Dug into a hillside in rural Virginia, the Packard Campus of the Library of Congress is a massive sprawl, mostly underground. Millions of items, including film, video and sound recordings, are preserved here, like a high-tech storage locker for the nation’s culture. Of these millions of items, some are so flammable they are kept in the vaults of a former Federal Reserve nuclear bunker.
Officially known as the National Audio-Visual Conservation Center, part of their mission is to preserve original camera negative and prints from films produced before 1951, when nitrate film stock was in use. Cellulose nitrate is incredibly flammable, but was the base material for motion picture film going back to the 1880s.
Disastrous fires from self-ignited film were not uncommon, and can still happen with nitrate materials today. Conditions of temperature, humidity and specific storage techniques are strictly adhered to for any nitrate, including the Library’s thousands of reels housed at the bunker in Culpeper, Virginia.
The history of the Library’s Packard Campus goes back to the menacing and heady days of the Cold War. In the mid-1960s the Federal Reserve, worried about the money supply in the event of a nuclear disaster, initiated plans to keep the economy afloat and store billions of dollars in cash. They needed a place that could withstand a blast and continue to operate through months—or even years—of nuclear fallout.
With the solid bedrock and high vantage point of a Culpeper hillside known as Mount Pony, the site was chosen to build a vast underground bunker. Included in the subterranean structure were 124 concrete vaults, “radiation-hardened” and steel-reinforced, to safeguard thousands of pallets stacked with money (which, oddly, was mostly in two-dollar bills).
From 1969 to 1988 the literal money pit quietly went about its business, until it was finally decommissioned in 1992, and in 1997 was emptied out and put on sale as a “High Security Office and Storage Facility”.
A joint effort between Congress and the Packard Foundation (as in Hewlett-Packard) enabled the sale of the property to the Library, and also covered the $200 million dollar price tag to convert it into one of the world’s great preservation complexes. With nuclear-proof vaults already in place, the Library had a place to store its volatile film stock and keep it safe. As safe as nitrate can be anyway.