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  • Embassies, From Landmark To Bulwark

    EMBASSIES, FROM LANDMARK TO BULWARK
    by Susan Spano, Times Staff Writer

    Los Angeles Times
    September 11, 2005 Sunday
    Home Edition

    HER WORLD;
    To protect diplomats abroad, new building designs play up security
    while downgrading architectural singularity.

    AMERICAN travelers may not know it, but they own a magnificent 18th
    century palace on the Place de la Concorde in Paris. After World War
    II, the U.S. government bought the building at this enviable address,
    and it now serves as the consular services division of the U.S.
    Embassy, a proud postage stamp of America and symbol of our long,
    complicated relationship with France.

    The neoclassical Hotel de Talleyrand, as it is called, is one of the
    grandest of about 270 U.S. embassies and consulates around the world
    dedicated to promoting U.S. foreign policy and serving as the face
    of America abroad.

    Some are as distinguished as the Hotel de Talleyrand in historic
    and architectural terms. But since the 1998 Al Qaeda bombing of U.S.
    embassies in Kenya and Tanzania and in the wake of Sept. 11, 2001,
    many more have been deemed a security risk and will soon be replaced
    in an unprecedented wave of embassy building. The construction,
    estimated to cost $17 billion, is aimed, above all, at safeguarding
    the people who work in American diplomatic installations abroad.

    More than 200 people died as a result of the embassy bombings in Kenya
    and Tanzania, including 12 U.S. diplomats. The two attacks were hardly
    isolated incidents; embassies have become prime terrorist targets.

    "Every year on Foreign Service Day in May, more names are added to
    the plaque at the U.S. State Department in Washington, commemorating
    members of the foreign service who have died in the line of duty," John
    M. Evans, U.S. ambassador to Armenia, said in a telephone interview.

    His mission has just moved into one of the new embassies mandated by
    the 1999 Secure Embassy Construction and Counterterrorism Act. The
    State Department's Bureau of Overseas Buildings Operations, led by
    retired Maj. Gen. Charles E. Williams, recently completed 15 new
    embassy compounds in such countries as Turkey and Bulgaria; 39 others
    are being designed or constructed around the world; and contracts will
    soon be awarded for 13 more State Department facilities in foreign
    lands, which include embassies, consulates, office buildings and
    ambassadorial residences.

    New or old, embassies generally are places of business, not museums
    or cultural centers open to casual inspection. Besides serving as the
    headquarters of U.S. diplomatic missions, they often house a variety
    of federal agencies such as the FBI and the Internal Revenue Service.
    Consular services, however -- which can be at an embassy or in a
    separate building -- are available to American citizens in case of
    such emergencies as a lost passport.

    As a result, Americans abroad get to know U.S. embassies and consulates
    only if they get into trouble, which is a pity. Some, like the Hotel
    de Talleyrand, are exceptional enough to warrant a visit.

    The State Department keeps a register of culturally significant
    properties, including Winfield House, an ambassadorial residence near
    London's Regent's Park, surrounded by a 12-acre garden. It was built
    in 1936 by Woolworth heiress Barbara Hutton, who sold it to the U.S.
    government after World War II for $1.

    A changing world

    ALSO on the register are the Palazzo Margherita, a U.S. Embassy
    office building on the Via Veneto in Rome, atop an archeological
    trove of 2,000-year-old Roman Imperial frescoes; the French colonial
    ambassador's handsome residence in Hanoi; Schoenborn Palace in Prague,
    Czech Republic, with a Baroque facade and interior features from the
    Renaissance; and the American Legation at Tangier, Morocco, the first
    U.S. government property acquired abroad, a gift from sultan Moulay
    Suliman in 1821. Unlike other entries on the register, the Tangier
    Legation is a museum that can be visited.

    Other noteworthy properties are more recent. In "Building Diplomacy:
    The Architecture of American Embassies," author Elizabeth Gill
    Lui identifies the 1950s as another time of accelerated embassy
    construction. Many facilities from that era, like the Athens embassy,
    designed by Walter Gropius, were built by modern architectural masters
    as symbols of democratic openness. In the busy hearts of foreign
    cities, they had plenty of windows and relatively easy access but
    little concern for security. "The architecture of embassies reflects
    our changing relationship with the outside world," Lui said in a
    recent telephone interview.

    That relationship turned ugly with the 1965 bombing of the U.S.
    Embassy in Saigon, Vietnam. "The political shock was that an absolutely
    fundamental principle of international order -- the mutually agreed
    upon inviolability of diplomats and their missions operating in host
    countries -- was violated," Charles Hill, a diplomat and fellow of
    Stanford University's Hoover Institution, said in an e-mail. Subsequent
    attacks on American diplomatic facilities -- in Tehran; Beirut;
    Dar es Salaam, Tanzania; and Nairobi, Kenya -- ultimately resulted
    in the current rush to build new, more secure embassies. Since 2001,
    when Williams was put in charge of the program, the Overseas Buildings
    Operations bureau has cut costs and construction time, chiefly because
    of the introduction of a standard embassy design.

    Sized, like the three bears -- small, medium and large -- the design
    template de-emphasizes architectural singularity. Instead, security
    is optimized, with such features as perimeter walls, guard booths,
    bulletproof windows and doors, leeway separating the building from
    the street, anti-ram barriers and sites at a distance from congested
    city centers.

    Though the State Department intends to customize its new
    standard-design embassies to their settings -- for instance, the
    Armenian embassy is on a lake reflecting Mt. Ararat (actually in
    neighboring Turkey) thought to be the biblical landing place of
    Noah's Ark -- critics have called them bunkers, reflections of fear,
    not the free and open values of American democracy.

    At the very least, post-9/11 requirements for secure embassy buildings
    make it harder for the State Department to maintain historic landmarks
    like the Hotel de Talleyrand. The choice of new building sites outside
    city centers signals the abandonment of storied embassy districts. And
    it's unknown whether access to consular services may become, in
    certain cases, more difficult for American travelers in trouble.

    "What the average American tourist needs to know," said diplomat
    Hill, "is that the American government is not responsible for these
    difficulties. It is the rise of terrorist movements, which have set
    themselves monstrously against the basic foundations of international
    order, law and established diplomatic practice."

    The recent relocation of the U.S. Consulate in Istanbul, Turkey,
    from a landmark palazzo downtown to a new building 45 minutes outside
    the city illustrates the increasingly conflicted claims on American
    diplomatic missions abroad.

    The former consulate, known as the Palazzo Corpi, in the busy Beyoglu
    district, was completed around 1882. It was then purchased for use
    as an embassy by Ambassador John G.A. Leishman, who assumed that
    the government would ultimately reimburse him. But Congress was
    in a stingy mood, so back in Washington, D.C., Leishman staked the
    building in a poker game with a handful of influential lawmakers,
    who promised to see that the ambassador was repaid for the property if
    he won. The Palazzo Corpi has the distinction of being the only U.S.
    Embassy acquired by the government at a card table.

    But the building's vulnerable architecture and location fated it for
    replacement, and in 2003 the consulate moved to a new building so
    impregnable that it has been likened to a maximum-security prison.
    Just a few months later, a terrorist bomb hit the British consulate
    and London-based HSBC bank, near the Palazzo Corpi in central Istanbul,
    killing 32 people, including Britain's consul general, Roger Short. One
    of the suspected perpetrators arrested after the bombing reportedly
    told investigators that his group would have targeted the American
    consulate had it not moved to a more secure facility.

    In these highly charged times, balancing security requirements with
    access, cultural exchange and the promotion of American values so
    vital to effective diplomacy is the great challenge of the State
    Department's embassy building program. "We can't do our work in a
    fortress," said Ambassador Evans. "But in Yerevan [Armenia], we've
    got the balance right."

    Mixing business, comfort

    THE new American embassy in Yerevan, Armenia's mountain-bordered
    capital, is nothing like a bunker, said Evan. It's a five-minute drive
    from Yerevan's central square, and the building, completed earlier
    this year, is surrounded by lakefront and three perimeter walls,
    providing protection to 70 Americans, as well as 328 Armenians who
    work there. "But once you're inside, it's like a college campus, with
    lawns and trees and more space for receiving guests," said Evans. The
    waiting area for visa applicants and U.S. citizens in need of consular
    services is more comfortable, he said, and the embassy's library is
    open to the public.

    Seemingly successful applications of the secure embassy design are
    hopeful signs, even if their out-of-town locations speak volumes about
    America's response to the changing world. "When we build, they will
    come," Williams said by e-mail, referring to his belief that embassy
    construction outside city centers would stimulate development.

    At the very least, it's a safe bet we won't be buying new property
    on the Place de la Concorde, which is why, here in Paris, I keep
    walking by to admire the Hotel de Talleyrand. Keeping diplomats and
    foreign service workers safe comes first, of course. I just hope
    the illustrious old building will never be deemed too insecure to
    serve as a part of the U.S. Embassy to France. Every time I pass it,
    I feel proud to be an American.

    *

    Susan Spano also writes "Postcards From Paris," which can be read
    at latimes.com/susanspano.
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