Describing D.C.’s ‘National Security Sprawl’

Posted: April 8th, 2007 | Author: Rob Goodspeed | Filed under: District of Columbia, Urban Development, Virginia |

National Security Sprawl To Deborah Natsios, the September 11, 2001 attack on Washington ushered in a new epoch of national security sprawl. She traces the evolution of “war sprawl” in the region: the city’s circumferential Civil War forts, suburban WWII facilities, Cold War beltway and missile placements, and exurban defense industry office campuses.

In Natsios’ account, the September 11 attack “inaugurated a new chapter in a regional history,” extending far beyond the downtown security bollards. The attack transformed “sprawl’s unpredictable legacy of subdivisions, culs-de-sac, big-box retailers, parking lots, fast-food franchises and high-tech corridors” into a “battlespace” subject to aggressive home raids and panoptic schemes of advanced electronic surveillance.

Leftist jargon aside, the article’s history and intriguing graphics make it well worth a perusal.

> National Security Sprawl by Deborah Natsios, from Architectural Design, Nov/Dec 2005, pp. 80-85.


One Comment on “Describing D.C.’s ‘National Security Sprawl’”

  1. #1 The Goodspeed Update » Blog Archive » Virginia’s Spotsylvania Courts Security Sprawl said at 2:13 am on October 30th, 2007:

    [...] the blast radius of an atomic bomb during the Cold War, and bollards and checkpoints today. To geographer Deborah Natsios, the contemporary metropolitan region contains “artifacts of the national security [...]


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