The Pentagon 75 Years: The Building. The People. The Institution. 1943 - 2018

Page 60

PENTAGON75YEARS

THE PENTAGON IN PEACE AND WAR By Craig Collins

E

ven today, 75 years later, the numbers are staggering: The massive building, constructed to bring the U.S. Department of War under a single roof in the lead-up to World War II, sprawls over 29 acres, an area larger than the footprint of the Great Pyramid of Cheops, and is still the largest of any office building in the world, capable of containing five U.S. Capitol Buildings. The Pentagon sits atop 41,492 piles driven into the bottomlands of the Potomac River, from which 680,000 tons of sand and gravel were dredged to make concrete for the project. The building’s interior contains 6.5 million square feet, about half of which is used as office space. Its lawns total 200 acres and its 67-acre parking lot can accommodate 8,770 vehicles. The total length of its corridors is more than 17 miles. 23,000 military and civilian employees of the Department of Defense work there, along with about 3,000 support personnel – a population roughly equal to that of New London, Connecticut. Six ZIP codes are assigned to it. It was designed and built with great speed and pragmatism, about 17 months

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from conception to dedication – slightly longer than it takes some contractors today to finish a new house. In spite of – or maybe because of – its designers’ prosaic avoidance of embellishment, the Pentagon hasn’t suffered the ignominy directed at other hastily conceived government buildings. To the rest of the world, it’s more than a building: It’s a symbol of immovable might, of the dominance of the U.S. military. “The Pentagon” is today a metonym, a name that stands in for the entire military and all of its service branches. In July 1941, just after Nazi Germany had expanded its aggression beyond Europe and invaded the Soviet Union, the U.S. War Department was a bureaucracy of 24,000 people scattered among 23 buildings in and around Washington, D.C. The War Department was in the midst of an unprecedented peacetime mobilization; the draft bill, approved months earlier, had already increased the ranks of the Army to about a million-and-a-half soldiers, and it was estimated that the number of people needed to administer and support this Army would swell to 30,000 by the end of the year.

The speakers platform of the Pentagon building during the Christmas exercise, Arlington, Virginia, Dec. 24, 1942.


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Articles inside

Backward Is The Way Forward: Touring the Pentagon

10min
pages 154-155, 157, 159-160

Protecting Those who Protect the Nation

11min
pages 144-145, 147, 149, 151, 153

Lost and Found, Navigating the Pentagon

4min
pages 141, 143

The Five-Sided Neighbor: How the Pentagon Fits into Northern Virginia and Washington D.C.

11min
pages 130-131, 133, 135, 137, 139

The Pentagon 9/11 Memorial

4min
pages 124-125, 127, 129

The Phoenix Project

11min
pages 114-115, 117-119, 121-122

Strength, Honor, Fortitude: The Pentagon's 9/11 First Responders

15min
pages 102-103, 105-107, 109, 111, 113

Rebuilding the Pentagon: The Pentagon Renovation Project, 1993-2011

15min
pages 92-93, 95, 97, 99, 101

U.S. Navy

1min
page 91

U.S. Marine Corps

1min
page 89

U.S. Coast Guard

1min
page 87

U.S. Army

1min
page 85

U.S. Air Force

1min
page 82

A United Force

6min
pages 76-77, 79, 81

The Pentagon's Hall of Heroes

3min
pages 73, 75

The Pentagon in Peace and War

17min
pages 60-61, 63-65, 67, 69-71, 73

Interview: Secretary Chuck Hagel, U.S. Secretary of Defense 2013-2015

15min
pages 50-51, 53, 55-56, 58

Building An Icon

14min
pages 42-43, 45-47, 49

Interview: Secretary Leon Panetta, U.S. Secretary of Defense 2011-2013

10min
pages 34-35, 37-39, 41

A New Home

15min
pages 22-23, 25-27, 29, 31-32
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