With Special Thanks to Anthony Casendino
In 1959, the Cornell College of Architecture launched a study to
design a city that could survive nuclear attack. In the view of
Prof. Fredrick W. Edmondson, existing cities were ill-suited to the
demands of the Cold War, and he proposed to design from whole cloth a
new alternative, better adapted to the rigors of the nuclear age.
The Schoharie Valley Townsite project was one of the most ambitious
civil defense proposals of the Cold War: a factory-town that could
not only withstand nuclear attack, but maintain war production even
as the hydrogen bombs burst around it.
The Study
The study was staffed primarily by students, senior undergraduates
in the architecture program and first-year graduate students in the
planning department, with Professor Edmondson acting as the faculty
advisor. Edmondson had graduated from Cornell in 1937, then won a
prestigious Prix de Rome fellowship. By 1944 he was back at Cornell
as the director of the Landscape Architecture program. Besides
teaching, he also acted as an architecture and planning consultant,
and in the 1950s helped select the site for the new capitol of
Brazil. He seems to have had a personal interest in civil defense,
judging by his continued participation in civil defense conferences
after the project was over.
Figure 1: Students Working on Architectural Diagrams
For most of his students, though, the study was just schoolwork.
According to one, Anthony Casendino, most of the undergraduates “just
saw this as a way to interact with some of the graduate planners and
to not do the [undergraduate] subthesis.” In an interview with
journalist Tom Vanderbilt, another student, M. Perry Chapman,
recalled that “most of us took it for granted that it was just part
of trying to introduce some unconventionality – at least in the
physical context of the planning.”
Besides his students, Edmondson recruited an array of public and
private organizations to assist: the New York State Civil Defense
Commission, the federal Office of Civil and Defense Mobilization, the
RAND Corporation, IBM, the state Department of Commerce, the Office
of the New York State Geologist, the Buffalo Forge company, US Naval
Air Reserve Station Floyd Bennet, and ninety individuals from groups
like the Atomic Energy Commission and the Naval Radiological Defense
Laboratory. The American Machine and Foundry corporation and the
Ford Foundation provided financial support.
Figure 2: Student Working on Design
The students were initially divided into seven research teams, who
began by studying “basic design criteria” for two weeks. As a
baseline, they decided to design the town to withstand a 20 megaton
blast at a distance of ten miles from city center, and to then
maintain industrial production while buttoned up against fallout.
The next step was to choose a location in New York state for their
new town. Based on local geology, the availability of transport,
and being outside the blast radius of existing cities, they narrowed
the choice to either the Schoharie Valley or Slaterville. Edmondson
then divided the class again, this time into four teams, two for each
candidate site, to prepare preliminary proposals. The Schoharie
site won the competition, and the group moved on to the design phase.
Figure 3: Map of Project Location
Figure 4: Schoharie Valley in 1959
The Design
The Schoharie Townsite was explicitly modeled after the factory
towns of the IBM corporation, and centered around the “EMF”, or
Electronics Manufacturing Facility. Based on existing IBM
factory-towns, they estimated a population of 9,000, of whom about
1,500 would work at the EMF itself.
The students rejected a completely subterranean design as both too
expensive and too depressing to live in. Instead, they decided to
build the town on the surface, with underground communal shelters for
each neighborhood linked by tunnels. Since the different shelters
were all connected, in an attack people could head for cover
immediately, without worrying about being cut off from family members
in different shelters. Every point on the surface would be within
1500 feet – about five minutes walk – from a shelter entrance.
All underground space would be buried beneath at least four and a
half feet of earth and a foot of concrete for blast protection and
radiation attenuation.
The 9,000 residents would live in 1,158 apartments, 372 rowhouse and
duplex units, and 951 detached houses, split among three main
residential areas. Each residential area would be centered around a
community center with an elementary school, shops, social center,
churches, communal recreation areas, and a park. The entrances to
the neighborhood shelter would be in the elementary schools. Each
entrance would include mass decontamination stations, able to handle
60-75 people per hour.
Figure 5: Model of the Community
At the center of the three residential areas would be a central
business hub with a high school, municipal buildings, stadium, and
shops. The town high school would sit on top of the downtown
shelter, which would also be the hub of the subterranean network.
The municipal offices' basements would be hardened and serve as the
town's civil defense control center.
Figure 6: Model of Underground Shelter
Unlike the rest of the town, the Electronics Manufacturing Facility
would be entirely underground, in limestone one hundred feet below
the surface. The access tunnel would have a series of turns to
dilute blast, and the internal structures would be shock-mounted.
The student planners saw the subterranean character of the factory as
a bonus – “by virtue of its subterranean character, the plant
inflicts no objectionable atmosphere upon adjacent residential areas,
so that usual difficulties in industry-residence relationships should
not arise.”
Figure 7: Map of EMF
The town would get its water from underground wells, with an
underground treatment plant and million-gallon subterranean reservoir
in the rock above the EMF, and three other million-gallon reservoirs
located elsewhere. A small light water reactor would supply the
electrical power.
All of the underground spaces would serve secondary roles in
peacetime. The rooms of the high school shelter would be used a
gymnasium, library, auditorium, cafeteria, and storage facilities.
The underground tunnels would hold a “seatway” transportation
network, a sort of minimalist subway: “trains” of eight to ten
chairs would be pulled along by a continuously moving belt, briefly
disengaging from the belt at stations to allow passengers to get on
or off.
Figure 8: Diagram of Seatway System
The shelters would be stocked with collapsible furniture that would
occupy little volume when not in use. Two types were designed for
the study: the “Family Tree”, a network of telescoping poles that
could be used to hang hammocks, and curtains for privacy, and the
“Versibed”, a rectangular frame that could be attached to a
variety of surfaces.
Figure 9: Diagram of Collapsible "Family Tree"
The study concluded with a brief narrative of a family in the
Schoharie Valley Townsite the day the air raid sirens wail: Jim,
Isabel, and Jimmy Curran. Jim is working at the factory, Jimmy is
at school, and Isabel – this being 1959 – is baking a pie. When
they hear the siren, they all naturally rush into the shelters.
Isabel and Jimmy are reunited, while Jim – a civil defense officer
– reports to the CD control center. Over the next day, Isabel and
Jimmy help erect “Family Trees”, while Jim performs unspecified
civil defense work. No mention is made of an actual enemy attack
in this episode; the story has the air of an extended rehearsal. In
retrospect, perhaps that's intentional.
The Epilogue
Edmondson's students presented the finalized plans and detailed
models at a UN auditorium in April of 1960, and Cornell printed the
study as a pamphlet. The project received some press attention,
though nothing exceptional. As far as I have been able to learn,
while many of the students participating went on to successful
careers, none maintained an interest in civil defense.
While the students may have seen the project as just a school
project, Edmondson seems to have taken it more seriously. At a
design conference a year later, he presented a proposal for a
150,000-person partially underground city called “NEUS”, which
would serve as an “executive center” for the American northeast.
He claimed that, since the city would be extremely compact and
mostly underground, it would take up “only a few hundred acres,
ousting one good size dairy farm.” He decried existing cities as
obsolete: “Born by geography but grown by the technology of Eli
Whitney, they are reacting weakly to the surgical concept of renewal.
The prognosis is poor. The old arteries are collapsed, the organs
of social and mechanical functions are diseased and intravenous
feeding of Federal, State, and private finance simply extends
disability payments for a few more years.”
In some ways, the Schoharie Valley Townsite study was published at
the perfect time. Just a year and a half later, President John F.
Kennedy would call for a national civil defense effort, setting off a
brief but intense wave of interest, still visible in the rusting
black-and-yellow fallout shelter signs decorating municipal buildings
throughout America. But the civil defenders of the Kennedy era had
no interest in building new cities. Instead, they chose smaller,
simpler, cheaper solutions: encouraging private shelter construction,
finding and stocking existing rooms that could be used as shelters,
etc.
And, in retrospect, while there is a certain Buck Rogers-ish appeal
to the idea of a nuke-proof city, that was probably the right choice.
Previously published in the Journal of Civil Defense, the magazine of The American Civil Defense Association.
... reminds me of H.G. Wells "The Time Machine" - the Morlocks.
ReplyDeleteFascinating- thanks!
Reminds me Vaults from Fallout games
ReplyDelete