National Audio-Visual Conservation Center
The National Audio-Visual Conservation Center is a branch of the Library of Congress devoted to preserving the United States' audio-visual history. It includes the Packard Campus, opened in 2007 to store the then entire 6.3 million piece collection of the Library's movie, television, and sound artifacts, the Center's largest facility; the Library's Motion Picture and Television Division and Recorded Sound Division reference centers on Capitol Hill; the Mary Pickford Theater; and any other Library of Congress audio-visual storage facilities that remain outside the Packard Campus audiovisual archive located inside Mount Pony in Culpeper, Virginia.
Packard Campus establishment
From 1969 to 1988, the original campus was a high-security storage facility operated by the Federal Reserve Board, referred to colloquially as "Mt. Pony". With the approval of the United States Congress in 1997, it was purchased by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond via a $5.5 million grant, done on behalf of the Library of Congress. With a further $150 million from the Packard Humanities Institute and $82.1 million from Congress, the facility was transformed into the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center, which completed construction in mid-2007, and after transfer of the bulk of archives, opened for free public movie screenings on most weekends in the fall 2008. The campus offered, for the first time, a single site to store all 6.3 million pieces of the Library's movie, television, and sound collection.Technically, the Packard Campus is just the largest part of the whole National Audio-Visual Conservation Center, which also consists of the Library of Congress's Motion Picture and Television Division and Recorded Sound Division reference centers on Capitol Hill, the Mary Pickford Theater, and any other Library of Congress audio-visual storage facilities that remain outside the Packard Campus.
The PCAVC design, named Best of 2007 by Mid-Atlantic Construction Magazine, involved upgrading the existing bunker and creating an entirely new, below-ground entry building that also includes a large screening room, office space and research facilities. Designers BAR Architects, project-architect SmithGroup and landscape designers SWA Group, along with DPR Construction, Inc., collaborated in what is now the largest green-roofed commercial facility in the eastern United States, blending into the surrounding environment and ecosystem.
Federal Reserve bunker
With Cold War tensions came fear that in the event of a nuclear war, the economy of the United States would be destroyed. In response to this, the United States Federal Reserve constructed a bunker to protect the computer bank responsible for electronic funds transfers between member banks of the Federal Reserve, which moved some $30 trillion dollars a year in 1975 through the so-called "Culpeper Switch" located at Mt. Pony. It also served as a data backup point for member banks east of the Mississippi River.Between 1969 and 1988 the facility housed enough U.S. currency to replenish the cash supply east of the Mississippi River in the event of a catastrophic event.
Dedicated on December 10, 1969, the, radiation-hardened facility was constructed of steel-reinforced concrete thick. Lead-lined shutters could be dropped to shield the windows of the semi-recessed facility, which is covered by of dirt and surrounded by barbed-wire fences and a guard post.
Prior to July 1992, the bunker also served as a physical continuity of government facility. With a peacetime staff of 100, the site was designed to support an emergency staff of 540 for 30 days, but only 200 beds were provided in the men's and women's dormitories. A pre-planned menu of freeze-dried foods for the first 30 days of occupation was stored on site; private wells would provide uncontaminated water following an attack. Other noteworthy features of the facility were a cold storage area for maintaining bodies unable to be promptly buried, an incinerator, indoor pistol range, and a helicopter landing pad.
Post-Cold War
In 1988, all currency was removed from Mount Pony. The Culpeper Switch ceased operation in 1992, its functions having been decentralized to three smaller sites. In addition, its status as continuity of government site was removed. The facility was poorly maintained by a skeleton staff until 1997 when the bunker was offered for sale. With the approval of the United States Congress, it was purchased by the David and Lucile Packard Foundation from the Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond via a $5.5 million grant, done on behalf of the Library of Congress. With a further $150 million from the Packard Humanities Institute and $82.1 million from Congress, the facility was transformed into the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center, which opened in mid-2007. The center offered, for the first time, a single site to store all 6.3 million pieces of the library's movie, television, and sound collection.Campus architecture
The Packard Campus was designed exploit the original facility's mostly underground, sod-roofed construction - which so insulated it from the elements that no heating system was required: residual heat from the building's numerous computers was used to maintain warmth in cool seasons, and air-conditioning was required in warm. This was renovated and expanded along the principles of green building, with a much larger exposed structure designed to have minimal visual impact on the Virginia countryside by blending into the existing landscape. From the northwest, only a semi-circular terraced arcade appears in the hill to allow natural light into the administrative and work areas. Additionally, the site also included the largest private sector re-forestation effort on the Eastern Seaboard, representing over 9,000 tree saplings and nearly 200,000 other plantings.The underground vaults contain nearly of shelving, not including 124 nitrate film vaults: the largest nitrate film storage complex in the Western Hemisphere. The campus's data center is the first archive to preserve digital content at the petabyte level.
The campus also contains a 206-seat theater capable of projecting both film and modern digital cinema and which features a digital organ that rises from under the stage to accompany silent film screenings. The Packard Campus currently holds semi-weekly screenings of films of cultural significance in its reproduction Art Deco theater according to .