The Capital Reflected is a photograph by Tom Gari Gallery-Three-Photography which was uploaded on May 31st, 2014.
The Capital Reflected
United States Capitol, or simply Capitol, is home of the United States Congress and its two legislative bodies, the US House of Representatives and... more
Title
The Capital Reflected
Artist
Tom Gari Gallery-Three-Photography
Medium
Photograph - Photography
Description
United States Capitol, or simply Capitol, is home of the United States Congress and its two legislative bodies, the US House of Representatives and the US Senate. Standing tall atop the Capitol Hill at the eastern end of the National Mall, this architecturally impressive and magnificent building is situated in Washington DC, United States. Ever since the construction of the Capitol began in 1793, it has been built, burnt, rebuilt, extended and restored several times only to present spectators with the most important federal building in America in today’s times.
Rising at a height of 287 feet, this legislative building is the fourth tallest masonry dome in the world. As many as 173 million pounds of stone, brick, concrete and steel have been used in the construction of the building.
The Capitol building has been divided into two wings: the north wing is the Senate chamber, while the south wing is the House of Representatives chamber. Each has it’s own separate subway system and phone system
The structure of this symbolically significant building was an outcome of a design competition held by Thomas Jefferson in 1792, which was won by amateur architect, William Thornton. Initially, French architect Stephen Hallet’s design was selected, but it was later rejected on the context of being too fancy and costly. However, Hallet was appointed as the superintendent of construction.
The design went under several modifications, the first being by Hallet due to the various problems. Later modifications came from Benjamin Henry Latrobe and Charles Bulfinch.
The building went under expansion during the 1850s. The East Front of the Capitol building was designed by architects Carrère and Hastings, who designed the Senate and House office buildings as well.
The statue that rests on top of the dome is known as ‘Miss Freedom’ that weighs 2,000 pounds and is 15 feet tall.
The National Park Service declared the Capitol as a National Historic Landmark on December 19, 1960. The building ranks in the sixth position in American Institute of Architects’ list of ‘America’s Favorite Architecture’.
The newest addition to the Capitol is the Capitol Visitor Center that was built in 2008. Spread across 580,000 square feet, this underground 3-level screens all the visitors through a magnetometer, before they enter the building.
Uploaded
May 31st, 2014