THE PENTAGON


:''This article is about the United States military building. For the shape, see Pentagon.''
'The Pentagon' is the headquarters of the United States Department of Defense, located in Arlington, Virginia. As a symbol of the U.S. military, "the Pentagon" is often used metonymically to refer to the Department of Defense rather than the building itself.
Designed by architect George Bergstrom (1876 - 1955) and built by Philadelphia, Pennsylvania general contractor John McShain, the building was dedicated on January 15, 1943 after ground was broken for construction on September 11, 1941. It is the highest-capacity office building in the world and the third largest building in the world by floor area. It houses approximately 23,000 military and civilian employees and about 3,000 non-defense support personnel. It has five sides, five floors above ground (plus two basement levels), and five ring corridors per floor with a total of 17.5 miles (28.2 kilometers) of corridors.
At five acres (20,000 m²), the central plaza in the Pentagon is the world's largest "no-salute, no-cover" area[1] (an area exempt from the normal rule that, when out of doors, U.S. military personnel must wear hats and salute superior officers). The open space in the center is informally known as "ground zero," a nickname originating during the Cold War and based on the presumption that the Soviet Union would target one or more nuclear missiles at this central location. At the center of this plaza is the "Ground Zero Cafe," a snack bar. The 'Ground Zero Cafe' bites the dust Lisa Hoffman At one point, a target was painted on the ground as a bit of gallows humor, but after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, it was painted over.
Just south of the Pentagon are Pentagon City and Crystal City, extensive shopping and high-density residential districts in Arlington. Arlington National Cemetery is to the north. The Washington Metro Pentagon station is also located at the Pentagon, on the Blue and Yellow Lines. The Pentagon is surrounded by the complex Pentagon road network.[2]
The Pentagon has between 700 and 800 bases around the world, in 63 countries.[3]
1945 map of the Pentagon road network, including present-day State Route 27 and part of the Shirley Highway


Contents
Construction
History
Peace protests
Renovation
September 11, 2001
Pentagon Memorial
Food Services
Navigating the building
Tours
Facts and figures
Land
Parking
Main building
Numbers
Zip Codes
References
External links

Construction


Northwest exposure of the Pentagon's construction underway, July 1, 1942.

"Temporary" buildings in 1943; they were not torn down until 1970

Prior to the construction of the Pentagon, the War Department was housed in a series of "temporary" buildings erected during World War I which nearly covered the National Mall. Ground was broken for the Pentagon on September 11, 1941, with construction completed in approximately sixteen months at a cost of $83 million. A minimal amount of steel was used in construction, which was in short supply during World War II. 680,000 tons of sand, dredged from the Potomac River, were used in the reinforced concrete structure.[4]
Its unusual shape results from the fact that its originally intended site, Arlington Farms, fronted on Arlington Ridge Road and the Arlington Memorial Bridge approach, which intersected at an angle of approximately 108 degrees (the angle of a regular pentagon).[5] President Franklin D. Roosevelt had it constructed at its current location because he didn't want the new building to obstruct the view of Washington, D.C. from Arlington Cemetery,[6] but the building retained its pentagonal shape because a major redesign at that stage would have been costly and because Roosevelt liked the design. Freed of the constraints of the asymmetric Arlington Farms site, however, it was modified into a regular pentagon.[7]

History


Peace protests

Military police keep back Vietnam War protesters during their sit-in on October 21, 1967, at the mall entrance to the Pentagon.

During the late 1960s the Pentagon became a focus for peace protests against the Vietnam War. In one of the better known incidents, on October 21, 1967, some 35,000 anti-war protesters organized by the National Mobilization Committee to End the War in Vietnam, gathered for a demonstration at the Defense Department (the "March on the Pentagon"), where they were confronted by some 2,500 armed soldiers. Abbie Hoffman satiricaly declared the group's intention of levitating the Pentagon 300 feet by means of meditation, wobbling it once in mid-air in order to exorcise evil spirits. Several protesters maintain to this day that they were briefly successful in this endeavor.
(This became the basis for the claim in the metafictional novel ''Illuminatus!'' by Robert Shea and Robert Anton Wilson that the soldiers prevented the levitation because it also would have exorcised the Lovecraftian Outer God Yog-Sothoth, deliberately entrapped within the Pentagon by the Illuminati.)
On May 19 1972, the American radicals known as the Weather Underground Organization successfully planted and exploded a bomb in a Pentagon restroom in retaliation for the Nixon administration's bombing attacks on Hanoi during the final stages of the Vietnam War.
On March 17 2007, an estimated at 10,000 to 15,000 protested the Iraq War.[8] The protesters marched from the Lincoln Memorial, down Route 27 to the Pentagon North Parking Lot.
Renovation

Main articles: Pentagon Renovation Program

As originally built, most Pentagon office space consisted of open bays which spanned an entire ring. These offices used cross-ventilation from operable windows instead of air conditioning for cooling. Gradually, bays were subdivided into private offices with many using window air conditioning units.
Since 1998, the Pentagon has been undergoing a major renovation, known as the Pentagon Renovation Program. This program, scheduled to be completed in 2010, involves the complete gutting and reconstruction of the entire building in phases to bring the building up to modern standards, removing asbestos, improving security and providing greater efficiency for Pentagon tenants. Recently, the process of sealing all of the building's windows began.
The new space will include a return to open office bays, with a new Universal Space Plan of standardized office furniture and partitions developed by Studios Architecture.[9]
In the center courtyard a refreshment stand called the "Ground Zero Cafe", is being replaced with a more modern restaurant.
September 11, 2001

Main articles: American Airlines Flight 77

Security camera image of the moment that American Airlines Flight 77 hit the Pentagon.[10]

Picture of the Pentagon before part of the outer wall collapsed on 9/11.

The damaged section of the Pentagon in October 2001.

9/11 Tribute of Lights at the Pentagon.

Sixty years to the day after groundbreaking on the Pentagon, the September 11, 2001 attacks occurred. American Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the west side of the Pentagon after being hijacked, killing all aboard as well as over a hundred people within the Pentagon. The flight penetrated three of the five rings of the Pentagon. Because the affected area was under renovation at the time, several offices were unoccupied, sparing many lives. The aircraft struck on the edge between two sections—one of which had just finished being upgraded.
Contractors involved in the Pentagon Renovation Program were also charged with the task of rebuilding the damaged section of the Pentagon following the attacks. This additional project was named the "Phoenix Project", with the goal of having the outermost offices in the damaged section occupied again by September 11, 2002. Part of the pre-attack renovation had involved adding improved security features, including walls and windows with greater blast resistance. An initial analysis suggested that the section's improvements had saved lives, enabling more people to evacuate. Repairs included demolition of the damaged areas, complete rebuilding of the area that had previously been renovated, and reconstruction of the shell of the unrenovated section. The first Pentagon tenants whose offices were damaged in the attack began moving back in on August 15, 2002, nearly a month ahead of schedule.[11][12]
Before the September 11, 2001 attacks, an escalator ran from the Metro station to the Pentagon lobby. After the attack this escalator was blocked off and later removed as part of the Pentagon Renovation Program.
Pentagon Memorial

Main articles: Pentagon Memorial

A memorial is being constructed at The Pentagon in memory of those who died at The Pentagon and on American Airlines Flight 77.[13][14] Construction of the memorial is scheduled for completion by September 2008.[15]
For the 5th anniversary of the September 11, 2001 attacks, a memorial of 184 beams of light shone up from the center courtyard of the Pentagon, one light for every victim of the attack.

Food Services


The Pentagon has many of its own fast food operations, including a Subway, McDonald's, and Taco Bell restaurants, operated by the Navy Exchange.

Navigating the building


There is a concourse on the southeast side of the second floor of the building. It contains a mini-shopping mall. Located near the Metro bus and rail stations, this is the main entrance for visitors.
Floors in The Pentagon are lettered "B" for Basement and "M" for Mezzanine, both of which are below ground level. The concourse is located on the second floor at the metro entrance. Above ground floors are numbered 1 to 5.
The concentric rings are designated from the center out as "A" through "E" (with addition "F" and "G" in the basement). "E" Ring offices are the only ones with outside views and are generally occupied by senior officials.
Office numbers go clockwise around each of the rings and range from 100 to 1099. The corridors that radiate out from the central courtyard are numbered 1 to 10, beginning with the Concourse's south end. Thus office 2B315 is on the second floor, B ring, between corridors 2 and 3. Each numbered radial corridor intersects with the corresponding numbered group of offices (for example, corridor 5 divides the 500 series office block).

Tours


There are a number of historical displays in the building, particularly in the "A" and "E" rings. In 1976, the Pentagon began offering guided tours to the general public, as part of the American Bicentennial.[16] Tours for the general public were suspended after the September 11, 2001 attacks, and are now only available on a pre-arranged basis to veterans and other groups.

Facts and figures



★ Construction began September 11, 1941.

★ Construction was completed on January 15, 1943.

★ Total cost of project (including outside facilities) was $83,000,000 (over $940 million in 2005 dollars).
Land


★ Total land area: 583 acres (2.4 km²)

★ Location: 38.87099°N, 77.05596°W

★ Cost: $2,245,000

★ Area covered by Pentagon bldg: 29 acres (117,000 m²)

★ Area of center court: 5 acres (20,000 m²)

★ Access highways built: 30 miles (48 km)

★ Overpasses and bridges built: 21
Parking


★ Parking space: 67 acres (270,000 m²)

★ Capacity (vehicles): 8,770
Main building


★ Cost of building: $49,600,000

★ Gross floor area: 6,636,360 ft² (620,000 m²)

★ Cubic contents: 77,015,000 ft³ (2,000,000 m³)

★ Length of each outer wall: '921 ft (280 m)'

★ Height of building: '77 ft 3.5 in' (24 m)

★ Number of floors, plus mezzanine and basement: seven, five above ground, two below

★ Total length of corridors: 17.5 miles (28 km)
Numbers


★ Stairways: 131

★ Escalators: 19 - many more than that now that renovation is ongoing

★ Elevators: 13

★ Windows: 7,754

★ Rest rooms: 284 ("It was constructed with twice the number of bathrooms needed for the number of employees — segregated Virginia required separate facilities for "white" and "colored" persons.") Virginia places.

★ Fixtures: 4,900

★ Drinking fountains: 691 (''See "Rest rooms" above'')

★ Clocks installed: 4,200

★ Light fixtures: 16,250

★ Daily lamp replacements: 250

★ Total glass area: 7.1 acres (309,276 square feet)

★ Telephone cable: 100,000 miles

★ Telephone calls made daily: 200,000

★ Pieces of mail handled monthly by the Defense Post Office: 1,200,000
Zip Codes


★ Even though the building is located in Virginia, the United States Postal Service requires that "Washington, D.C." be used in conjunction with the six ZIP Codes assigned to it:


★ 20301 - Secretary of Defense


★ 20310 - Army


★ 20318 - Joint Chiefs of Staff


★ 20330 - Air Force


★ 20350 - Navy


★ 20380 - Marine Corps
The Pentagon, south parking lot side

References


1. Dodona Manor - Docent's Corner
2. Mixing Bowl Interchange Complex
3. http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=viewArticle&code=DUF20070504&articleId=5564
4. How The Pentagon Got Its Shape (Gallery)
5. Bureau of Public Roads memorandum, October 25, 1960.
6. General Information
7. How the Pentagon Got Its Shape Steve Vogel
8. "4 Years After Start of War, Anger Reigns", Washington Post, 2007-03-17 page A1
9. Renovation of the Pentagon. Retrieved Oct. 7, 2006.
10. Flight 77, Video 2
11. Pentagon Renovation Program
12. Americas: Pentagon staff reclaim destroyed offices
13. Pentagon Memorial Web Site.
14. Official Press release at the United States Department of Defense.
15. For Pentagon Memorial, the Power of Touch
16. Penetrating the Pentagon Stephen Stewart

External links



The Pentagon website

Pentagon Renovation Program

The Worldwide Network of US Military Bases

Navigating the Pentagon

Great Buildings Online - The Pentagon

How the Pentagon Got Its Shape - The Washington Post, May 26, 2007


★ Satellite image from Mapygon

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