Tribeca Pop-Up Turns 3.5 Million Epstein Pages Into Towering 'Memorial' Library
A stark new pop-up in Tribeca has turned the Department of Justices recent Jeffrey Epstein document dump into something you can literally walk through: more than 3.5 million pages printed, bound and stacked in a two-story gallery, an archive that organizers say weighs around 17,000 pounds. The temporary installation, formally titled the Donald J. Trump and Jeffrey Epstein Memorial Reading Room, opened this week with a wall-length timeline of Epsteins contacts and a floor of candles meant to represent more than 1,200 survivors. Entry is by appointment only and subject to age restrictions.
Organizers and the message
Run by the nonprofit Institute for Primary Facts, the reading room compiles the Justice Departments Epstein records into more than 3,700 printed volumes, a process that took roughly a month to print, bind and arrange, according to WIRED. David Garrett, the exhibits lead organizer, told the outlet, The evidence in this room is evidence of one of the most horrific crimes in American history. He and the group say the point is to give visitors a sense of the cases physical scale and to push for broader public accountability.
What you'll see inside
Inside, the space lays out a detailed timeline tracing Epsteins relationship with Donald Trump along one wall, flanked by shelves of bound volumes that climb across the two-story Tribeca gallery, per Time Out. Candles on the floor are arranged as a memorial and are meant to stand in for the Justice Departments estimate of more than 1,200 victims. The exhibit is open to visitors 16 and older by appointment only, and you have to RSVP to receive the exact address. According to Time Out, only credentialed journalists and members of law enforcement are allowed to read the unredacted files; everyone else is limited to viewing the timeline, the shelves and the memorial elements.
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Why it matters and the debate it stirs
Organizers argue the reading room forces a reckoning with the extent of Epsteins network by turning a digital archive into a monumental physical object, a pairing of timeline and documents that WIRED notes is very intentional. At the same time, lawmakers and advocates have blasted the DOJs document releases for inconsistent redactions and for withholding certain materials, concerns highlighted by AP News. Organizers say they tried to keep survivors at the center of the presentation and restricted direct reading of the unredacted files to credentialed press and law enforcement in an effort to avoid exposing victims identities.
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https://hoodline.com/2026/05/tribeca-pop-up-turns-3-5-million-epstein-pages-into-towering-memorial-library/