• Login / Join
  • About
  • •
  • Contact
  • •
  • Advertising
bustler logo
bustler logo
  • News
  • Competitions
  • Events
  • Bustler is powered by Archinect
  • Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

  • Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • Search

    Search in

  • Submit

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event
  • Login / Join
  • News|Competitions|Events
  • Search
    | Submit
    | Follow
  • Search in

    What are you submitting?

    News Pitch
    Competition
    Event

    Follow these Bustler feeds:

  • About|Contact|Advertising
  • Login / Join
Search: secret cities

Secret Cities: The Architecture and Planning of the Manhattan Project

Saturday, May 5, 201810 AM — Sunday, Mar 3, 20195 PMEDT

National Building Museum, 401 F Street NW Washington Washington, DC, US Washington, DC, US | National Building Museum, 401 F Street NW Washington

In the fall of 1942, less than a year after the United States was drawn into World War II by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers quietly began acquiring vast tracts of land in remote areas of three states. The few residents of these areas were summarily evicted and their houses demolished. Soon, thousands of young workers arrived from far and wide, initially occupying tents and other makeshift shelters within the newly designated military reservations.

Shielded from public view by natural barriers and security fences, the workers quickly erected hundreds of buildings, ranging from prefabricated houses to industrial structures of unprecedented scale. As they did so, thousands more residents arrived in a near-continuous stream. By the end of the war, a total of more than 125,000 people lived in the three cities that had been built from scratch on these sites. Yet these cities appeared on no maps, and the federal government did not acknowledge their existence. Unfathomable quantities of supplies were delivered, but very little seemed to come out, adding to the air of mystery surrounding these “Secret Cities.”

That mystery unraveled on August 6, 1945, when the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, and President Harry S. Truman publicly revealed the purpose of the sites now known as Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Los Alamos, New Mexico; and Hanford/Richland, Washington. In roughly two and a half years, the Manhattan Project—so named because it was managed by the Army Corps’s Manhattan Engineer District in New York—had produced a weapon of previously inconceivable destructive force. While the ethics and strategic necessity of the decision to use such a weapon in combat are still fiercely debated, there is no question that this initiative was one of the most significant milestones in the history of scientific research and development.

The Manhattan Project would not have been possible without the extraordinary achievements in architecture, engineering, and planning that yielded three entirely new cities in a remarkably short time. Built in the early years of the modern movement, these cities reflected cutting-edge ideas about town planning, mass housing, civil and mechanical engineering, and modular construction. They became important proving grounds for the large-scale suburban development that would dramatically alter the physical and cultural landscape of the nation in the post-war era.

Secret Cities examines the innovative design and construction of Oak Ridge, Hanford, and Los Alamos, tracing their precedents in the Bauhaus and other early modern schools of architectural thought. It looks at daily life within the cities and how it was shaped by their physical form, illuminating the social stratification and segregation that were still evident in these cities despite the high-minded principles underlying their design.

The exhibition addresses each city’s development since the conclusion of the Manhattan Project, and their continuing importance as centers of research and technology, now largely devoted to non-military purposes.

National Building Museum

RELATED EVENT Talk: Secret Cities
Secret Cities – an exhibition at the National Building Museum

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Secret Cities: The Architecture and Planning of the Manhattan Project

Sat, May 5 - Sun, Mar 3, 2019

Washington, DC, US

The Future of the Secret Cities

Tue, Dec 4

Washington, DC, US

Talk - Skidmore, Owings & Merrill: From Secret Cities to Global Recognition

Tue, Oct 23

Washington, DC, US

Spaces of Disappearance: The Architecture of Extraordinary Rendition - Jordan H. Carver Launch/Conversation

Fri, Sep 21

New York, NY, US

Talk: Secret Cities

Thu, May 24

Washington, DC, US

RESONATE Thinking Sound and Space

Mon, Feb 12

Lisbon, PT

Together! The New Architecture of the Collective

Sat, Jun 3 - Sun, Sep 10, 2017

Weil am Rhein, DE

Power and Architecture Exhibition Programme

Sun, Jun 12 - Sun, Oct 9, 2016

London, GB

Residency & Symposium: How to Make Waste Public: Experiments with Infrastructure

Sat, Apr 19 - Sat, May 31, 2014

Sign up for Bustler's Email Newsletters

ZATO: Secret Soviet Cities During the Cold War

Wed, May 16

IN-PUBLIC@10

Fri, May 28 - Sat, Jul 10, 2010

TEDGlobal 2009: The Substance of Things Not Seen

Wed, Jul 22 - Sat, Jul 25, 2009

Next page » Loading

Secret Cities: The Architecture and Planning of the Manhattan Project

Saturday, May 5, 201810 AM — Sunday, Mar 3, 20195 PMEDT

National Building Museum, 401 F Street NW Washington Washington, DC, US Washington, DC, US | National Building Museum, 401 F Street NW Washington

Share

Related

exhibition ● national building museum ● washington d.c. ● usa ● design exhibition ● wwii ● architectural history

In the fall of 1942, less than a year after the United States was drawn into World War II by the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers quietly began acquiring vast tracts of land in remote areas of three states. The few residents of these areas were summarily evicted and their houses demolished. Soon, thousands of young workers arrived from far and wide, initially occupying tents and other makeshift shelters within the newly designated military reservations.

Shielded from public view by natural barriers and security fences, the workers quickly erected hundreds of buildings, ranging from prefabricated houses to industrial structures of unprecedented scale. As they did so, thousands more residents arrived in a near-continuous stream. By the end of the war, a total of more than 125,000 people lived in the three cities that had been built from scratch on these sites. Yet these cities appeared on no maps, and the federal government did not acknowledge their existence. Unfathomable quantities of supplies were delivered, but very little seemed to come out, adding to the air of mystery surrounding these “Secret Cities.”

That mystery unraveled on August 6, 1945, when the U.S. dropped an atomic bomb on Hiroshima, Japan, and President Harry S. Truman publicly revealed the purpose of the sites now known as Oak Ridge, Tennessee; Los Alamos, New Mexico; and Hanford/Richland, Washington. In roughly two and a half years, the Manhattan Project—so named because it was managed by the Army Corps’s Manhattan Engineer District in New York—had produced a weapon of previously inconceivable destructive force. While the ethics and strategic necessity of the decision to use such a weapon in combat are still fiercely debated, there is no question that this initiative was one of the most significant milestones in the history of scientific research and development.

The Manhattan Project would not have been possible without the extraordinary achievements in architecture, engineering, and planning that yielded three entirely new cities in a remarkably short time. Built in the early years of the modern movement, these cities reflected cutting-edge ideas about town planning, mass housing, civil and mechanical engineering, and modular construction. They became important proving grounds for the large-scale suburban development that would dramatically alter the physical and cultural landscape of the nation in the post-war era.

Secret Cities examines the innovative design and construction of Oak Ridge, Hanford, and Los Alamos, tracing their precedents in the Bauhaus and other early modern schools of architectural thought. It looks at daily life within the cities and how it was shaped by their physical form, illuminating the social stratification and segregation that were still evident in these cities despite the high-minded principles underlying their design.

The exhibition addresses each city’s development since the conclusion of the Manhattan Project, and their continuing importance as centers of research and technology, now largely devoted to non-military purposes.

National Building Museum

RELATED EVENT Talk: Secret Cities
Secret Cities – an exhibition at the National Building Museum from lou mora on Vimeo.

Share

  • Follow

    0 Comments

  • Comment as :

Promoted Events

Cranbrook Academy Admissions Online Conversation

Sep 27, 2023

MIT Center for Real Estate MSRED Extended Open House

Oct 23 - Oct 25, 2023

Cambridge, MA, US

Temple University - Tyler School of Art & Architecture Master of Landscape Architecture (MLArch) Virtual Information Session

Oct 18, 2023

Tulane School of Architecture Fall Open House (In-Person and Virtual)

Oct 2, 2023

New Orleans, LA, US

Beaux Arts Ball 2023: SEA CHANGE

Sep 29, 2023

New York, NY, US

Zaha Hadid Architects: The New World

Jul 06 - Oct 3, 2023

Beijing, CN

Wide-Angle View: Architecture as social space in the Manplan series 1969-1970

Sep 13 - Feb 24, 2024

London, GB

UCLA AUD's Fall 2023 Virtual Open House for Graduate Programs: MArch, MSAUD, MA, PhD

Oct 26, 2023

Seoul Biennale of Architecture and Urbanism 2023

Sep 01 - Oct 29, 2023

Seoul, KR

SCI-Arc Gala 2023: Forging the Future

Oct 19, 2023

Los Angeles, CA, US

2x8x20 ACLA 2x8 20th Anniversary Celebration

Nov 16, 2023

Los Angeles, CA, US

Archtober 2023

Oct 01 - Oct 31, 2023

New York, NY, US

Emerging Ecologies: Architecture and the Rise of Environmentalism

Sep 17 - Jan 20, 2024

New York, NY, US

Pratt GCPE Admissions Info Session (in-person + tour + studio visit)

Oct 19, 2023

New York, NY, US

Open House Chicago

Oct 14 - Oct 15, 2023

Chicago, IL, US

Biennale Architettura 2023: The Laboratory of the Future

May 20 - Nov 26, 2023

Venice, IT

Next page » Loading