NYT: Consolidation for Homeland Security, Headaches for Preservationists
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Coming during a deep recession, the $3.4 billion, 4.5-million-square-foot public works project is being hailed as a boon to the local economy. The development, on a hill overlooking the United States Capitol and the Washington Monument, represents the federal government’s first significant presence in the District of Columbia’s blighted neighborhoods east of the Anacostia River.
But the mammoth undertaking has also drawn sharp criticism from preservationists, who say it will be devastating to a certified national historic landmark, the now-shuttered St. Elizabeths Hospital, a pioneering mental institution. Its residents over the years have included the poet and fascist propagandist Ezra Pound after World War II and, more recently, John Hinckley, who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981.
By EUGENE L. MEYER
Published: April 7, 2009
WASHINGTON —The federal government is about to undertake what the General Services Administration calls the largest public building project since construction of the Pentagon during World War II: consolidating the Department of Homeland Security on the historic site of a former mental hospital.
Published: April 7, 2009
WASHINGTON —The federal government is about to undertake what the General Services Administration calls the largest public building project since construction of the Pentagon during World War II: consolidating the Department of Homeland Security on the historic site of a former mental hospital.
Coming during a deep recession, the $3.4 billion, 4.5-million-square-foot public works project is being hailed as a boon to the local economy. The development, on a hill overlooking the United States Capitol and the Washington Monument, represents the federal government’s first significant presence in the District of Columbia’s blighted neighborhoods east of the Anacostia River.
But the mammoth undertaking has also drawn sharp criticism from preservationists, who say it will be devastating to a certified national historic landmark, the now-shuttered St. Elizabeths Hospital, a pioneering mental institution. Its residents over the years have included the poet and fascist propagandist Ezra Pound after World War II and, more recently, John Hinckley, who shot President Ronald Reagan in 1981.