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Department of Commerce’s Herbert C. Hoover Building anchors the Federal Triangle and features a base of rusticated granite blocks, a colonnade with Doric capitals, and a cornice embellished with eagles. Upon completion in 1932, the structure was the world’s largest office, building, covering almost eight acres and filling three city blocks with 3,300 rooms. It brought under one roof offices that had been scattered among 20 locations in Washington. The massive Hoover Building has six interior courtyards that bring light and air into offices. Exterior sculptures, plaques, and inscriptions illustrate the department’s historically wide-ranging activities. The monumental structure reflects the nation’s prosperity when Louis Ayres of the New York firm of York and Sawyer designed it. President Herbert Hoover laid the cornerstone in May 1929. A few months later, however, the world economy crashed, launching the Great Depression. Fortunately construction on the Federal Triangle proceeded, creating jobs that became harder to find as the depression deepened. When the Commerce Department was founded in 1903, it took in the Census Bureau (established in 1790), Bureau of Navigation (1789), Lighthouse Service (1789), Patent Office (1802), Coast and Geodetic Survey (1807), Bureau of Steamboat Inspection (1838), and Bureau of Fisheries (1871). The new building also housed the bureaus of Mines, Foreign and Domestic Commerce, and Aeronautics, as well as the Radio Division. Changing times have consolidated or eliminated many bureaus but the department’s mission of supporting the American economy remains constant.
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