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9/11 Memorial & Museum: Defining a memorial

The National September 11 Memorial & Museum is the nonprofit organization responsible for operating and overseeing the memorial being built at the World Trade Center site, and for programming and raising funds. Landor first donated our strategic expertise to the Memorial & Museum in July 2007 as part of our annual founder’s-day celebration. Our entire New York office participated in a Brand Driver™ workshop on the organization’s behalf. Its leaders were so impressed with our ideas that they called on us again in February 2009.

 

Challenge

As development of the memorial continued, leaders of the organization realized there were a number of practical issues with its identity. Its full legal name—The National September 11 Memorial & Museum at the World Trade Center—was too long and unwieldy for most applications. This caused various audiences to create their own shortened versions of the name, leading to inconsistent use and public confusion. The identity, which included the full legal name, was also limiting—it was hard to read, lacked impact, and did not reproduce well.

Solution

We created a new 9/11 memorial identity that is effective in its simplicity. This idea was the guiding principle of our work and informed the type choice, weight, color, and arrangement. Finding a balance between a compelling visual style and the proper tone and mood for the memorial was important. The typography is modern yet timeless, and the eleven is crafted from two austere blue rectangles that reference the shapes missing from the New York City skyline. Combining the date with the building silhouettes creates an essential connection in people’s minds. It is also elegant: a characteristic required by a historical institution whose role is remembrance and education.

The new identity is flexible and timeless, allowing for easy application across a variety of media.

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