| |
|
|
 |
|
|
ARCHITECTURAL
SPACE AND THE
TREASURY BUILDING
When humans build,
be it a tool-shed in the back yard or a building as large and complex
as the Treasury Department, we create physical containers of space.
The act of building creates the space in which we live, in which we
work, play, or eat. Each of these functions, and myriad others, have
different needs and thus demand different spaces. An office needs different
spaces, and differently shaped and sized spaces, than does a cathedral.
In response to the role that we assign to a particular space, we design
and construct a building to contain and give shape to that space.
 
This 1985 photograph of the first floor center corridor
shows a barrel vault, one method of enclosing space used by Robert
Mills in the construction of the East and Center wings of the Treasury
Building. Any time you see the barrel vault icon (to the left) throughout
the rest of this exhibit, you'll know that you're looking at images
of and information about spaces in this part of the Treasury Building.
Photograph by Gary K. Griffin; drawing from Sara E. Wermiel. The Fireproof
Building: Technology and Public Safety in the Nineteenth-Century American
City. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2000. 13.
In
the history of the American workplace, the Treasury Department’s spatial
needs have often been unique. The multiple roles and requirements of
the Department influenced the design and construction of the building
and juxtaposed manufacturing with office space at a time when separation
of these functions was increasingly the norm. Throughout the nineteenth
and twentieth centuries in America, industrial, commercial, governmental,
and residential functions shifted more and more into distinct spaces.
The Treasury Department, however, for much of its history resisted this
trend. From the offices of the East and Center wings, built by Robert
Mills between 1836 and 1851, to the offices and workrooms of the South,
West, and North wings, built by Ammi B. Young, Isaiah Rogers, and Alfred
B. Mullett, respectively, between 1855 and 1869, the many functions
that the Treasury required of its building created the spaces that are
our legacy today.
 
This 1985 photograph of the first floor
west corridor shows the spatial results of the iron-beam-and-arch construction
used in the South, West, and North wings by Ammi B. Young, Isaiah Rogers,
and Alfred B. Mullett. Any time you see the post-and-lintel icon (to
the left) throughout the rest of this exhibit, you'll know that you're
looking at images of and information about spaces in this part of the
Treasury Building. Photograph by Gary K. Griffin.
< < Back to Start <
Previous | Next
> Skip to End >
>
Office of the Curator
All rights reserved. 2001
|
|
|
|
|
|
|