Families and survivors have waited 9 years for Orlando to build a memorial for Pulse shooting victims. Now the city is moving forward with plans
For nearly a decade, the community in Orlando has been working to find a way to memorialize the 49 people who were killed when a gunman opened fire on Latin night at a popular gay nightclub, making it the worst mass shooting in modern US history at the time.
Now, as the city marks the nine-year anniversary of the tragedy at Pulse on June 12, city leaders and local activists say they have renewed hope that construction of a permanent memorial site will begin next June.
City engineers are currently reviewing proposals from design firms with plans to award a contract this summer.
The conceptual site design – created by an 18-member advisory board of survivors, loved ones of victims and community leaders – includes a memorial and reflection space, a survivors' tribute wall, a private gathering space for personal reflection, a walkway with columns honoring the 49 victims on rainbow glass panels, a healing garden and a visitor's center.
The Pulse Memorial is set to be completed by the end of 2027, according to the city. Admission to the memorial will be free, city officials say.
Orlando Mayor Buddy Dyer, who has been mayor since 2003, said he believes it's important to honor the victims and survivors.
'I think from the time it happened we knew that we wanted to memorialize the victims of the tragedy and have a place to reflect on what happened and to honor them,' Dyer told CNN. 'Hopefully that is what we will be able to achieve with the memorial, and I think it's important that it's on the site where it took place.'
The building that housed the club will be demolished, Dyer said.
Family members of the victims and survivors were able to walk through the building for the first time on Wednesday.
'For whatever closure and peace of mind that may provide somebody, we wanted to make that available,' Dyer said.
The city acquired the land where Pulse sits from the club's owners in December 2023 for $2 million, a city spokeswoman said.
The club owners had formed a non-profit called the onePulse Foundation following the shooting with the intention of raising funds to build a memorial and museum in honor of the victims, Dyer said. The foundation raised more than $20 million in the seven years it operated, according to CNN affiliate WFTV. Dyer said the money raised was largely spent on salaries of foundation workers.
The foundation's plans for both a memorial site and a museum that would cost at least $50 million to build proved to be 'very hard to achieve,' Dyer said. The onePulse Foundation dissolved in December 2023, according to WFTV.
'The magnitude that needed to be raised to create a museum overwhelmed the memorial process,' Dyer said.
Nancy Rosado, an advisory committee member and community activist, said the lack of progress on building the museum for nine years became a 'sticking point to healing' for survivors and the family and friends of victims.
Rosado, who offered grief counseling to many of the families impacted by the massacre, said people wanted to see their loved ones memorialized and have the trauma they endured from the shooting recognized in a meaningful way.
The city, she said, surveyed families and victims on what they wanted the memorial site to include.
One shared goal of the advisory committee was to ensure that the memorial honored both the gay and Latino communities who felt at home at the club before the shooting.
'I believe this will move them forward,' Rosado said. 'Let's get this component settled so you have a place to go to express your grief or to express joy at seeing your son or daughter's name or your friend's name on a wall. These elements are so healing and I'm really happy that we are at this particular point.'
Brandon Wolf, who survived the Pulse shooting after hiding in a bathroom, said it's past time for the community to have a 'respectful, permanent place to pay their respects.'
Wolf lost his two best friends, Christopher Andrew Leinonen and Juan Ramon Guerrero, in the attack.
'I am looking forward to a space that is worthy of the memory of my best friends – one where I can feel close to them and reflect on why we have to continue doing the work to honor them with action,' said Wolf, who is also national press secretary for the Human Rights Campaign.
But some families and community advocates say they oppose the advisory committee's design plan for a memorial site.
Zachary Blair, co-founder of the grassroots group Pulse Families and Survivors for Justice and a former Pulse patron, said he is disappointed that it's been nine years since the shooting and the city still has no permanent memorial for the victims of the tragedy at Pulse.
Blair said he created his group and started speaking out in 2019 when he learned the onePulse Foundation wanted to build a multi-million dollar museum. He said many families and survivors were against the museum because they believed it was 'turning a massacre into a tourist attraction.'
When onePulse dissolved in 2023, Blair said there was even more frustration that the foundation had raised millions of dollars, yet it still didn't build anything to memorialize those impacted by the attack.
'It's awful and it shows how much of a failure these people are,' Blair said.
In a statement published by CNN affiliate WESH in 2023, the onePulse board said it was 'challenged by unexpected and definitive events, among them the inability to secure a full donation of the Pulse nightclub site from the property owners and a global pandemic that brought with it critical limits and many unanticipated consequences, that ultimately impacted our fundraising efforts.'
'These unanticipated challenges have led the Trustees to vote late yesterday to initiate the transfer of our assets and the dissolution of the Foundation,' the statement read.
Blair said his group still believes the city's current memorial design is 'too garish, it's too touristy.'
'It's not a somber, reflective, dignified space where families and the public can come to pay their respects,' he said.
Christine Leinonen, Christopher Andrew Leinonen's mother, said she believes the existing plan is more of a tourist attraction that the city is using to bring in revenue from visitors spending money in Orlando.
Leinonen, also a co-founder of Pulse Families and Survivors for Justice, said she would prefer an outdoor memorial park with trees and a walking path. She said she applied to join the city's advisory committee but was not selected.
'We want a simplified, dignified, free, easy space,' Leinonen. 'A place where people can stop by while they are out walking. Let's not take a mass shooting … and make it into your form of collecting tourist dollars.'
Dyer acknowledged that there has been some division among families and survivors on how the Pulse memorial site should look. He called claims that the site will be a tourist attraction 'misinformation.'
Rosado said she feels confident the current plans for the memorial will be successful.
'Right now, people have such little faith and are braced for a shoe to drop somewhere along the line,' Rosado said. 'But I have a lot of faith that at this stage of the game with all the fanfare and all the commitment and time invested in this that we are going to see this memorial be a fitting tribute to those we lost that day.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Fast Company
41 minutes ago
- Fast Company
If you feel burned out, it might be time to work on quieting your ego
Take a quick look around the office or scan the names of your colleagues on Slack. Two-thirds of your coworkers are feeling burned out. Maybe you are, too. In a survey conducted for Moodle, an e-learning tool, 66% of workers are struggling, citing too much work, not enough resources, and a poor economy. While all these circumstances have a role in burnout, there may be an internal problem also in play, according to Jeffrey Hull and Margaret Moore, coauthors of The Science of Leadership: Nine Ways to Expand Your Impact. Your ego could be too noisy! 'A noisy ego describes a person who is constantly thinking about themselves,' Moore says. 'They're asking 'Am I OK?' 'Are they insulting me?' 'Am I being positioned correctly?' It's a self-referencing, self-oriented noise.' A quiet ego is a term coined by Jack Bauer, a professor of psychology at the University of Dayton, and Heidi Wayment, a professor of psychological sciences at Northern Arizona University. It describes a personality type characterized by being mindful, emotionally intelligent, compassionate, and growth-oriented.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
The News Journal took a chance on me. As I prepare to leave, I am so grateful
I started at The News Journal in January 2022 as a bright-eyed, bushy-tailed and wholly unprepared college student intern. Flash forward a few months and I was hired full time with The News Journal, working on the business and development beat, and sneaking some environmental stories in there when I could. I've learned a lot over the past three years, and it is with a burning bittersweet feeling in my heart that I announce that I will be departing The News Journal. The things that I've learned from the people who work here will be embedded in my brain forever – from what the right questions to ask are to what routes to avoid on my commute. Newsroom connections: I am who I am thanks to people I've met over the years in my newsroom The knowledge and insight of the people in this newsroom have changed me as a reporter, writer and as a person. I started at this job at 21 and am leaving it at 25. A lot has changed over the years, and people often ask me what my favorite story I wrote was. I hate that question. But here is my attempt to answer it. Writing about Jaquata Whittle, a Wilmington resident whose home was contaminated for over a decade until it collapsed, represented a huge turning point for me. As a science and environment nerd who often writes about development trends around Delaware, this story combined the things that I am passionate about with a beat that I have become especially familiar with. I first heard from Ms. Whittle via email. She told me her business and apartment above it were found to have potentially harmful contaminants. She had spent years fighting for answers about her home, all to no avail. One day before my scheduled meeting time, the parking garage behind her apartment collapsed – leaving her home condemned, a fact I did not realize until photographer Damian Giletto and I arrived on the scene. We had to change gears quickly. This story became not just a story of environmental contamination and an analysis of who bears the responsibility for its cleanup, but where Whittle and her son would live – and who would cover the costs. Reaching out to the city of Wilmington, Department of Natural Resources and Environmental Control, the former owner of the apartment, the Red Cross and more – painted a complex picture that, to me, shed light on the complications that arise in local and state government and how the lines of responsibility can blur despite everyone's best intentions. Another fact about me: I don't know much about sports. The only thing I know 100% for certain is that I am a Philadelphia fan through and through and that is a life sentence bestowed on me at birth. So, when I was tapped to assist with NFC Championship and Super Bowl coverage, I was honestly a little intimidated. I don't know anything about positions, play names or players that aren't regularly playing for the Eagles or dating Taylor Swift. When the Super Bowl rolled around, I was hoping and praying not only that my favorite team would win, but that I wouldn't have to interview angry Eagles fans for the rest of the night. Luckily, the Super Bowl ended with a resounding victory, and my Broad Street trip became a lot less daunting. Getting to talk to Philly fans, some neighbors I'd never met before, and hearing their excitement was one of the most fun assignments I had ever been on. A few weeks later, I similarly covered the Eagles parade. Getting to walk up and down Broad Street with no police intervention (thank you, press pass) was one of the coolest moments I have had as a Philadelphian and a reporter. I got to experience my city at its best, happiest and craziest – all while getting paid. I can confidently say none of those assignments felt like work. Thank you, Delaware Online, for the past three-plus years! And thank you, readers, for following along with me! This article originally appeared on Delaware News Journal: The News Journal's development reporter reflects on the past three years


Washington Post
an hour ago
- Washington Post
Silver Spring home melds art and history, for $2.4 million
When Stanley Asrael bought his Silver Spring home in 1962, the Tudor-style house with a soaring 20-foot beamed ceiling in the living room, friezes carved into its plaster walls and arched doorways was, as his daughter Lynn Grodzki tries to say as charitably as she can, 'out of shape.' But Asrael took the Latin inscription carved above the front door to heart: 'Cedere Numquam,' or never give up. So Asrael, now 101, and his wife, Evelyn, went to work, removing heavy drapes and bookcases along an exterior living room wall to create space to add three massive atrium windows. They filled the home, built in 1923, with artwork, much of it now donated to museums, and eventually added a large, modern primary suite with his-and-her bathrooms. 'It's really one of a kind. My wife was the one with the vision, but along the way I became invested in it as well,' said Asrael, who now lives next door with Grodzki in a contemporary house built in 2016 by her architect husband, Tadeo Grodzki. When asked his favorite part of the house, Asrael replied, 'All of it.' That starts with the curving polished stainless-steel handrails along the steps leading uphill to the stone and stucco house. Asrael commissioned them from Chevy Chase artist Barton Rubenstein, whose sculptures can be seen around the Washington area, including at American University and Sidwell Friends School. Stainless-steel beams in the addition's bedroom echo the handrails. Floating glass shelves in the living room were designed by former Renwick Gallery curator Michael Monroe. The house can be accessed from steps leading up from the cul-de-sac or by a glass tube elevator, which Asrael installed, that goes from the garage to the first floor. Real estate agent Leigh Reed said the kitchen was not renovated so new owners could choose their own design. Ornate carvings surround the stone living room fireplace. They also cover the dining room's coffered ceiling, which includes the crest of the Order of the Garter, a British order that dates to medieval times. 'It's hard to know what the developer was thinking when he decided to put these elements in. He was crazy about British history,' Grodzki said. 'So I feel like that sometimes the house kind of has a sense of humor.' A narrow, curving stairway leads to the second floor, which houses three bedrooms in addition to the primary suite on the first floor. A long balcony at the top of the stairs overlooks the living room. One bedroom features a cozy built-in wooden bed original to the house underneath a window that overlooks the yard, which borders Sligo Creek Park. While wallpaper was stripped from most rooms before the house was put on the market, one bedroom still includes the pink wallpaper and matching curtains it contained when occupied by one of the Asrael children. Back downstairs, the living room opens to a terrace shaded by a Japanese maple tree. An additional patio is accessible from one of the two family rooms in the house, and a path into the woods leads to Sligo Creek Park. 'We hope whoever buys it would be somebody who would appreciate what the house is and how unique it is,' Grodzki said. 'It needs somebody who comes through who has an artistic mind. It does not look like many other houses, if any other house.' 302 Ellsworth Drive, Silver Spring, Md.