Sunday, 10 March, 2002
Rebuilding
the Pentagon
Alex
Belida
Pentagon
9
Mar 2002

Monday (3/11)
marks the six-month anniversary of the attack on the Pentagon by
suicide terrorists who commandeered a jetliner and slammed it into the
building, killing 125 people inside the famous five-sided structure.
VOA Pentagon Correspondent Alex Belida reports on the rebuilding
effort.
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Reconstruction
of the damaged section of the Pentagon
U.S. Defense Department
Photo - March 5, 2002 |
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The work crews
involved in what is called the Phoenix Project have tapered back from
their initial 24-hour-a-day, seven-day-a-week pace. But not much. They
now still labor 20-hours-a-day, six-days-a-week.
That is because the
hundreds of men and women helping rebuild areas of the Pentagon
damaged in the terrorist attack have an ambitious goal: by this coming
September 11th they want to get military and civilian staff back to
work in totally refinished offices at the exact spot where American
Airlines Flight 77 crashed into the building.
Lee Evey is the
Project Manager of this more than $700 million effort to move rapidly
from a bloody tragedy to a construction triumph. "Our stated goal
is we want to have people back in the building on E Ring, where the
aircraft impacted, by September 11," he said. "We want them
to be sitting at their desk performing their mission, doing their
work. So we expect those offices not just to have a chair in it, that
people sit in, we expect those to be fully functional offices."
Mr. Evey says
the project is several weeks ahead of schedule. But to help keep the
workers' eyes squarely on the goal, a countdown clock has been erected
at the construction site, counting down to zero on the September 11
anniversary.
Not that
construction crews need any prompting. Mr. Evey said the workers are
already highly motivated. "It's a highly motivated workforce,"
he said. "There's no question about that. And the reasons for
that motivation sometimes are quite personal. You know we have people
on the project who lost family members and things like that, okay?
These are just the most -- construction workers are just the most
patriotic people you'll ever meet in your life, just incredible
people. So I'm very proud of them."
Nearly 50,000 square
meters of office space on five floors and in three of the Pentagon's
five rings were demolished in the attack. But casualties were kept to
a minimum because of anti-bomb security upgrades in the area that was
struck.
Mr. Evey says
the rebuilt section will have the same kinds of bomb-proofing measures
plus additional upgrades offering new protection against fire, blast
and chemical, biological and radiological attack.
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