New York - A tribute center that’s been hosting tours led by volunteers with personal ties to the Sept. 11 attacks is moving and expanding.

“Our mission here is to give a voice to those who lost their voice,” said co-founder Lee Ielpi, a retired firefighter who had carried his firefighter son’s body out of the debris. “Here, it’s firsthand knowledge, from the people who experienced it.”

On Tuesday, he joined a news conference to announce plans for the future of the privately funded Sept. 11 Tribute Center. It’s currently housed on the site of a former deli that was destroyed just feet from one of the collapsed towers and next to the firehouse that lost five men. The center has drawn as many as half a million visitors a year.

By spring 2017, it plans to reopen a few blocks away in a 40,000-square-foot space.... Read More: VIN