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William J. Clinton Federal Building : ウィキペディア英語版
William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building

The William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building is located in the Federal Triangle in Washington, D.C., across 12th Street from the Old Post Office. The New Post Office, as the Clinton Building was originally known, housed the headquarters of the Post Office Department until that department was replaced by the United States Postal Service in 1971. The building, which now houses the headquarters of the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, was first renamed the Ariel Rios Federal Building on February 5, 1985, in honor of Ariel Rios, an undercover special agent for the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives who was killed in the line of duty on December 2, 1982. After the federal government announced that it would be renaming the building again in honor of former President Bill Clinton on May 13, 2013,〔("GSA Renaming D.C. Building After Former President." ''Washington Business Journal.'' May 13, 2013. ) Accessed 2013-05-13.〕 the building was officially renamed to its current title, the William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building, at a ceremony that took place July 17, 2013.
==History==

The Clinton Building was constructed in the early 1930s as part of the redevelopment of the Federal Triangle area. At that time one of the city's most blighted neighborhoods, this area was known as Murder Bay and was a center of crime and prostitution.〔("Ariel Rios Building, Washington, D.C." ). (General Services Administration official site). Retrieved May 18, 2008.〕
The plan for the area's redevelopment was laid out as part of the 1901 McMillan Plan, the first federally funded urban redevelopment plan, and the redevelopment of Federal Triangle began in earnest in the 1930s under the leadership of Treasury Secretary Andrew W. Mellon. Construction on the Clinton Building was completed in 1934.
The Clinton Building was a central feature of the redevelopment. The neoclassical building was designed by architects William Adams Delano and Chester Holmes Aldrich, who took as their inspiration the Place Vendôme in Paris. The central section of the tri-unit building consists of two huge, back to back, semicircular units with side wings. The semicircle formed by the building's curve on its eastern façade was to be mirrored by a similarly curved façade built across 12th Street on the site of the Old Post Office Building.
Secretary Mellon's building commission actively sought the demolition of the Old Post Office to fulfill that plan, but preservation efforts—which continued over the course of 50 years—saved the Old Post Office. The second half of the grand plaza was never finished as designed, save for a curve in the northwest corner of the headquarters of the Internal Revenue Service. (The Ronald Reagan Building, completed in 1998, does mirror, to some degree, the semicircle of the west façade of the Clinton Building.)
The exterior is decorated with bas relief panels, by Adolph Alexander Weinman.〔(【引用サイトリンク】title=Ariel Rios Federal Building (New Post Office), Washington, DC )
The Clinton Building has been refurbished with the architectural details of the hallways preserved in the style of the 1920s and 1930s. A seven-story marble spiral staircase is a prominent element of the building's interior. A chandelier hangs in the center of the staircase and has exposed bulbs to illuminate each floor. It terminates in a dramatic chrome and brass globe.
In December 2012, both houses of Congress unanimously voted to rename the Rios Building as the William Jefferson Clinton Federal Building, after Bill Clinton, the 42nd president.〔The legislation is Public Law 112-237 (S. 3687, 112th Cong., 2d sess.). It also renamed the George Mahon Federal Building in Lubbock, Texas, the "George H.W. Bush and George W. Bush United States Courthouse and George Mahon Federal Building", and renamed Federal Office Building 8 in Washington, D.C., as the "Thomas P. O'Neill, Jr. Federal Building".〕 The General Services Administration administratively renamed the building for Clinton on May 13, 2013. The structure was formally dedicated at a ceremony on July 17, 2013, at which Clinton spoke and former EPA Administratrix Carol Browner attended. The Rios family approved of renaming a building. A reflecting pool at the new ATF headquarters on New York Avenue NW was named for Rios.〔(Fears, Darryl. "EPA Headquarters Renamed in Honor of Bill Clinton." ''Washington Post.'' July 17, 2013 ), accessed 2013-07-018; ("ATF to Name Reflecting Pool in Honor of Special Agent Ariel Rios." Press release. Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives. United States Department of Justice. July 16, 2013 ), accessed 2013-07-018.〕

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