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Essential
Architecture- Washington D.C.
National Building Museum (Pension
Building) |
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architect
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Montgomery C. Meigs |
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location
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Washington, DC |
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date
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1887 |
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style
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a mixture of Renaissance Revival and
Romanesque, with classical interior elements |
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construction
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brick |
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type
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museum (former Pension Bureau building) |
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The National Building Museum's Corinthian columns are among the
largest in the world measuring 75 ft. (23 m) tall and 8 ft. (2.4 m) in
diameter.

The Pension Building (National Building Museum)
The National Building Museum is a museum in Washington, D.C. dedicated
to "architecture, design, engineering, construction, and urban
planning." It was created by an act of Congress in 1980, and is a
private non-profit institution. The museum is located adjacent to the
National Law Enforcement Officers Memorial and the Judiciary Square
Metro station.
The museum's large open space hosts various temporary exhibits,
such as an Amish barn raising, types of fencing, and green design. It
also has an excellent bookstore.
It is housed in the former Pension Bureau building, a brick
structure completed in 1887 and designed by Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs,
the U.S. Army quartermaster general. The building is notable for several
architectural features including the spectacular interior columns and a
frieze sculpted by Caspar Buberl stretching around the exterior of the
building depicting Civil War soldiers in scenes somewhat reminiscent of
those on Trajan's Column in Rome as well as the Horsemen Frieze of the
Parthenon in Athens. The vast interior, measuring 316 ft. (96 m) × 116
ft. (35 m), has been used to hold inauguration balls since the
building's construction and a Presidential Seal is set into the floor
near the south entrance.
Following the end of the Civil War the United States Congress
passed legislation that greatly extended the scope of pension coverage
for both veterans and for their survivors and dependents, notably their
widows and orphans. This ballooned the number of staff that was needed
to implement and administer the new benefits' system to over 1,500 and
quickly required a new building out of which to run it all. Meigs was
chosen to design and construct the new building and in doing so broke
away from the established Greco-Roman models that had been the basis of
government buildings in Washington D.C. up until then, as was to
continue following the Pension Building's completion. Meigs based his
design on Italian Renaissance precedents, notably Rome's Palazzo Farnese
and the Palazzo della Cancelleria.
Included in his design was a sculpted frieze executed by Caspar
Buberl. Since creating a work of sculpture of that size was well out of
Meigs' budget he had Buberl create 28 different scenes, totaling 69 feet
(21 m) in length, which were then mixed and slightly modified to create
the continuous 1,200 foot (365 m) long parade that includes over 1,300
figures. Because of the way that the 28 sections are modified and mixed
up, it is only by careful examination that the frieze reveals its self
to be the same figures repeated over and over. The sculpture includes
infantry, navy, artillery, cavalry and medical components as well as a
good deal of the supply and quartermaster functions, since that was
where Meigs served during the Civil War.
Meigs's correspondence with Buberl (see Joyce McDaniel) reveal
that Meigs insisted that a black teamster — "must be a negro, a
plantation slave, freed by war" — be included in the quartermaster
panel. This figure was ultimately to assume a position in the center,
over the west entrance to the building.
When Philip Sheridan was asked to comment on the building his
reply echoed the sentiment of much of the Washington establishment of
the day, that the only thing that he could find wrong with the building
was that it was fireproof. A similar quote is also attributed to William
Tecumseh Sherman so the story might be apocryphal.
The completed building, sometimes referred to as "Meigs Old Red
Barn" was created by using more than 1,500,000 bricks, which, according
to the wit of the day, were each counted by the parsimonious Meigs.
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links
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National Building Museum |
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www.essential-architecture.com
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