The NPRC was created in 1956 through the mergers of predecessor agencies after
World War II, including the
Demobilized Personnel Records Center (DPRC) and the
Military Personnel Records Center (MILPERCEN) of the
Department of Defense, along with the
St. Louis Federal Records Center of the
General Services Administration. In final form, the NPRC handled the service records of people in
federal civil service or American military service, overseen by the
National Archives and Records Administration of the General Services Administration. In 1951, the Department of Defense hired the Detroit firm of
Hellmuth, Yamasaki, and Leinweber, architects, to design a facility for its Demobilized Personnel Records Center. The firm visited several similar operations, including a
U.S. Navy records center at
Garden City, New York, and a Department of Defense facility in
Alexandria, Virginia, to study their functions and storage systems. Their February 1952 report detailed different approaches, including
fire prevention,
detection, and
suppression systems. The Naval records center, for example, was outfitted with a full
fire sprinkler system, while the Department of Defense facility was not. This reflected a debate among
archivists and
librarians: are documents at greater risk in a facility with sprinklers, which could cause
water damage, or in one without sprinklers to guard against
fire damage? Department of Defense officials approved a design plan that omitted sprinklers and heat and smoke detectors. Moreover, each floor had large spaces for records storage stretching hundreds of feet and containing no
firewalls or
other measures to limit the spread of fire. Set on a site of , the building had six floors, each measuring and encompassing for a total of . The building was constructed of
prestressed concrete floors and roof supported by concrete interior columns and surrounded by a
curtain wall of
aluminum and
glass. Along the north side of each floor were offices, separated from the records storage area by a
concrete block wall. Construction was completed in 1956 by the
United States Army Corps of Engineers at a cost of $12.5 million ($ today). When the facility opened in 1956, it housed some 38 million military personnel records. By the time of the 1973 fire, it held more than 52 million personnel records plus some of military unit records. The center's staff had grown past 2,200 personnel, including GSA management and staff as well as military and civilian personnel from the
Army, Navy,
Air Force,
Marines, the
Army Reserve, the
FBI, and others. ==Fire==