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Table of Contentss
Acknowledgements
Introduction
Dinosaur
Wright Brothers
Gettysburg
Pertified Forest
Rocky Mountain
Cecil Doty
Conclusion
Bibliography
Appendix I
Appendix II
Appendix III
Appendix IV
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Mission
66 Visitor Centers
Chapter 2
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Dedication of the
Visitor Center
The exterior appearance of the visitor center was significantly
altered by the end of the summer, with the completion of the wooden fence
shielding the parking area from a clear view of the first flight markers
and buildings. In preparation for the dedication, landscape architect
Lewis from EODC "inspected new planting and miscellaneous construction,"
and the Park Service's supervisory architect, Judson Ball, reviewed the
state of the visitor center. [62] By September the walks from the visitor center to the
camp buildings and the main entrance gate were complete. The information
desk for the lobby was delivered and installed, and planning for a permanent
display of a Wright glider replica continued. [63]
The Wright Brothers Memorial Visitor Center was dedicated on December
17, 1960, the 57th anniversary of the first flight. According to one
news account, a "slim audience saddened by Friday's airliner collision
over New York and Saturday's crash at Munich" attended. [64] The most memorable moment in Mitchell's recollection
of the event was a speech by Maj. Gen. Benjamin D. Foulois, who actually
watched the Wright brothers test their early planes and flew the country's
first army aircraft. Local papers covering the dedication had only compliments
for the new visitor center building, and by early December over one
hundred thousand visitors had already passed through its doors. [65]
If the Wright Brothers' legacy was the main focus of dedication day,
over the next few years the visitor center building would become the
subject of its own articles and press releases. Progressive Architecture
had given notice of the design in 1959 and, in 1961, included a floor
plan, photograph of the finished building, and close-ups of the concrete
wall and terrace design in its profile of "the Philadelphia School."
[66] Two years later, the "Kitty Hawk Museum"
was a feature of the journal's August issue. The building received praise
for its orientation and planning of interior spaces that "make visiting
this national park an aesthetic as well as an instructive experience."
[67] Washington Post architectural
critic Wolf Von Eckardt called the visitor center a "simple, but all
the more eloquent, architectural statement that honors the past precisely
because it does not ape it." [68] The Wright Brothers Visitor Center was also singled
out in "Great Builders of the 1960's," a special section of the international
publication Japan Architect (1970), in the AIA Journal's
1971 assessment of Park Service design, "Our Park Service Serves Architecture
Well," and as an example of excellent government-sponsored architecture
in The Federal Presence (1979). [69]
The fact that Mitchell/Giurgola was hardly a household name in the early
sixties, even in professional circles, speaks eloquently of the building's
enthusiastic reception by the popular media. [70]
CONTINUED 
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