#: locale=en
## Action
### URL
PopupWebFrameBehaviour_1F975084_37DC_17C1_41C7_116F495BB9D5.url = https://www.aoc.gov/what-we-do/areas-expertise/woodcrafting
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LinkBehaviour_7FFF3C54_375A_8A8A_41B1_AA73040BB3C5.source = https://www.virtually-anywhere.com
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## Hotspot
### Tooltip
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C73B907_388F_DD1C_41B4_084FCEEE31E2.toolTip = Apotheosis of Washington
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C1998FF_388F_DCEC_41BE_4C5E6B467BB8.toolTip = Baptism of Pocahontis
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_79FC1E98_3889_F734_41B0_FAB1D7C4FB30.toolTip = Bust of Martin Luther King, Jr.
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_10E440AF_7A8E_C04E_41DB_10C6FEF95EEF.toolTip = Ceiling
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_11E7CEAF_7A82_C04E_419F_F5B05595EF10.toolTip = Ceiling
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_11726A04_7A82_4032_41C5_F3144591311F.toolTip = Clock
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_111BE7A2_7A82_4076_41D1_93233E8ED614.toolTip = Collumns
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_11ADEE26_7A85_C07E_4198_100F3C60D51F.toolTip = Commemorative Arch
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C73890B_388F_DD14_4184_80D30DBE8C59.toolTip = Declaration of Independence
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C72A913_388F_DD34_41B6_CFE18C2DCB7B.toolTip = Discovery of the Mississippi \
by De Soto
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C712917_388F_DD3C_4175_2303C6AA3585.toolTip = Embarkation of the Pilgrims
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_1116C69F_7A82_404E_41A5_C3DBA4F3DD18.toolTip = Figurines
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_10228197_7A8E_405E_41D5_BB30A8766E44.toolTip = Floor
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3FD812E1_7A86_C1F2_41D7_116B5B7F3507.toolTip = Fountain
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C0C1909_388F_DD14_41BF_ECE47DD2C20F.toolTip = Frieze
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C730911_388F_DD34_415D_473E4E0EB51A.toolTip = General George Washington \
Resigning His Commission
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C71F915_388F_DD3C_41C7_0AA42238D46B.toolTip = Landing of Columbus
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C77C91A_388F_DD34_41A1_F57A9B9D7DD7.toolTip = Learn More
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_6FAC1D6B_3F89_D514_41C3_0F88036BF202.toolTip = Liberty and the Eagle
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3F72BDBF_7A86_404E_41CA_EF7A73BA7896.toolTip = Portico Busts
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_620632CB_3F98_EF14_4165_00228035CBC3.toolTip = President of the Senate’s Seat
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_62760881_3F98_DB14_41CC_87F65A950464.toolTip = Senate Floor
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_4005D6C4_7A8E_4032_41DE_45DD3334A999.toolTip = Statue of Freedom Plaster Model
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C72C90D_388F_DD2C_4193_F878809E265D.toolTip = Surrender of General Burgoyne
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_0C72690F_388F_DD2C_41C6_020F2AC38DD6.toolTip = Surrender of Lord Cornwallis
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_68427DD7_3F88_353C_41BF_A973DE98E2E3.toolTip = The Car of History Clock
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_750571C8_38F8_2D14_4194_42F34777CDA4.toolTip = The National Statuary Hall Collection
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_721E50FE_3F88_2CEC_41C9_F7DD7C77F930.toolTip = The National Statuary Hall Collection
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_412C5137_7A82_405E_419E_0C97D12A69B2.toolTip = The National Statuary Hall Collection
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_6FBA0257_3F88_2F3C_41C3_097423CADB00.toolTip = Whispering Gallery
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_5494A972_7A82_C0D6_41D1_85A882C24EF0.toolTip = to: CVC Congressional Auditorium
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_5434E9B0_7A9E_C052_41D3_6187F85ED8F4.toolTip = to: CVC Orientation Theatre
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_547B003E_7A82_404E_41BE_31678F539C8F.toolTip = to: CVC Skylight
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3FE92213_7A9E_4056_41A2_A1C8A73E2892.toolTip = to: Capitol Visitor Center
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3F5147B2_7A82_4056_41BC_04507CB03D69.toolTip = to: Capitol Visitor Center
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37A91E6F_326A_96CC_41BF_BFD3701CF5F9.toolTip = to: Closeup of Thomas Jefferson Building
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_54C7F9BE_7A85_C04E_41AE_E61AEF75D41F.toolTip = to: Emancipation Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_54C7E9BE_7A85_C04E_41AA_A7B7701F5864.toolTip = to: Emancipation Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_54707D89_7A82_4032_41DA_983769FDC4AA.toolTip = to: Emancipation Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_547FB79F_7A82_C04E_41D5_B52B1C378DC7.toolTip = to: Entrance
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37D33A96_323E_9E5C_418C_DCF0C4E57821.toolTip = to: Library of Congress
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3F722271_7A86_40D2_41D5_FF2119958885.toolTip = to: Library of Congress
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_06FB1CCC_321B_BBCC_41A6_C6D0DDB99465.toolTip = to: Statuary Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37AB6970_326E_BAD4_41AC_C98E5B001CBA.toolTip = to: Streetvies of The Thomas Jefferson Building
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CE5645_3226_963C_41C9_530B1A50E9D1.toolTip = to: The Conservatory Exterior
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37D0F2EC_323B_AFCC_41C1_8A06DD9B2924.toolTip = to: The Desert Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37AB155E_326E_6ACC_41C0_76D24445F823.toolTip = to: The Great Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CB393B_322E_9A54_41BC_DBA73B46B2DA.toolTip = to: The Great Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CC4B35_322A_FE5C_41B8_E54A30F88947.toolTip = to: The Great Hall
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CF6241_3226_AE34_41C5_08EBE18329F3.toolTip = to: The Jungle Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CDF462_3225_AAF4_41C9_B45095CDB7BE.toolTip = to: The Jungle Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37D147B1_323A_F654_41C8_6B5A5BAE0F26.toolTip = to: The Orchid Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CF13EF_3226_6DCC_419E_6CD2023EA613.toolTip = to: The Orchid Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37CBF11A_322D_AA54_41AD_FD5FA055DBFA.toolTip = to: The Reading Room
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_01F84BA6_321A_9E7C_41A9_009D4ED6E9CF.toolTip = to: The Rotunda
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_37A9D0FA_326D_EBD4_41BA_D86E54D6CB45.toolTip = to: The U.S. Supreme Court
HotspotPanoramaOverlayArea_3F1C561E_7A82_404E_41D6_812F20E49021.toolTip = to: U.S. Supreme Court
## Media
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### Popup Image
### Subtitle
panorama_73D6004A_3227_AA34_41C0_5A8A2327EADE.subtitle = Cannon House Office Building \
\
Cannon House Office Building, completed in 1908, is the oldest congressional office building as well as a significant example of the Beaux Arts style of architecture. Of special architectural interest is the rotunda. Eighteen Corinthian columns support an entablature and a coffered dome, whose glazed oculus floods the rotunda with natural light. Twin marble staircases lead from the rotunda to the Caucus Room.
panorama_73D7EAD8_3227_9FD4_41C9_5C2E5372B03B.subtitle = Cannon House Office Building \
\
Measuring 74 feet long by 54 feet wide, the caucus room in the Cannon House Office Building is embellished with paired Corinthian pilasters standing on a continuous pedestal and supporting a richly detailed entablature, with decorative moldings, color, and gilding. The ceiling is decorated with a variety of classical motifs, including rosettes and a Greek key border. Six windows facing the courtyard and four crystal chandeliers light the room. The three-tiered chandeliers, which are original to the room, feature etched globes. Some events of note that have taken place in the room date back at least to 1943, when 350 women were sworn in as members of the Women's Army Corps. Today it is used for numerous dinners, receptions and other events throughout the year.
panorama_73D62D92_3226_BA54_41B2_6599CC647309.subtitle = Cannon House Office Building \
\
Room 311 in the Cannon House Office Building – where the Committee on Homeland Security currently convenes – typifies the original appearance of committee hearing rooms. The decorations here deliberately remind Representatives and visitors of the grand purpose of American democracy. Eagles adorn the mahogany rostrum and the window valances. Coffered, vaulted ceilings recall the architecture of ancient Greece and Rome. Bundles of rods held together with ribbon, signifying strength in unity, are carved into the rostrum, where committee members gather to discuss issues and forge legislation. \
\
In keeping with its grandeur, this room was initially occupied by the powerful Ways and Means Committee. After that committee moved to the Longworth House Office Building in 1933, the room was used by several other committees: Armed Services, Internal Security, Post Office and Civil Service, and Small Business.
panorama_73D67EE9_3225_B7F4_417D_A663B4814FBA.subtitle = Cannon House Office Building \
\
The Veterans’ Affairs Committee room, in the Cannon House Office Building, is similar in architectural style to other committee rooms in the building—that is, less ornate than the high-style designs of the public spaces but more elaborate than the working offices of representatives. It is a two-story room with an imitation vaulted ceiling, consisting of a plaster ceiling suspended from iron beams, that was created to give an appearance similar to the interior masonry architecture of the Capitol without incurring the expense and time necessary to build a true masonry vaulted structure. The room also has Doric pilasters and a fill entablature along the spring line. The balcony affords fine views of the Capitol and the Thomas Jefferson Building of the Library of Congress.
panorama_73D61502_3227_AA34_41BB_3AA31D357527.subtitle = Dirksen Senate Office Building \
\
Before construction of the Dirksen Senate Office Building few committee rooms in the first Senate office building (Russell) were equipped with a rostrum, so senators and witnesses sat instead around a large conference table. Committee staff also worked in the hearing rooms, which reduced the seating available for the public. In order to house more people, larger (two stories in height) committee hearing rooms were constructed in the second Senate office building (Dirksen). Adjoining each public hearing room is a private chamber for the committee’s executive meetings. The largest hearing room, pictured here, is assigned to the Appropriations Committee.
panorama_73D7BA4A_3227_9E34_41AA_41255A61D5EA.subtitle = Dirksen Senate Office Building \
\
The Caucus Room in the Dirksen Building is an example of a typical hearing room with wood paneled walls, an acoustic tile ceiling with a decorative plaster border ornamented with signs of the zodiac. Notable are the monumental bronze sconces on display throughout the room.
panorama_73D60355_3226_AEDC_413C_B94A86B576B4.subtitle = Hart Senate Office Building \
\
In contrast to the other Senate office buildings, where offices ringed open courtyards, the Hart Senate Office Building features a 90-foot high central atrium. The skylit atrium provides an energy-efficient means of lighting corridors and offices. Walkways bridge the atrium on each floor. Located on either end of the atrium are elevator banks and skylit semicircular staircases.
panorama_73D7C86B_3226_BAF4_41AF_E2AD9D45A1A3.subtitle = Hart Senate Office Building \
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The large central hearing room in the Hart Senate Office Building was constructed for high-interest events attracting crowds that could not be accommodated in the regular hearing rooms. The room offers more seating, better acoustics, and movable side panes where television cameras could operate without distracting the participants. Behind the dais where committee members sit, the Senate seal is affixed to a white and gray marble wall, which contrasts with the wood-paneled side walls. The room has become familiar to television viewers as the site of numerous Senate investigations and confirmation hearings.
panorama_73D6898F_3225_BA4C_41AE_0BF598EFC6D2.subtitle = Rayburn House Office Building \
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Completed in 1965, the Rayburn House Office Building is the newest and largest of the three office buildings constructed for the House of Representatives. This courtyard faces First Street, SW, and directly overlooks the U.S. Botanic Garden Administration Building in Bartholdi Park. From this courtyard one can also view the U.S. Botanic Garden Conservatory and Ford House Office Building.
panorama_73D6E432_3225_AA54_41B9_5B099BFE7041.subtitle = Rayburn House Office Building \
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The room used by the House Committee on the Judiciary is located on the south side of the Rayburn House Office Building. The two-tiered rostrum in this room is made of American walnut, as are the room’s doors and wainscoting. Events of historical importance that occurred in this room include the committee’s 1974 hearings on the impeachment of President Richard Nixon.
panorama_73D6CA2A_3225_9E74_41C1_51D5602AB925.subtitle = Russell Senate Office Building \
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The Russell Senate Office Building (built 1903-1908) is the oldest of the Senate office buildings as well as a significant example of the Beaux Arts style of architecture. Of special architectural interest is the rotunda. Eighteen Corinthian columns support an entablature and a coffered dome, whose glazed oculus floods the rotunda with natural light. Twin marble staircases lead from the rotunda to the Caucus Room.
panorama_73D6F47C_3225_AACC_41B0_AA5B49E68001.subtitle = Russell Senate Office Building \
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The imposing Caucus Room in the Russell Senate Office Building, features Corinthian pilasters, a full entablature, and a richly detailed ceiling. The Russell Caucus Room retains its original 1910 benches and settles with carved eagles. This space has been used for many hearings on subjects of national significance, from the sinking of the Titanic (1912) to Watergate (1974) and the nomination of Justice Clarence Thomas (1991).
panorama_702280C7_3227_AA3C_41C4_A25C6F7EF1CB.subtitle = Russell Senate Office Building \
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The room currently used by the Senate Agriculture Committee is notable for the Corinthian marble pilasters that ring the room that have composition capitals. According to the architect’s original drawings (ca. 1906) they were intended to be gold leafed, but they never were until the Architect of the Capitol renovated the room. The AOC also used real gold leaf to highlight the moldings in the ceiling instead of the gold paint used previously. These improvements completed the room in the manner envisioned by architects of the Russell building, Carrere & Hastings.
panorama_73D6DF12_3225_B654_41C1_29656DA26F63.subtitle = Russell Senate Office Building \
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The room now used by the Senate Committee on Rules and Administration is one of the most elegant interiors of the Russell Building. Its vaulted ceiling rises two stories (32 feet) above the carpeted marble floor and is divided into large panels outlined with a profusion of classical ornaments. The walls are lined with Corinthian pilasters made from Vermont marble supporting a plaster entablature. The mahogany bookcases, made by the Frances H. Bacon Company of Boston are original to the room, as are the 30-inch terrestrial globe and its wooden stand. This room was originally occupied by the Committee on Foreign Relations, the Committee on Rules and Administration moved to the Russell Building in 1947 and began using the room soon thereafter.
panorama_73D64DCA_3226_FA34_41BD_7C8D9B274EDB.subtitle = Thomas Jefferson Building \
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The Thomas Jefferson Building was designed by Washington architects Paul Pelz and John Smithmeyer, who took the Paris Opera House as their model. After construction was transferred to the Army Corps of Engineers in 1892, the work was directed by Edward Pearce Casey, who orchestrated a legion of artists and sculptors to decorate the inside and outside of the building. Immediately after it opened in 1897, the Library of Congress was widely considered to be the most beautiful, educational and interesting building in Washington.
panorama_73D688B4_3226_FA5C_41BC_CE61CACB6176.subtitle = Thomas Jefferson Building \
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The Thomas Jefferson Building was designed by Washington architects Paul Pelz and John Smithmeyer, who took the Paris Opera House as their model. After construction was transferred to the Army Corps of Engineers in 1892, the work was directed by Edward Pearce Casey, who orchestrated a legion of artists and sculptors to decorate the inside and outside of the building. Immediately after it opened in 1897, the Library of Congress was widely considered to be the most beautiful, educational and interesting building in Washington.
panorama_73D7820A_3226_AE34_41C7_651A0B23BCD6.subtitle = Thomas Jefferson Building \
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This historic room is, through its catalogs, the primary entrance into the Library's research collections. Every day, hundreds of books and periodical volumes are delivered from the stacks for use in the Main Reading Room. There are approximately 70,000 volumes in the Main Reading Room reference collection.
panorama_73D67C8C_3226_9A4C_41C9_14954A2AA5CD.subtitle = Thomas Jefferson Building \
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Works of art from nearly 50 American painters and sculptors embellish the elaborately decorated interior of the Great Hall in the Library of Congress Thomas Jefferson Building. The design linked the United States to classical traditions of learning and simultaneously flexed American cultural and technological muscle.
panorama_73E115E1_3227_95F4_41A6_AD6FB1E3A248.subtitle = Bartholdi Park was created in 1932 and named for Frédéric Auguste Bartholdi, the sculptor of the historic fountain located at its center, and currently being renovated by the AOC. The Park now serves as a home landscape demonstration garden and showcases innovative plant combinations in a variety of styles and design themes. The U.S. Botanic Garden Administration Building is located in a residential building at the south end of the park.
panorama_73D65C00_3226_9A34_41B7_29883B6CC038.subtitle = Capitol Hill is known for its grand buildings including the iconic daises, committee and member desks along and other intricate woodworking. The care and creation of these woodworkings throughout the Congress and Supreme Court is the responsibility of Architect of the Capitol (AOC) woodcrafters. \
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The skilled craftsmen who care for the woodworkings use techniques both modern and ancient in their work. This includes large jobs such as the renovation of historic committee hearing rooms and the installation of cabinetry and small jobs such as replacement of missing pieces on a door.
panorama_73D7E90E_3226_7A4C_4194_3043FB78583D.subtitle = Construction to expand the East Front of the Capitol building began in 1958. The new front was built 32 feet 6 inches beyond the old front, in a marble duplicate of the original sandstone structure. The old sandstone walls were not destroyed; rather, they were left in place to become a part of the interior wall and are now buttressed by the addition. The marble columns of the connecting corridors were also moved and reused. Historically, the East Front was the side of the building intended for the arrival of visitors and dignitaries by horse-drawn carriage.
panorama_73D61E24_3226_767C_4185_5BDEF8241962.subtitle = Construction to expand the East Front of the Capitol building began in 1958. The new front was built 32 feet 6 inches beyond the old front, in a marble duplicate of the original sandstone structure. The old sandstone walls were not destroyed; rather, they were left in place to become a part of the interior wall and are now buttressed by the addition. The marble columns of the connecting corridors were also moved and reused. Historically, the East Front was the side of the building intended for the arrival of visitors and dignitaries by horse-drawn carriage.
panorama_73D663A7_3225_AE7C_41A1_B08A6C309047.subtitle = Finished and occupied in 1935, the Supreme Court’s great marble temple is a fitting home for the nation’s third branch of government. Chief Justice William Howard Taft was behind the effort to provide the Court with its own building, moving out of the Capitol where it had been meeting since 1801. The Court did not move far, however. Its new location was just across the street and was selected to remain near Union Station and thus convenient for out-of-town lawyers.
panorama_73D7FF73_3227_96D4_419F_17029C2FECFF.subtitle = From its inception, the Capitol Visitor Center was conceived as an extension of the U.S. Capitol Building. The materials used to construct the Visitor Center were selected to match the colors, textures, and materials seen throughout the historic building. This care is evident in Emancipation Hall, named to recognize the contributions of the enslaved laborers who helped build the U.S. Capitol, the central gathering place for visitors coming to see the Capitol. \
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Rising 36 feet above the floor, the walls and columns of Emancipation Hall are lined with sandstone slabs marked by a variety of color and texture similar to the sandstone seen in the Capitol. \
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At the entrance to the Exhibition Hall, visitors can see two round columns with a decorative leaf detail at the top of each column that matches the design of the 40 Doric columns in the Crypt of the Capitol.
panorama_73D6144A_3226_6A34_41A3_B3884D4385D4.subtitle = In Emancipation Hall, skylights provide striking views of the U.S. Capitol. The skylights also provide more than aesthetical value; the natural light they allow to fill the hall decreases the need for electric lighting during daytime hours.
panorama_73D7D736_3227_F65C_41C6_BDCA95FFB652.subtitle = In the U.S. Botanic Garden’s Jungle a tropical rainforest overtakes an abandoned plantation. The dome rises to 93 feet and has a mezzanine level from which to view the jungle canopy.
panorama_73D6BE53_3225_96D4_41B5_2476930D20BF.subtitle = Located at Independence Ave. and First St., SW, the U.S. Botanic Garden’s rain garden was completed in May 2010. This project’s goal—the purpose of any rain garden—is to capture rainwater and allow it to infiltrate into the soil. This process allows plants to soak up the water they need, while capturing and filtering runoff and returning it to our water table. The result is lower volumes of water entering our storm sewers and less water pollution. \
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New downspouts on the Conservatory’s existing gutter system redirect rainwater from the southeast section of the Conservatory roof into the Rain Garden basin. Unlike wetlands, rain gardens are not meant to retain water for more than 24 to 48 hours, so their plants must be able to tolerate both wet and dry conditions. Plants were also selected for aesthetics, flower and foliage color, as well as fragrance. Mesa Design Group, a Dallas-based landscape architecture firm, and Baltimore-based civil engineers Gannett Fleming designed the project.
panorama_144CF850_326E_9AD4_41BF_2A88CF746B4E.subtitle = National Statuary Hall, also known as the Old Hall of the House, is the large, two-story, semicircular room south of the Rotunda. The meeting place of the U.S. House of Representatives for nearly 50 years, and now the main exhibition space for the National Statuary Hall collection, this room is one of the most historic chambers in the Capitol.
panorama_73D7FD3E_3227_FA4C_41C8_53F826497399.subtitle = The Amateis bronze doors were designed by Louis Amateis and cast for $15,525 for the main central entrance of the West Front. They were completed in 1910, but they could not be placed because the proposed improvement to the West Front did not proceed. The transom and eight panels, bordered by 28 medallions and 18 statuettes, tell the intellectual and physical progress of the country, or the Apotheosis of America.
panorama_73D7F530_3227_AA54_418B_3BB43862CFF6.subtitle = The Capitol Visitor Center has space for use by Congress, including multiple new meeting and conference rooms. The Congressional Auditorium, a 450-seat theater, is available for use by members of Congress or for either House of Congress should their respective chamber be unavailable.
panorama_73D6696B_3225_9AF4_41A0_7475818D7C3F.subtitle = The Capitol’s West Front looks out onto the National Mall which leads to the Washington Monument. The terraces were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted who believed the addition was needed to visually support the massive Capitol.
panorama_73D7EE2D_3226_964C_4186_AED5F20717CB.subtitle = The Hall of Columns is a dramatic, high-ceilinged corridor over 100 feet long. It runs along the North–South axis of the first floor of the House wing in the U.S. Capitol, directly beneath the Hall of the House of Representatives (National Statuary Hall). The hall takes its name from the 28 fluted, white marble columns that line the corridor. The hall was constructed in the mid-19th century as part of architect Thomas U. Walter's extension of the Capitol, which added the present House and Senate wings and the dome. Since 1976, the hall has housed part of the National Statuary Hall Collection. These bronze or marble portrait sculptures have been donated to the Capitol by individual states in commemoration of notable citizens.
panorama_73D7836A_3226_EEF4_41C0_32FE270498C6.subtitle = The Lyndon Baines Johnson Room is located in the northeast corner of the Capitol, part of the 1851–1859 Senate extension designed by Thomas U. Walter. Early in 1959 Senate Majority Leader Lyndon B. Johnson moved his leadership office to this room. Johnson kept this office when he became vice president in 1961 and remained there until he ascended to the presidency in 1963. The Majority Leader’s office took over the room in 1965, and since that time it has been used for meetings, press conferences, committee meetings, party caucuses and congressional receptions.
panorama_73D78D48_3226_BA34_41A8_EAD0B94738F5.subtitle = The National Garden is a living laboratory for visitors to learn about gardening in harmony with nature, including cultivating America’s national flower, roses. Creation of the National Garden was authorized by Congress in 1988 and opened to the public in 2006.
panorama_73D7C294_3226_AE5C_41B0_DDA8963555AB.subtitle = The National Garden provides "living laboratories" for environmental, horticultural, and botanical education in a contemplative setting. The Rose Garden is designed as an outdoor garden room featuring many varieties of the rose, the national flower. The Garden features two octagonal parterres edged with limestone pavers and a permeable walkway.
panorama_73D69138_3226_6A54_4183_1ACAC65F1E6C.subtitle = The Old Supreme Court Chamber is the first room constructed for the use of the nation's highest judiciary body. Built by Benjamin Henry Latrobe, it was a significant architectural achievement, for the size and structure of its vaulted, semicircular ceiling were virtually unprecedented in the United States. After Latrobe's resignation in 1817, work on the chamber continued under architect Charles Bulfinch. Bulfinch was able to complete it in time for the court session that began in February 1819. For the next 41 years, the Supreme Court met in this chamber.
In addition to housing the Supreme Court, this space later served as a committee room, a law library, a meeting room, and a storage room. Today, it has been restored to its mid-19th-century appearance.
panorama_73D6B476_3226_6ADC_41C5_04CD9A539027.subtitle = The President’s Room provides convenience for the chief executive when visiting the Capitol. In 1859 Constantino Brumidi began decorating the President’s Room with allegorical and historical figures on the ceiling while the walls were painted with portraits of George Washington and members of the first cabinet.
Presidents used the room to sign legislation into law at the close of each session of Congress. This practice ended in 1933 with the passage of the 20th amendment, which established different ending dates for presidential and congressional terms of office. Although occasionally used by presidents, the room today is utilized primarily by senators for interviews and press conferences.
panorama_73D7D803_3226_BA34_41BE_572C321DB320.subtitle = The Regional Garden features a cascading waterway under a boardwalk and showcases plants native to the mid-Atlantic region in a naturalistic setting. An amphitheater is located at one end and is a gathering place and venue for outdoor programs. Seats were created from marble steps that once were used on the U.S. Capitol.
panorama_73D6FF31_3225_9654_419E_D8F791F7F350.subtitle = The Senate Appropriations Committee’s suite of offices is perhaps the most elegant of all committee quarters. The seven rooms span the west side of the first floor in the Senate wing of the U.S. Capitol. In 1911 the Appropriations Committee moved from second floor quarters into these rooms. Much of the mural painting in the suite is the work of artist Constantino Brumidi.
panorama_73D6A56C_3225_EACC_41AD_3A68CA9674B4.subtitle = The Speaker's Lobby—situated directly outside the House Chamber in the U.S. Capitol—is a long corridor featuring portraits of past Speakers of the U.S. House of Representatives.
panorama_73D65E71_3225_96D4_41C8_B3D6DB22C486.subtitle = The Summerhouse, a brick structure set into the sloping hillside of the West Front lawn among the paths that lead from Pennsylvania Avenue to the Senate side of the Capitol, has offered rest and shelter to travelers for over a century. Constructed to provide comfort for those who explore the area on foot, it is also a pleasant location from which to appreciate the Capitol's classical architecture and the landscaping that surrounds it.
panorama_73D60A9E_3227_BE4C_41B4_95924EAB6D0B.subtitle = The U.S. Botanic Garden is a living plant museum that highlights the diversity of plants and interprets the role of plants in enriching human life and supporting Earth’s diverse and fragile ecosystems.
The Conservatory is a neoclassical limestone structure with 11 lofty arches inspired by the 17th-century orangery at Versailles near Paris. The domed glasshouses are constructed with an aluminum framework styled in the glass house tradition first seen in the 1850s Crystal Palace in London. The Conservatory was designed by the Chicago firm of Bennett, Parsons & Frost and completed in 1933.
panorama_73D7C2CC_3226_AFCC_41B4_9BCEF672B40D.subtitle = The decorations in this room by Constantino Brumidi were the first fresco decorations in the United States Capitol. They were painted in 1855-1856 when the room was occupied by the Agriculture Committee. The two murals and the portrayals of the four seasons are in the fresco. The wall scenes and medallion heads are in oil.
panorama_73D68034_3225_EA5C_41BA_AA2365ADE900.subtitle = The display fountain in the park between the Capitol and Union Station is located over the Senate underground garage. It operated for the first time on July 16, 1932.
The fountain, a hexagonal granite monolith with high jets of water spouting from its center, is surrounded by six smaller jets on a lower level. Lion-head spouts on the faces of the hexagon project streams of water into a large circular basin with a scalloped stone rim, over which the water spills into a larger oval basin. The hexagon is 25 feet across and the basin measures 85 feet by 100 feet.
panorama_73D68420_3225_AA74_41BD_80859146E67E.subtitle = The glowing dome atop the Capitol Building at night is one of America’s most iconic images. The Capitol’s West Front looks out onto the National Mall which leads to the Washington Monument. The terraces were designed by Frederick Law Olmsted who believed the addition was needed to visually support the massive Capitol.
panorama_73D7D02B_3227_AA74_41A9_38C8E1AE9EAD.subtitle = The large circular area on the first floor of the Capitol is called the Crypt. The 40 Doric columns of brown stone surmounted by groined sandstone arches support the floor of the Rotunda. This center section of the building was completed in 1827 under the direction of the third Architect of the Capitol, Charles Bulfinch. Despite its name, the Crypt has never been used for funerary purposes; it serves today for the display of sculpture.
panorama_73D68927_3225_BA7C_4195_5849F8B0D535.subtitle = The memorial to Senator Robert A. Taft is a lean, modern design consisting of a rectangular bell tower 100 feet tall and faced with Tennessee marble. Douglas Orr of Connecticut was the architect of the memorial, which is located in the park between the U.S. Capitol building and Union Station. The 10 foot bronze statue of Taft was sculpted by Wheeler Williams.
panorama_73D7F32C_3226_6E4C_41C1_20035F800124.subtitle = The most unusual aspect of the Capitol Visitor Center is that it lies entirely below ground on the east side of the Capitol. Putting the new facility beneath the east plaza was considered to be the best way to render such a large structure invisible and thus preserve the views to the Capitol and respect its historic landscape setting. Slight modifications to existing walkways were necessary to lead the visitor down to the center’s entrance, and along with two new elevator pavilions, six new skylights, and new granite paving, were some of the few above-ground modifications made to the site. While construction was under way, the opportunity was also taken to restore the 19th century fountains, walks, benches, and lighting that were part of the landscape improvements designed by Frederick Law Olmsted in the 1870s.
panorama_73D6680F_3225_FA4C_41B7_B687139024C3.subtitle = The nation's 100 senators sit at individual desks arranged on a tiered semicircular platform facing a raised rostrum. A visitor's gallery overlooks the chamber on four sides. \
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The Senate met in a semicircular room of the U.S. Capitol's north wing from 1819 until this new chamber was ready in 1859. First used on January 4, 1859, the Senate chamber was designed by Thomas U. Walter, the architect of the Capitol extension. The chamber was built without windows to insulate senators from outside noise. Light was originally provided through a large skylight and ventilation came courtesy of steam-powered fans.
panorama_73D638DB_3226_9BD4_41B8_008F1BBD0E32.subtitle = The sculptural monument to President James A. Garfield is an outstanding example of American sculpture. The monument stands in the circle at First Street, S.W., and Maryland Avenue, where it was unveiled on May 12, 1887. The tapered, cylindrical granite pedestal holds four over-life-size bronze figures, with the portrait statue of Garfield at the top and three allegorical figures representing different phases of his career below. The top-coated figure, depicted as if giving a speech, gazes intently outward, a sheaf of papers in his left hand, his right resting on a book on a draped column.
panorama_157B12B7_326E_6E5C_41C4_32960F25D0C9.subtitle = The symbolic and physical heart of the United States Capitol is the Rotunda, an imposing circular room 96 feet in diameter and 180 feet in height. It is the principal circulation space in the Capitol, connecting the House and Senate sides, and is visited by thousands of people each day. The Rotunda is used for important ceremonial events as authorized by concurrent resolution, such as the lying in state of eminent citizens and the dedication of works of art.
panorama_73D601DD_3227_EDCC_41BB_4AAC6DDED4CB.subtitle = The vaulted, ornately decorated corridors on the first floor of the Senate wing in the United States Capitol are called the Brumidi Corridors because, although assistants and other artists are responsible for many of the details, the design of the murals and the major elements are by Constantino Brumidi. Born in Rome in 1805, Brumidi had painted in the Vatican and in the palace and villa of a Roman prince before emigrating to the United States in 1852. After he proved his skill in fresco painting in 1855, he spent much of the next 25 years until his death in 1880 decorating the Capitol.
panorama_73D69F5B_3226_76D4_41C1_4A82EBF93FF4.subtitle = The white marble Peace Monument was erected in 1877-1878 to commemorate the naval deaths at sea during the Civil War. The 44-foot-high monument stands in the circle to the west of the Capitol at Pennsylvania Avenue and First Street, N.W. \
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At the top of the monument, facing west, stand two classically robed female figures. Grief holds her covered face against the shoulder of History and weeps in mourning. History holds a stylus and a tablet that was inscribed "They died that their country might live." Inscribed "In memory of the officers, seamen and marines of the United States Navy who fell in defense of the Union and liberty of their country, 1861-1865," this sculptural group has also been called the Naval Monument.
panorama_73D6B9FF_3226_7DCC_41AA_CE07BFBF9EDF.subtitle = There are two Orientation Theaters in the Capitol Visitor Center where visitors will start their tours of the Capitol by watching a 13-minute orientation film that introduces them to the Capitol and illustrates how government was initially established in the United States.
panorama_73D78833_3226_9A54_41AC_6417ED730B93.subtitle = This semicircular, half-domed chamber, located north of the Rotunda, was occupied by the Senate between 1810 and 1859. After the Senate moved to its present chamber, this room was used by the Supreme Court from 1860 until 1935.
panorama_73D78153_3227_EAD4_4188_230CE52A5953.subtitle = U.S. Botanic Garden maintains a permanent, ever blooming, ever-changing display of orchids. The USBG orchid collection numbers about 5,000 specimens, but about 200 orchids are on display at any given time.
panorama_73D7A0F5_3226_EBDC_4154_4A2EC37333D4.subtitle = Unlike the Members of the Senate, Members of the House have no assigned seats but are by tradition divided by party; Members of the Democratic Party sit to the Speaker's right and Members of the Republican Party sit to his left. \
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Among the 448 permanent seats on the House Floor are four tables, or two on each side. These tables are occupied by Members of the Committee that have brought a bill to the floor for consideration and by the respective party leadership. \
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Members address the House from microphones at any table or "the well," the area immediately in front of the rostrum.
panorama_73D79BC4_3227_9E3C_41C2_2726897DE51F.subtitle = World Deserts in the Conservatory is filled with succulents, grasses, shrubs, and other flowering plants.
### Title
panorama_702280C7_3227_AA3C_41C4_A25C6F7EF1CB.label = Agriculture Committee Hearing Room
panorama_73E115E1_3227_95F4_41A6_AD6FB1E3A248.label = Bartholdi Park
panorama_73D601DD_3227_EDCC_41BB_4AAC6DDED4CB.label = Brumidi Cooridors
panorama_73D7FF73_3227_96D4_419F_17029C2FECFF.label = CVC — Emancipation Hall
panorama_73D7F530_3227_AA54_418B_3BB43862CFF6.label = CVC Congressional Auditorium
panorama_73D6B9FF_3226_7DCC_41AA_CE07BFBF9EDF.label = CVC Orientation Theatre
panorama_73D6144A_3226_6A34_41A3_B3884D4385D4.label = CVC Skylight
panorama_73D7EAD8_3227_9FD4_41C9_5C2E5372B03B.label = Cannon Caucus Room
panorama_73D7F32C_3226_6E4C_41C1_20035F800124.label = Capitol Visitor Center Entrance
panorama_73D6E432_3225_AA54_41B9_5B099BFE7041.label = Committee on the Judiciary Hearing Room
panorama_73D79BC4_3227_9E3C_41C2_2726897DE51F.label = Desert Room
panorama_73D7BA4A_3227_9E34_41AA_41255A61D5EA.label = Dirksen Building — Caucus Room
panorama_73D61502_3227_AA34_41BB_3AA31D357527.label = Dirksen Building — Committee Room
panorama_73D7E90E_3226_7A4C_4194_3043FB78583D.label = East Front Plaza
panorama_73D61E24_3226_767C_4185_5BDEF8241962.label = East Front Plaza
panorama_73D638DB_3226_9BD4_41B8_008F1BBD0E32.label = Garfield Monument
panorama_73D7C86B_3226_BAF4_41AF_E2AD9D45A1A3.label = Hart Building — Central Hearing Room
panorama_73D60355_3226_AEDC_413C_B94A86B576B4.label = Hart Senate Office Building — Atrium
panorama_73D62D92_3226_BA54_41B2_6599CC647309.label = Homeland Security Committee Room
panorama_73D7C2CC_3226_AFCC_41B4_9BCEF672B40D.label = House Appropriations Committee
panorama_73D7A0F5_3226_EBDC_4154_4A2EC37333D4.label = House Chamber
panorama_73D65C00_3226_9A34_41B7_29883B6CC038.label = House Wood Shop
panorama_73D7D736_3227_F65C_41C6_BDCA95FFB652.label = Jungle Room
panorama_73D64DCA_3226_FA34_41BD_7C8D9B274EDB.label = Library of Congress — Exterior
panorama_73D688B4_3226_FA5C_41BC_CE61CACB6176.label = Library of Congress — Exterior Closeup
panorama_73D67C8C_3226_9A4C_41C9_14954A2AA5CD.label = Library of Congress — Great Hall
panorama_73D7820A_3226_AE34_41C7_651A0B23BCD6.label = Library of Congress — Reading Room
panorama_73D7836A_3226_EEF4_41C0_32FE270498C6.label = Lyndon Baines Johnson Room
panorama_73D7D803_3226_BA34_41BE_572C321DB320.label = National Garden — Regional Garden
panorama_144CF850_326E_9AD4_41BF_2A88CF746B4E.label = National Statuary Hall
panorama_73D69138_3226_6A54_4183_1ACAC65F1E6C.label = Old Supreme Court Chamber
panorama_73D78153_3227_EAD4_4188_230CE52A5953.label = Orchid Room
panorama_73D69F5B_3226_76D4_41C1_4A82EBF93FF4.label = Peace Monument
panorama_73D6898F_3225_BA4C_41AE_0BF598EFC6D2.label = Rayburn House Office Building — Courtyard
panorama_73D68927_3225_BA7C_4195_5849F8B0D535.label = Robert A. Taft Memorial
panorama_73D6DF12_3225_B654_41C1_29656DA26F63.label = Rules and Administration
panorama_73D6F47C_3225_AACC_41B0_AA5B49E68001.label = Russell Caucus Room
panorama_73D6CA2A_3225_9E74_41C1_51D5602AB925.label = Russell Rotunda
panorama_73D6FF31_3225_9654_419E_D8F791F7F350.label = Senate Appropriations Committee Room
panorama_73D6680F_3225_FA4C_41B7_B687139024C3.label = Senate Chamber
panorama_73D68034_3225_EA5C_41BA_AA2365ADE900.label = Senate Garage Fountain
panorama_73D6A56C_3225_EACC_41AD_3A68CA9674B4.label = Speakers Lobby
panorama_73D65E71_3225_96D4_41C8_B3D6DB22C486.label = Summer House
panorama_73D7FD3E_3227_FA4C_41C8_53F826497399.label = The Bronze Door
panorama_73D6004A_3227_AA34_41C0_5A8A2327EADE.label = The Cannon Rotunda
panorama_73D7D02B_3227_AA74_41A9_38C8E1AE9EAD.label = The Capitol Crypt
panorama_73D60A9E_3227_BE4C_41B4_95924EAB6D0B.label = The Conservatory — Exterior
panorama_73D7EE2D_3226_964C_4186_AED5F20717CB.label = The Hall of Collumns
panorama_73D78D48_3226_BA34_41A8_EAD0B94738F5.label = The National Garden — Fountain
panorama_73D7C294_3226_AE5C_41B0_DDA8963555AB.label = The National Garden — Rose Garden
panorama_73D78833_3226_9A54_41AC_6417ED730B93.label = The Old Senate Chamber
panorama_73D6B476_3226_6ADC_41C5_04CD9A539027.label = The President's Room
panorama_73D6BE53_3225_96D4_41B5_2476930D20BF.label = The Rain Garden
panorama_157B12B7_326E_6E5C_41C4_32960F25D0C9.label = The Rotunda
panorama_73D663A7_3225_AE7C_41A1_B08A6C309047.label = U.S. Supreme Court
panorama_73D67EE9_3225_B7F4_417D_A663B4814FBA.label = Veterans’ Affairs Committee Room
panorama_73D6696B_3225_9AF4_41A0_7475818D7C3F.label = West Front Lawn
panorama_73D68420_3225_AA74_41BD_80859146E67E.label = West Front Lawn Night
## Skin
### Button
Button_077B4696_1EA8_00F9_41A1_CAAA00F53C8F.label = < Back
Button_33E0F47E_11C1_A20D_419F_BB809AD89259_mobile.label = ABOUT US
Button_070CE1E5_2750_8BFC_41C2_F1EF39E0D534_mobile.label = All
Button_72146E03_33ED_9634_419F_5AB48AE27BC7.label = Botanic Garden
Button_523F5714_4BF8_D53C_41B6_FE287AE8D7E4.label = Botanic Garden
Button_1830D20E_17B1_6AC3_4198_688BED36E073_mobile.label = CONTACT US
Button_521D4CD7_4BB8_3B3C_41A4_F7B2E8C2CB6F.label = Capitol Building
Button_070CC1E5_2750_8BFC_41B6_D0305B0E6819.label = Capitol Building
Button_52404054_4B88_2B3C_41B0_3785DB0BB1F4.label = Capitol Crounds
Button_1FE4B611_0C0A_256F_418E_EA27E66F8360_mobile.label = FLOORPLAN
Button_070C11E5_2750_8BFC_41B8_0C0E5CC8BBD5.label = Grounds
Button_070B71E4_2750_8BFC_41AC_D02461D18354.label = HOUSE INFO
Button_03D37B27_0C7A_63B3_41A1_89572D8C8762_mobile.label = HOUSE INFO
Button_070CE1E5_2750_8BFC_41C2_F1EF39E0D534.label = Home
Button_6075DB31_75E1_333B_41DB_53BD8F4A5F31.label = House Buildings
Button_52375898_4B88_DB34_41D1_7D8FBD1C1A5C.label = House Offices
Button_1CA392FC_0C0A_2295_41A3_18DEA65FB6AD_mobile.label = LOCATION
Button_070CA1E5_2750_8BFC_41B4_BD50F652D572.label = LOCATION
Button_070C01E5_2750_8BFC_41AA_D8403BEFF0D2_mobile.label = Learning
Button_5227B4CF_4B88_6B2C_41D2_B55DE29C445B.label = Library of Congress
Button_0DCB7EFA_33E7_B7D4_419B_789830BB8584.label = Library of Congress
Button_00EBF1D0_1ED8_0079_41B4_C95B8DC2C410.label = Next >
Button_1FDDCF4A_0C0A_23FD_417A_1C14E098FDFD_mobile.label = PANORAMA LIST
Button_1830D20E_17B1_6AC3_4198_688BED36E073.label = PARTNER WITH US
Button_1EBF3282_0C0A_1D6D_4190_52FC7F8C00A5_mobile.label = PHOTOALBUM
Button_526943FA_4B98_2CF4_41C4_8F3AFB88DEAC_mobile.label = START THE TOUR
Button_070CC1E5_2750_8BFC_41B6_D0305B0E6819_mobile.label = See More Tours
Button_0DACDB09_33E7_9E34_41C8_12D4D2327E26.label = Senate Buildings
Button_5236A9C9_4B88_7D14_41CB_9C4AA2D0FD39.label = Senate Offices
Button_070C11E5_2750_8BFC_41B8_0C0E5CC8BBD5_mobile.label = Services
Button_0DE69A67_33E7_BEFC_41C8_6E81F729057A.label = Supreme Court
Button_522543A5_4B88_2D1C_41BD_C8184754F2EB.label = Supreme Court
Button_070C71E6_2750_8BFC_41AA_04EE67A34E91_mobile.label = TOUR BY VA
Button_6075DB31_75E1_333B_41DB_53BD8F4A5F31_mobile.label = Tour by VA
Button_52385F96_4BF8_D53C_41B0_FD6E9F8597AE.label = Visitor Center
Button_070C01E5_2750_8BFC_41AA_D8403BEFF0D2.label = Visitor Center
Button_386DE8AA_17CC_0B05_41B5_DE879E1001C4_mobile.label = lorem ipsum
### Image
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Image_1BD5F5ED_356B_859A_419F_D51E025E7E79.url = skin/Image_1BD5F5ED_356B_859A_419F_D51E025E7E79_en.png
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Image_876F1DC0_DC5B_CB2B_41D8_9E8067799986_mobile.url = skin/Image_876F1DC0_DC5B_CB2B_41D8_9E8067799986_mobile_en.png
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Image_B2514FD6_A66D_1B01_41D9_E909400BA295_mobile.url = skin/Image_B2514FD6_A66D_1B01_41D9_E909400BA295_mobile_en.png
### Label
Label_0B847746_3225_963C_41C6_7F2D8A23EEA6.text = Click for More Info:
Label_844CCD0E_AEEB_3F01_41C9_4D53D2ED2BCC_mobile.text = More Info
### Multiline Text
HTMLText_386DF8AA_17CC_0B05_41AE_D7BDB2970D08_mobile.html =