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Posted: 2018-05-09T21:56:05Z | Updated: 2018-05-09T21:56:05Z Here's A Look At Orlando's Interim Pulse Nightclub Memorial | HuffPost

Here's A Look At Orlando's Interim Pulse Nightclub Memorial

A temporary monument to the victims of the 2016 mass shooting was unveiled Tuesday.

An interim memorial for the  49 people  killed in the 2016 Pulse nightclub attack  opened to the public Tuesday in Orlando, Florida. 

The onePulse Foundation , which is managing the planning and design of a permanent memorial and museum on the site of the now closed nightclub, debuted the interim monument in an emotional ceremony attended by Pulse survivors, first responders and victims’ loved ones. 

The site includes interactive wall exhibits, lighted benches and a steel fence where visitors can leave messages and mementos. The now iconic Pulse sign remains in place, and an adjacent fountain that was badly damaged by gunfire in the attack nearly two years ago has been restored. 

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The temporary memorial includes interactive wall exhibits, lighted benches and a steel fence where visitors can leave messages and mementos.
Courtesy of onePulse Foundation

Pulse owner Barbara Poma, who now serves as the executive director of the onePulse Foundation, called the interim memorial “a true testament to how people continue to respond.” 

“It is just utterly heartwarming how everyone still wants to be a part of what happens here,” she said, according to a press release. “Orlandoans truly love their city, their people, their family.” 

She stressed that the current design is intended to be temporary, adding, “It is our legacy for all future generations . This is part of both Orlando and world history, and it’s going to take all of us to get it done right.”

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The memorial is intended to be in place for up to two years, with three possible one-year extensions.
Courtesy of onePulse Foundation

Democratic state Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith  echoed that sentiment, telling The Orlando Sentinel, “As a gay Latino man who lives here in Orlando, there’s no way that this tragedy couldn’t have been deeply, deeply personal for me. We can’t forget what happened here on the darkest day of our city’s history.”

Poma announced plans for a memorial and museum on the site of the massacre last May. A January survey, however, found that Orlando residents were divided nearly evenly  over how to properly commemorate the tragedy.

The public got its first look at renderings for the interim memorial in February, and construction on the site began that month. It’s intended to be in place for up to two years, with three possible one-year extensions. 

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