Rayburn House Office Building

E693738

The Rayburn House Office Building is a major U.S. congressional office building in Washington, D.C., housing offices for members of the House of Representatives and their committees.

Try in SPARQL Jump to: Statements Referenced by

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf congressional office building
office building
architect Harbeson, Hough, Livingston & Larson NERFINISHED
architecturalStyle Modernist architecture
constructionStartDate 1955
country United States of America
eponymDateOfBirth 1882
eponymDateOfDeath 1961
hasFeature auditorium
cafeteria
committee hearing rooms
member offices
subway connection to the United States Capitol
underground parking garage
hasFloorCount 2 basement levels
5 above ground
hasFunction committee hearings
legislative support
office space
hasSecurity United States Capitol Police NERFINISHED
hasUndergroundConnectionTo Cannon House Office Building NERFINISHED
Longworth House Office Building NERFINISHED
United States Capitol NERFINISHED
inception 1965
locatedIn Capitol Hill NERFINISHED
District of Columbia NERFINISHED
Washington, D.C.
locatedNear Cannon House Office Building NERFINISHED
Longworth House Office Building NERFINISHED
United States Capitol NERFINISHED
locatedOnStreet Independence Avenue SW NERFINISHED
managedBy Architect of the Capitol NERFINISHED
materialUsed concrete
limestone
marble
steel
namedAfter Sam Rayburn NERFINISHED
namedForOccupationOfEponym Speaker of the United States House of Representatives
occupant United States House of Representatives NERFINISHED
opened 1965
ownedBy United States government
surface form: United States federal government
partOf House side of the Capitol complex
United States Capitol Complex NERFINISHED
servesAs office building for House committees
office building for members of the United States House of Representatives

Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Cannon House Office Building connectedTo Rayburn House Office Building