WASHINGTON — To the myriad indignities suffered by Congress, including
stagnant legislation, partisan warfare and popularity on a par with
petty criminals, add this: the Capitol’s roof is leaking, and there is
no money to fix it.
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Architect of the Capitol
A piece of cast iron was removed from the dome for safety reasons by the Architect of the Capitol.
Architect of the Capitol
Damage to the exterior of the Capitol dome.
The Capitol dome, the nation’s grandest symbol of federal authority, has
been dinged by years of inclement weather, and its exterior is in need
of repair.
The dome has 1,300 known cracks and breaks. Water that has seeped in
over the years has caused rusting on the ornamentation and staining on
the interior of the Rotunda, just feet below the fresco “
The Apotheosis of Washington,” which is painted on the Rotunda’s canopy.
Like most of what the federal government is on the hook to fix —
highways, bridges and airports — the dome is imperiled both by tough
economic times and by a politically polarized Congress. While Senate
appropriators have voted to repair the dome, which has not undergone
major renovations for 50 years, their House counterparts say there is
not money right now. In that way, the dome is a metaphor for the
nation’s decaying infrastructure.
“The dome needs comprehensive rehabilitation,” said Stephen T. Ayers,
the architect of the Capitol, whose office oversees the building’s
physical state. “It’s a public safety issue.”
The skirt of the dome — the section around the base of the original
sandstone foundation — was fixed up recently at a cost of about $20
million, but an additional $61 million is needed to repair and restore
the rest of the structure’s exterior.
The Senate Appropriations Committee
voted just before Congress left for its August recess to provide the money.
“I support funding the Capitol dome,” said Senator John Hoeven,
Republican of North Dakota, who voted against an appropriations bill
because it did not include money for the dome. (The money was included
moments later in an amendment, which passed with Mr. Hoeven’s vote.)
The appropriators in the Republican-controlled House are starting with a
smaller overall budget for the 2013 fiscal year than the
Democratic-controlled Senate, and they want to finance much of the
government’s operations at lower levels.
Senate leaders have decided that it would be too difficult to reconcile
the two appropriations bills, as is normally done, until after the
election.
That means Congress will have to pass a short-term spending bill — the
sort that set off the fight that almost shut down the government last
year — and it most likely will not include more money for repairs.
“This is not a ‘bridge to nowhere’ we’re talking about here,” said
Senator Charles E. Schumer of New York, the leader of the Senate Rules
Committee, which oversees the architect’s office. “This is basic upkeep
to the United States Capitol building. There is a time and place to
debate spending levels and the proper role of the federal government,
but when your house has a leaky roof, you pay to fix the roof.”
The Capitol’s first dome, made of copper-covered wood, was completed in
1824 but by the 1850s was deemed too small. It was also seen as a fire
hazard in a place where oil lamps, British attacks and other events had
caused blazes. A cast-iron replacement was envisioned, and lawmakers,
thrilled with the idea, appropriated $100,000 to begin construction,
with the acquiescence of President Franklin Pierce.
Construction on the cast-iron dome began in 1856 and progressed through various architects, disputes over the design and the
Civil War,
when the project was continued in part by workers who were afraid that
the military would take the metals and repurpose them for war use, said
Donald A. Ritchie, the Senate historian.
The Statue of Freedom, which sits triumphantly atop the nine million
pounds of ironwork that makes up the dome, was completed in December
1863, topping the project. The interior was finished in 1866, its famous
fresco revealed. Total cost: $1,047,291, or more than $15 million in
today’s dollars.
The dome was completely restored in 1960 during the construction of the
Capitol’s East Front extension. Weather remains its biggest enemy:
precipitation pelts the exterior, and the statue endures the occasional
strike of lightning. At least 100 pieces of the dome have fallen off or
been removed, including a 40-pound cast-iron decorative acorn.
Viewed from a (sort of scary) balcony between the fresco above and a
frieze depicting American history that lines the Rotunda’s interior,
tourists with iPhones and fanny packs can be seen lingering in awe
hundreds of feet below, unaware of the water damage and chipping paint
above.
“When you have those conditions on the outside,” said Mr. Ayers, the
Capitol’s architect, “it really accelerates deterioration on the
inside,” including possible damage to the fresco, which is painted on
plaster.
In other words, just as it is best to fix a bathroom leak before it
causes damage to the rest of the house, the dome repairs could prove
much more expensive over time.
The project will involve taking apart many pieces of the dome, one at a
time, and then putting them back together once repaired, much like a
puzzle, Mr. Ayers said.
In many ways, the process reflects the history of the Capitol and the nation, said Mr. Ritchie, the historian. “The
Capitol building
is an interesting conglomeration,” he said. “It is a whole series of
buildings put together at different times, and in that way it is a nice
reflection of American democracy, which was put together piecemeal from a
lot of different materials. It reflects one motto of our nation, ‘E
pluribus unum,’ Latin for ‘Out of many, one.’ ”
It is a project, however, that may be delayed until the country’s fiscal condition improves.
“The Capitol is a wonderful story of the history of our nation,” Mr.
Ritchie said. “And as a result it is preserved very carefully to
maintain the story, not to mention to keep it from leaking into the
Rotunda.”