The Pentagon, headquarters of the Department of Defense,
is one of the world's largest office buildings. It is twice
the size of the Merchandise Mart in Chicago, and has three
times the floor space of the Empire State Building in New
York. The National Capitol could fit into any one of the
five wedge-shaped sections. There are very few people throughout
the United States who do not have some knowledge of the
Pentagon. Many have followed news stories emanating from
the defense establishment housed in this building. However,
relatively few people have had the opportunity to visit
with us.
The Pentagon is virtually a city in itself. Approximately
23,000 employees, both military and civilian, contribute
to the planning and execution of the defense of our country.
These people arrive daily from Washington, D.C. and its
suburbs over approximately 30 miles of access highways,
including express bus lanes and one of the newest subway
systems in our country. They ride past 200 acres of lawn
to park approximately 8,770 cars in 16 parking lots; climb
131 stairways or ride 19 escalators to reach offices that
occupy 3,705,793 square feet. While in the building, they
tell time by 4,200 clocks, drink from 691 water fountains,
utilize 284 rest rooms, consume 4,500 cups of coffee, 1,700
pints of milk and 6,800 soft drinks prepared or served by
a restaurant staff of 230 persons and dispensed in 1 dining
room, 2 cafeterias, 6 snack bars, and an outdoor snack bar.
The restaurant service is a privately run civilian operation
under contract to the Pentagon.
Over 200,000 telephone calls are made daily through phones
connected by 100,000 miles of telephone cable. The Defense
Post Office handles about 1,200,000 pieces of mail monthly.
Various libraries support our personnel in research and
completion of their work. The Army Library alone provides
300,000 publications and 1,700 periodicals in various languages.
Stripped of its occupants, furniture and various decorations,
the building alone is an extraordinary structure. Built
during the early years of World War II, it is still thought
of as one of the most efficient office buildings in the
world. Despite 17.5 miles of corridors it takes only seven
minutes to walk between any two points in the building.
The original site was nothing more than wasteland, swamps
and dumps. 5.5 million cubic yards of earth, and 41,492
concrete piles contributed to the foundation of the building.
Additionally, 680,000 tons of sand and gravel, dredged from
the nearby Potomac River, were processed into 435,000 cubic
yards of concrete and molded into the Pentagon form. The
building was constructed in the remarkably short time of
16 months and completed on January 15, 1943 at an approximate
cost of $83 million. It consolidated 17 buildings of the
War Department and returned its investment within seven
years.
We hope this information will serve to eliminate some of
the myths surrounding the Pentagon and give an appreciation
of the size of the building.
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