When COMSAT Laboratories opened in Clarksburg in 1969, residents thought the modernistic building at the end of Montgomery County's Interstate-270 technology corridor looked like something from outer space.
One of the first buildings designed by internationally renowned architect Cesar Pelli, it has an aluminum and glass exterior and is organized internally along a central spine with wings.
Looking at it now shows the model for National Airport, another Pelli-designed building.
"It's a first early work, experimental but successful, of a modern master architect - now one of the best known architects in the world," said Isabelle Gournay, professor of architecture at the University of Maryland College Park.
Professors Gournay and Mary Corbin Sies are nominating the building for inclusion in the National Registry of Historic Places. On Nov. 1 they nominated the building for county historic designation.
"[The COMSAT building] is the first example of high-tech architecture in the United States I can recall," Gournay said.
Pelli's use of aluminum panels was a European style new to the United States, she said. The building had no central organization as was the style at the time, but was built with a spine to accommodate expansion. The addition of a cafeteria and four-story attachment in the 1980s did not alter the basic footprint of the building.
"The building was supposed to expand and change over time," Gournay said.
The building earned Pelli a number of awards and more work, she said. In 1998 Pelli designed the tallest building in the world - the Petronas Towers in Malaysia.
COMSAT Laboratories was the most northern building along I-270. It's most significant façade faces I-270, Gournay said.
"It's an early example of architecture meant to be seen from the highway," Gournay said.
The details remind Gournay of an ocean liner, "I think they're pretty swanky," she said.
The building's design and address reflect the satellite work done inside.
COMSAT was created by Congress in the Communications Act of 1962 to create a global telecommunications satellite network and advance the American mission in space.
Its address is 22300 COMSAT Drive because 22300 is the distance in miles for a satellite to be located above the equator and to appear to stand still in the sky or be geosynchronous.
The United States launched COMSAT's first satellite, Early Bird (also called Intelsat I), in 1965. It could handle 240 phone calls or one black and white television channel. It had a design life of 18 months. By contrast, Intelsat IV, launched in 1971, could handle 4,000 telephone calls, color television and had a 7-year design life.
COMSAT was a special place to work. "People who came there were very much interested in the frontiers of science," said Mike Onufry of Clarksburg, a former COMSAT employee.
COMSAT got an Emmy award for developing small terminals for satellite newsgathering activities, Onufry said. "We did R&D in this building, built components, tested things," said Steve Teller, a former COMSAT employee who is helping to preserve COMSAT's records.
The list of COMSAT Laboratories' accomplishments is extensive. Onufry knows of more than 300 patents developed at COMSAT, including the nickel hydrogen battery. The battery was first flown during the Intelsat V program.
The nickel hydrogen battery provided a substantial improvement over the existing nickel cadmium battery. This resulted in an increase in satellite battery lifetimes from five to seven years to the current 15-year lifetime.
The COMSAT building was organized with three separate research wings, which included central core lab space, surrounded by the offices of the laboratory's staff. The opposite side of the main corridor included a state-of-the-art plating facility, a machine shop, a clean room facility and a state-of-the-art environmental test facility.
The test facility included a large thermal vacuum chamber to test how circuits worked in the vacuum of outer space, a large vibration shaker to test if components could withstand temperature variations and the motion on the trip to outer space, and an Anechoic chamber to test antennas and circuits. The facility also included smaller vacuum chambers and load test equipment.
An oversized freight elevator carried satellites to the roof for testing. Today displays of the battery work, microelectronic circuits and satellites line the central corridor.
COMSAT was a private company, traded on the New York Stock Exchange. Lockheed-Martin bought COMSAT in 2000 and began dismantling the company. Much of the work done by COMSAT is now done by COMSAT scientists working for other firms.
COMSAT sold the building and 230-acre campus to LCOR of Bethesda seven years ago.
It has filed a request to rezone the property, demolish the laboratory and put housing on the property, according to Gwen Wright, historian with the Maryland National Park and Planning Commission.
"We're still in the process of formulating our plans," said Mike Smith, LCOR vice president.
Lockheed Martin has a lease for another three years on 203 acres of the property, including the building, he said. Another 23 acres is already going through the county approval process for rezoning for townhouses, Smith said. "[The COMSAT] parcel is far removed from that," he said.
As long as enough green space is left around the building to preserve its pristine look, development at a distance does not detract from the building, Gournay said.
"My view is, it would be very nice to have another significant building than the jail [in Clarksburg]," said Kathie Hulley, chair of the Clarksburg Civic Association planning committee. "We're going for all sorts of ideas for it, such as the Clarksburg library or the daycare center or a planetarium."
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