When it comes to the topic of the World Trade Centers and 9/11, there are many prolific figures that come to mind. People like former President George Bush, the brave men and women who sacrificed their lives to try to save others, and the infamous Philippe Petit, who performed a legendary stunt in 1974, when he performed acrobatics on a thin wire strung between the Twin Towers of the World Trade Center.

But there is also another figure that is even less known, and that is a man by the name of Minoru Yamasaki. Is it Oakland History Center's Facebook page remembered that he not only designed the World Trade Center, but another prolific building in Michigan, and was also a Michigan resident:
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Famed architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912-1986) lived much of his adult life in Oakland County’s Birmingham and Troy. He designed the World Trade Center in New York City and the Michigan Consolidated Gas Company building in Detroit.

The man would have been devastated to know what the eventual outcome of those buildings would be, as we remember those who lost their lives in the biggest tragedy that's taken place this millennium.

The Michigan Consolidated Gas Company building is still in use today as a National Bank at One Woodward Ave in Detroit, so at least there is one building of his that still stands and eerily reflects the same majesty the former Twin Towers once resembled.

Give it a pass today if you're on the east side of the state and remember the man who made the greatest buildings in America's history.

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See 20 Ways America Has Changed Since 9/11

For those of us who lived through 9/11, the day’s events will forever be emblazoned on our consciousnesses, a terrible tragedy we can’t, and won’t, forget. Now, two decades on, Stacker reflects back on the events of 9/11 and many of the ways the world has changed since then. Using information from news reports, government sources, and research centers, this is a list of 20 aspects of American life that were forever altered by the events of that day. From language to air travel to our handling of immigration and foreign policy, read on to see just how much life in the United States was affected by 9/11.

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