One curious aspect of a visit to the capitol is the sense
that one is not a tourist, visiting a strange city, but
rather a citizen, reporting for duty, to upload the official
version of America, represented through a dizzying array
of displays. Like the buffet table at an inaugural ball,
the nation is served up - for free, no less - in a variety
of dishes and confections. Some are bite-sized and some
are meaty. Theres the largest museum in the country,
with its great themed halls, spanning the architectural
spectrum from neoclassical to I. M. Pei, and there are carefully
crafted little exhibits installed in lobbies and visitors
centers of government entities, private institutions, and
politically-minded commercial organizations. Together, the
displays of the Capitol region provide an interpretive feast
for the visitor, and something to chew on long after returning
to the nations landscape.
Most museum-going visitors to DC begin at the museum of
America, the Smithsonian Institution, with its dozen display
centers in the Capitol. At the Castle, the headquarters
of the institution, museum-goers will find a visitor center,
a sort of virtual museum-for-the-Museum, with touchscreen
kiosks that provide an orientation to the museums
various locations, an information desk, and main offices
upstairs. Little remains visible from the days when the
Castle housed the entire collection of the Smithsonian,
when its exhibit halls were a jumble of natural history
displays, terrariums, and curious artifacts, while upstairs,
apartments housed the museums director and visiting
scientists. The institutions original benefactor,
James Smithson, never set foot in America, until he had
both of them in his grave. His tomb is on the grounds of
the Castle.
|
|
A photograph in the vestibule of the Castle shows
how that very section of the original museum used
to look, with terrariums, vitrines, framed pictures,
and specimens. On the wall in the image is a peacock
feather fan. Above the image is the same fan, in the
same place, a relic from the days when the Smithsonian
was a cabinet of natural history curiosities.
CLUI photo
|
From this symbolic museum and
tomb complex, visitors to the Smithsonian can fan out to
the themed exhibition center of their choice. Close-by,
the Arts and Industries Building was the first addition
to what would become the continuously expanding Smithsonian.
It is a Victorian exhibition hall that contains rotating
exhibits on a wide range of subjects (boxing and Margaret
Mead were recently portrayed in separate exhibits) and features
a model train set circling a miniature Smithsonian Castle.
When this building opened, in 1881, it was called the National
Museum Building. It was renamed when the natural history
displays were extracted, and moved across the Mall, in 1910,
into the new National Museum of Natural History.
In 1964, the Smithsonians
750,000 square foot National Museum of History and Technology
opened next to the Natural History Museum. This museum is
a modernist monolith that was among the last structures
designed by McKim, Mead and White. It broke with the neoclassical
and Victorian fashion favored by the builders of Important
Buildings in Washington. Though its name has changed to
the National Museum of American History, exhibits on technology
dominate the basement level of the museum, covering the
early railways, civil engineering, the Bomb, the SAGE system,
computers, the internet, and even Fresh Kills landfill,
as interpreted by garbologist Bill Rathje, in an entertaining
touchscreen display.
The 1970s saw two new Smithsonian
museums on the Mall, the nations modern and contemporary
art museum, the Hirshhorn Museum and Sculpture Park, and
the Air and Space Museum, conceived to display aircraft
after World War Two, but not built until 1976. Displays
in the Air and Space museum are battle-ready, for the throngs
of school kids that course through the cavernous interior.
Though full-sized aircraft, space capsules, and satellites
are featured, the museum is building a new, 760,000 square
foot facility at Dulles airport, scheduled to open in late
2003 where, among 200 other aircraft, the Enola Gay will
be able to be displayed whole, instead of in pieces as it
was originally displayed in a controversial exhibit in 1995
at the Air and Space Museum. In the meantime, the Enola
Gay is kept at the Institutions Garber facility in
Suitland, Maryland, a town just outside DC which, as the
home of several vast Smithsonian curatorial complexes as
well as possibly the largest federal records archive, can
claim to have more storage space than nearly any other place
in America.
|
|
The attic for "Americas Attic," incidentally,
is just outside Washington DC in Suitland Maryland,
where the Smithsonian operates a number of curatorial,
reseach, and storage facilities, including the Museum
Support Center, where rows of metal sheds contain
acres of storage for the museum.
CLUI photo
|
Off the Mall, the National Building
Museum is a truly remarkable structure and display center,
unrelated to the Smithsonian. The Victorian pavilion, built
originally as an office building in 1882, features a grand
interior hall, nearly 15 stories tall, with two levels of
exhibit halls off balconied hallways. The focus of the museum,
founded in 1985, is American architecture, urban planning,
construction, engineering, and design. Among the more than
a hundred exhibits it has presented over the years are such
classics as Stay Cool! Air Conditioning America, On the
Job: Design and the American Office, World War Two and the
American Dream, and an exhibit about the Bechtel Corporation,
which had a purity of perspective sometimes lacking from
museum exhibits, as it was mostly funded by the Bechtel
Corporation.
|
|
The wondrous Great Hall of the National Building
Museum is sometimes used for presidential inaugural
balls. The eight Corinthian columns are among the
largest interior columns in the world.
CLUI photo
|
Despite the National Building
Museums erroneous claim of being "the only cultural
institution in the country exclusively dedicated to presenting
exhibitions and public programs about Americas built
environment," they certainly do stand tall in the interpretive
arena of America.
|
|
Among the things to do at the National Geographic
is to have an image of your head superimposed on a
selection of backdrops that are like National Geographic
Magazine covers.
CLUI photo
|
The National Geographic Society
headquarters is another must see interpretive site in the
nations capitol. The ground floors of the two office
buildings occupied by the Society are open to the public,
and contain lecture halls, where several times a month,
the Societys roster of modern-day explorers and adventurers
return from the field to present their findings and relate
their experiences. There are also numerous display areas,
as is befitting the "worlds largest non-profit
educational organization." The Explorers Hall, the
"window into the adventurous world of National Geographic,"
is the principal display area, and is a highly designed,
immersive exhibit space, with some of the most state-of-the-art
interactive museum displays to be found in the Capitol district.
The colorful, wide-angle photography that is the hallmark
of the organizations magazine, is splashed all over
the place, as floor-to-ceiling wall prints, formal, framed
pictures, and everything in between. Display cases show
artifacts and specimens from the field, such as the backpack,
shorts, and broken sandals worn by Michael Fay, on his recent
2,000 mile walk across Africa, part of the "Megatransect:
Trek Across Africa" exhibit.
Also on the ground floor of the
Society is a television studio, with windows overlooking
the street. It is used to record host segments, anchor commentary,
and interviews for the National Geographic television channel,
which broadcasts nationwide via cable, and locally by playing
on plasma screens and loudspeakers facing the sidewalk.
|
|
Rhetorical questions abound at the Patuxent Wildlife
Refuge Visitor Center.
CLUI photo
|
The Federal region, of course,
extends beyond the limits of the District of Columbia, into
the DC suburbs of Maryland and Virginia, where visitors
will continue to find unusually instructive, entertaining,
and superlative display venues of national import.
What must be the most elaborate
and startling wildlife refuge visitor center in the country
can be found at the Patuxent Research Refuge, a 13,000 acre
woodland north of DC, and the largest natural area in close
proximity to the city. Patuxent was the nations first
major wildlife research station, established in the 1930s
(adjacent to the larger National Agricultural Research Center),
and it has a history of research on bird migration and waterfowl
habitat. The refuge more than doubled in size in the 1990s
as it absorbed some of the NSAs Fort Meade, including
several firing ranges still in use today. With the institutionalization
of basic environmental principles in the 1970s, educational
outreach became part of the mission of the Center, and the
U. S. Fish and Wildlife Service, which operates the facilities
at Patuxent, began planning a "National Wildlife Visitor
Center" to reflect their programs, and as an attraction
to draw the public away from the restricted areas of the
refuges lands. The largest science and environmental
education center in the Department of the Interior finally
opened in 1994, though much of the alarmist environmental
urgency of the 1970s remains intact in the displays.
The visitor center is a labyrinth
of highly designed display spaces, which create an atmosphere
of immediate environmental doom amid a haunted and fleeting
natural world. After a large, bright lobby area, visitors
enter into the first darkened room and are assaulted by
several kinetic displays with flashing rear screen projections,
backlit image panels, and scrolling LED text displays warning
of overpopulation, depletion of resources, starvation, contamination,
land exploitation, and pollution, amid frantic sounds of
machines grinding away at the earth. Unanswered questions
leap out of the displays: "What is Happening to Our
Wetlands?" "What is Happening to Our Oceans?"
"How do We Feed the World?"
|
|
Some mysteries are explained at the Patuxent Wildlife
Refuge Visitor Center.
CLUI photo
|
This initial chamber of horrors
sets the tone for the rest of the displays, which describe
environmental research programs by depicting field scientists
with probes, headphones, and telemetry equipment, and celebrate
the majesty and mystery of nature through darkened hallways
with lurking surreal vitrines that resemble cryogenic alien
freezers. Numerous touchscreen consoles are set up in command
and control center-like rooms within rooms, and sounds of
howling wolves and panicked birds fills the air. Near the
exit, an immersive kaleidescoped video display swirls phantasmagorically,
presenting the option of two futures (like the Theater of
Time at the Luxor Casino): environmental holocaust, or Arcadian
paradise. You decide.
Next to the refuge is the USDAs
Beltsville Agricultural Research Center, a sprawling, 7,000
acre research farm with fields, woodlands, and numerous
laboratory complexes. With additional off-site offices and
programs in other states, BARC claims to be the largest
and most diversified agricultural research complex in the
world, conducting research into large-scale farming practices
including beef, pig, and poultry raising, pesticides, nutrition,
and other programs of interest to the American agricultural
industry. An on-site visitor center explains some of what
they do through image, text, and artifact displays, with
titles such as "Integrated Pest Management," "Fungi
in our Lives," and "Soy!"
|
|
The Agricultural Research Centers visitor center
uses a simple static panel display method, with text
and image panels and artifacts, in a cozy building
that is a historic log structure built by the Civilian
Conservation Corps during the Depression.
CLUI photo
|
The National Air and Space Administration
operates visitor centers at most of its major production
and R&D sites. In Greenbelt, Maryland, at the Goddard
Space Flight Center, the visitor center overlooks the multifaceted
industrial complex from the edge of the restricted area.
The Goddard Center was the first major NASA R&D site
devoted to space exploration, and was built immediately
following the Soviets launching of Sputnik. Today
around 7,000 people continue to work there, on projects
primarily related to satellite and earth observation systems.
The four largest contractors at Goddard are the defense
and satellite companies Lockheed, Raytheon, TRW, and Hughes.
Goddard also operates the Wallops Island launch and test
complex on the coast of Virginia.
|
|
At the Goddard Visitor Center, Commodore computers
with bright red joysticks are encased in formica consoles,
set up like an elementary version of Mission Control.
CLUI photo
|
It is hard to get a sense of
the exceedingly high-tech activities at the lab from the
displays in the visitor center, which are sadly primitive
and antiquated (computer displays and interfaces resemble
a video arcade circa 1988). But the capacious visitor center
does convey a poetic sense of the vacuuity of space, punctuated
by lonely, spinning tools.
It is no coincidence that not too far from NASA in Greenbelt
is the headquarters for the National Security Agency (NSA),
an organization that employs at least 20,000 people in the
daunting task of intercepting, decoding, and classifying
communications all over the world for the American intelligence
community. While no public visitation facilities exist in
either of the two main office buildings, an official NSA
museum, called the National Cryptologic Museum, is located
nearby at the edge of Fort Meade.
The museum represents an interesting
display dichotomy: a display site built by an organization
that would rather no one knew it existed, that describes
the operations of the organization, operations that are,
however, secret, and are, paradoxically, about revealing
secrets. The NSA has partially addressed this problem by
dwelling on well known historical elements of its story,
such as the cracking of World War Two codes with the Enigma
machine, which is prominently featured in the museum, with
many other historic analog code-breaking instruments that
look like alien typewriters.
The museum does have a number
of more contemporary displays, such as a finger print analyzing
computer that visitors can rate the "quality"
of their prints on, and several computer and supercomputer
systems that, with little explanation of how they were used,
are beautifully enigmatic icons of the age of information
and intelligence. For example, a computer called the CM-5
is an elegant bathroom-sized machine clad in horizontal
and vertical metal fins, like a giant architectural model
of a modernist skyscraper. There is an array of flickering
rack-mounted components called the Rissman Telemetry Processing
System, that has a satisfying assortment of milspec switches.
A Cray XMP-24 supercomputer (the kind with the built-in
padded bench around its base), looks like a Stanley Kubrick
film prop, but is labeled as having been in use at NSA circa
1985-1993. And a Ziegler supercomputer machine (called "Barney"
by its handlers, because it was big and purple), which weighs
several tons, was cooled by a 60 ton refrigeration unit
(all to process 32 gigabytes), and is labeled as having
been in use at the NSA from 1993 to 2000.
|
|
Inside the NSAs museum.
CLUI photo
|
The museum is a fascinating place
in itself, as well as for what it represents. Docents are
eager to show visitors around, and photographs are permitted
everywhere except in the gift shop where the clerk says,
without any sense of irony, that it is against her religion
to be photographed.
With the general trend for exhibit
centers and museums to integrate more interactive computer
and video-based displays, it is perhaps with an eye on things
to come that one would take a look at the Newseum in Arlington,
Virginia, just across the river from the Capitol. This "museum
of news" was opened in an existing office building
in 1997. The $50 million display environment, created by
the designer of the Holocaust Museum, is about as high-tech
as it comes. Interactive touchscreens abound, as do video
projections, and plasma screens. The introductory film "What
is News" is shown on the regions largest high
definition video screen. Video news feeds come in from all
over the world, and are routed to screens via the museums
central control room, which itself looks like a broadcast
booth. Downstairs, have a snack in the NewsByte Cafe, while
logging on to Lexis-Nexis through a highspeed internet connection.
The Newseum celebrates the first
amendment, and the importance of journalism to the cause
of freedom. It was built and is operated by the Freedom
Forum, which itself is headed by the founder of USA Today,
and the former CEO of its parent company Gannett (which
owns about 90 other newspapers across the country). Based
on its popularity in the first four years of its existence,
the museum will soon be relocating to a new building in
Washington DC. When it opens there, sometime in 2005, this
"museum of the moment" will no doubt be even fancier,
ushering in a new era of interconnected display technology,
and providing a museumified version of the current events
that are shaped by the forces of commerce and government,
centered in this city of display.
|
|
At the Newseum, a wall of 70 front pages from newspapers
around the world are updated daily, while above, the
125 foot long Video News Wall has nine newscasts going
at once.
CLUI photo
|