Pulse 2019 [work] Info
"I was at a bar in Tampa last month, and a balloon popped," says "Marco," a 34-year-old survivor who asked to use a pseudonym. "I hit the floor. Twenty other people hit the floor. We looked at each other, and we all knew. We were reliving Pulse in a parking lot two hours away."
In December 2019, workers carefully removed the iconic "Pulse" sign from the marquee. It was placed in storage, awaiting a future museum display. For a moment, the street looked like any other strip of South Orange Avenue. pulse 2019
But the rainbow crosswalk at the intersection remained. The 49 trees planted in the nearby park still stood. And in the hearts of a city that learned to love louder, the beat of Pulse—the bass drum of resilience—continued to pulse. "I was at a bar in Tampa last
That year, the U.S. government finally added the Pulse shooting to the FBI’s list of hate crime investigations. While the shooter had been killed, the designation allowed the Bureau to study the attack as a targeted act of homophobia. We looked at each other, and we all knew
The plan was ambitious: a reflecting pool set within the footprint of the club’s walls, a "Survivors Wall," and a museum dedicated to the history of violence against queer spaces. For survivors like Patience Carter, who was shot in the leg and hid in the bathroom for three hours, the announcement was a double-edged sword.
"It’s hard to see blueprints for a garden where I thought I was going to die," Carter told the Orlando Sentinel in July 2019. "But if we don't build something there, they win. The hate wins." Nationally, 2019 marked a critical pivot in the conversation about the Pulse shooting. For two years following the tragedy, the "Orlando nightclub shooting" was often framed primarily as terrorism (the shooter pledged allegiance to ISIS) or gun violence. By 2019, the narrative had sharpened.

