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All the United States New York State New York City Manhattan Long Lines Building

Long Lines Building

An uber-secure, windowless tower of doom in the center of Manhattan is an NSA spyscraper.

New York, New York

Added By
Sarah Brumble
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View of 33 Thomas Street from the adjacent streets at the intersection of Church & Worth.   Wikipedia user Dhaluza
Among the last “brick mountains” from the golden days of telecommunications   Flickr user Mister V
Street level view of 33 Thomas Street entrance showing elevated foyer.   Wikipedia user Dhaluza
  Michael Busch / Atlas Obscura User
  ipinguping / Atlas Obscura User
Long Lines Building   blimpcaptain / Atlas Obscura User
  Lilsxkitten / Atlas Obscura User
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About

So you finally noticed that terrifying, windowless skyscraper in the middle of Manhattan? It's fine, really. Now, move along.

Unofficially known as the "Long Lines Building," New York's doom-iest tower was designed in 1974 by architect John Carl Warneke. Though its most noteworthy feature is its utter lack of windows, the building is also known for its unusually high ceilings and for being designed to bear an extremely large amount of weight per square-foot. 

Not that the latter two details are something the average citizen would ever be privy to witnessing on their own, of course. The name "Long Lines" suggests a lovely hat tip to the building's architectural elements, but in reality the sky fortress was originally created to house AT&T's carrier exchanges for their long distance telephone switches and equipment. Today it continues in that purpose, while also storing a portion of the company's datacenter processing. This ephemeral element of the technological infrastructure has been deemed so important that the building is able to survive nuclear fallout and exist off-grid for up to two weeks without issue.

What's more, it's since come to light that this ominous building is used as a hub for NSA spying—a brick-and-mortar arm of the surveillance state. As reported by The Intercept, the fortified skyscraper was not only made to safeguard critical telecommunications equipment, a sort of fortress for the information age, but it also houses equipment for controversial government data collection and wire tapping, codenamed TITANPOINTE.

One look at the skyscraper's face should tell you that public admittance isn't an option. But that beautiful, terrifying image you have in your head of stories upon stories of telephone cables and digital boxes stacked 18-feet high, glowing within the building's impenetrable walls, might just be better than the real thing, anyway.

Related Tags

Architectural Oddities Architecture Spies Government

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Added By

littlebrumble

Edited By

Mike Portanova, krisjp84, kristingail, erjeffery...

  • Mike Portanova
  • krisjp84
  • kristingail
  • erjeffery
  • dlc31723
  • Lilsxkitten
  • Michael Busch
  • ipinguping
  • blimpcaptain
  • chapmanpaulsteven

Published

September 1, 2015

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  • http://web.archive.org/web/20070630233827/http://www.greatgridlock.net/NYC/nyc3b.html#74b
  • http://www.nyc-architecture.com/SOH/SOH026.htm
  • https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/33_Thomas_Street
Long Lines Building
33 Thomas Street
New York, New York, 10007
United States
40.716437, -74.00613
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