, the tower is anchored with foundations drilled nearly a hundred feet to bedrock, overcoming quicksand and hardpan. Special caissons had to be sunk just to hold this tall, slender marvel aloft in a city eager for height. Through every transformation, Liberty Tower has clung fiercely to its identity. Its restoration in the 1990s and again after September 11th-a day the tower sustained heavy damage just steps from Ground Zero-became a monumental challenge of its own, as residents worked together to save the storybook creatures clinging to the walls. Now, not only does it look as fantastical as it did over a century ago, it’s officially recognized as a New York City Landmark and part of the Wall Street Historic District. Here you are, at the crossroads of money, mystery, scandal, and resilience-where a slender, white terracotta tower once crowned the skyline, and still stands guard over Liberty Street, whispering stories through every gargoyle and bird set in stone. Yearning to grasp further insights on the site, architecture or the critical reception? Dive into the chat section below and ask away.

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  2. Look ahead and you’ll see a striking plaza filled with orderly rows of trees and two enormous square pools sunk deep into the ground-these are the footprints of the original Twin…Meer lezenToon minder

    Look ahead and you’ll see a striking plaza filled with orderly rows of trees and two enormous square pools sunk deep into the ground-these are the footprints of the original Twin Towers, now transformed into powerful reflecting pools. Standing here, you are at the heart of the National September 11 Memorial & Museum, a place where history, memory, and emotion mingle in the air. Close your eyes for a moment and imagine what stood here decades ago-towering skyscrapers full of life and energy, a symbol of business, ambition, and New York’s lofty dreams. Then, everything changed on a bright September morning in 2001. The world watched in disbelief and horror as two planes struck the Twin Towers, and nearly 3,000 people lost their lives within just a few hours. This site, the very ground beneath your feet, saw fire, chaos, bravery, and heartbreak on a scale New York had never imagined. In the painful days that followed, as smoke lingered and rescue workers toiled through night and day, people knew this place would never be just another city block again. Mission after mission, workers searched for survivors and hope. As the dust settled, the city began to ask: how do we remember the loss and honor not just the victims, but also the thousands who courageously risked everything to help? The answer stands before you now. Out of an international competition with over 5,000 entries, a design called “Reflecting Absence” by architect Michael Arad and landscape architect Peter Walker was chosen. Walk among the more than 400 swamp white oaks surrounding you-each carefully planted, each with its own story of resilience. The air here is cooler, the city seems muted beneath the shade. These trees were chosen because they thrive for centuries, and each autumn, their leaves turn gold-a delicate, living tribute to resilience and remembrance. Now, focus on the twin voids ahead of you. These vast reflecting pools are the largest man-made waterfalls in America, endlessly pouring down the exact footprints where the towers once stood. The sound of cascading water drowns out the city’s chaos, pulling you into a moment of quiet. Trace your fingers along the bronze parapets ringing the pools. You’ll find the names-2,983 in all-of those lost to the September 11 attacks and the 1993 World Trade Center bombing. Each name is placed with remarkable care, grouped by friendships and bonds: coworkers, passengers on the same flight, brave first responders, and loved ones connected in life, and now, in memory. Near the plaza stands the Survivor Tree, a pear tree nursed back from the ruins-charred, roots shattered, but defying all odds. Each spring, it blooms again, a living symbol of hope and rebirth. People gather beneath its branches for comfort, just as the city found hope in healing after loss. Beneath your feet, hidden deep in the earth, the museum tells the longer story-artifacts from that day, pieces of steel, a fire engine deformed by the collapse, personal items pulled from the rubble, and voices captured forever. It’s a place of heartache and remembrance, where the world’s outpouring of solidarity is collected, and the question of how to carry on is tackled with courage. Even the museum’s architecture honors its history-the exposed slurry wall, once holding back the Hudson River, stood strong even as skyscrapers fell. This is sacred ground, built on layers of sorrow and strength, where memory is kept alive not just by stone and water, but by everyone who pauses and reflects here. You stand at a crossroads of tragedy and hope-a place that asks us to remember, honor, and keep going, no matter what. Seeking more information about the design, museum or the withdrawn proposals? Ask away in the chat section and I'll fill you in.

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Veelgestelde vragen

Hoe begin ik de tour?

Download na aankoop de AudaTours-app en voer je inwisselcode in. De tour is direct klaar om te starten – tik gewoon op afspelen en volg de GPS-geleide route.

Heb ik internet nodig tijdens de tour?

Nee! Download de tour voordat je begint en geniet er volledig offline van. Alleen de chatfunctie vereist internet. We raden aan om te downloaden via wifi om mobiele data te besparen.

Is dit een groepsrondleiding met gids?

Nee - dit is een audiotour met eigen gids. Je verkent zelfstandig op je eigen tempo, met audiovertelling via je telefoon. Geen tourguide, geen groep, geen schema.

Hoe lang duurt de tour?

De meeste tours duren 60-90 minuten, maar jij bepaalt het tempo volledig. Pauzeer, sla stops over of neem pauzes wanneer je wilt.

Wat als ik de tour vandaag niet kan afmaken?

Geen probleem! Tours hebben levenslange toegang. Pauzeer en hervat wanneer je wilt – morgen, volgende week of volgend jaar. Je voortgang wordt opgeslagen.

Welke talen zijn beschikbaar?

Alle tours zijn beschikbaar in meer dan 50 talen. Selecteer je voorkeurstaal bij het inwisselen van je code. Let op: de taal kan niet worden gewijzigd na het genereren van de tour.

Waar vind ik de tour na aankoop?

Download de gratis AudaTours-app uit de App Store of Google Play. Voer je inwisselcode in (verzonden per e-mail) en de tour verschijnt in je bibliotheek, klaar om te downloaden en te starten.

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Als je niet tevreden bent met de tour, betalen we je aankoop terug. Neem contact met ons op via [email protected]

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