Home
Subscribe
About the Trust
Advertising
About Us
Search

WWII-Era Building Safe at Fort Knox

Story by Margaret Foster / Oct. 30, 2007

 Printer-friendly version

Fort Knox, Ky.
If not for this Fort Knox building, D Day may have had a different outcome. (Kentucky Heritage)

A unique building at Kentucky's Fort Knox is off the U.S. Army's demolition list, thanks to letters and phone calls from World War II veterans.

In preparation for the invasion of Europe during World War II, engineers built the wood structure in 1942 as they struggled to design the "landing ship, tank," a well ventilated ship that could carry and land 29 tanks. The so-called LST building is on a land that is slated for new construction.

Last week, army officials told the National Trust for Historic Preservation that it the fort's garrison director had removed the LST Building from the list of doomed buildings.

"It is great news. It's encouraging that [army officials] recgonize the importance of this building," says Joanna Hinton, executive director of Preservation Kentucky.

Yet the building is in poor condition, visitors say. Its paint is peeling, and birds have damaged the wood structure. "The fact that it's off a demolition list does not get it out of the hospital," says Paul Urbahns, a local historian who leads veterans on tours of the building. "They have been using planned neglect as a way to get rid of that building, by not maintaining it."

Urbahns and others contacted the army with their concerns. "The reason we're not in the 106 [pre-demolition] process now is because of retired military personnel being very concerned about its fate," says Janie-Rice Brother, environmental review coordinator at Kentucky Heritage, the state historic preservation office. "Its preservation future is far from ensured. We remain concerned but hopeful."

A museum currently uses the LST Building to store vehicles, but when the museum relocates, the Army will have to find another use for it.

"Today the building is an annex of the Cavalry and Armor Museum. Several historical tanks are on display there and can be seen by making arrangements with the museum," says Criss Helmkamp, cultural resources manager at Fort Knox, which has more than 180 buildings that are eligible for the National Register.

The army has agreed to allow to volunteers to paint the LST building. "We hope to have a painting party next spring," Brother says.

Want Today's News headlines delivered to your e-mail box? Sign up for our weekly e-newsletter >>


Recent News Stories

  • Carhop diner razed for CVS, bank - Oct. 29, 2007
  • Permit denied for feedlot near Minidoka - Oct. 25, 2007
  • No buyers for mid-century modern N.C. house - Oct. 24, 2007
  • Buffalo electric car factory reopens as artists' lofts - Oct. 23, 2007
  • Ocean City amusement park lives on - Oct. 22, 2007
  • Two power corridors approved - Oct. 18, 2007
  • Little Manila hotel unclaimed at auction - Oct. 17, 2007
  • Quantico Lustrons demolished - Oct. 16, 2007
  • Tower, barn rehabbed in Boston-area park - Oct. 15, 2007
  • Indiana city, county clash over historic house - Oct. 11, 2007
  • Free: Four Florida houses - Oct. 10, 2007
  • Edith Wharton's House wins award - Oct. 9, 2007
  • Nevada church reborn - Oct. 8, 2007
  • Berkeley residents fight to save 1940 rink - Oct. 4, 2007
  • Brooklyn's Domino Sugar refinery landmarked - Oct. 3, 2007
  • Quartered Calif. house awaits move - Oct. 2, 2007
  • Kansas mall to replace last house on the block - Oct. 1, 2007
  • Battle over Texas high school ends in demolition - Sept. 27, 2007
  • Boston's 19th-century jail reopens as luxury hotel - Sept. 26, 2007
  • Disney museum takes shape in Presidio - Sept. 25, 2007
  • Sullivan's last Chicago building renovated - Sept. 24, 2007
  • Saratoga Race Course's future up in the air - Sept. 20, 2007
  • Miss. says no to condos on Natchez Bluff - Sept. 19, 2007
  • S.C. foundation donates marshland to Drayton Hall - Sept. 18, 2007
  • Dairy farmer backs off from Calif. state park - Sept. 17, 2007
  • Volunteers help restore 18th-century house - Sept. 13, 2007
  • Omaha mattress factory becomes restaurant - Sept. 12, 2007
  • Demolition process begins on Ohio's Codebreaker Building 26 - Sept. 11, 2007
  • Developer damages 200-year-old farmhouse - Sept. 10, 2007
  • Standing up for Sitting Bull - Sept. 6, 2007
  • Fla. arsonists torch "haunted house" before its restoration - Sept. 5, 2007
  • Hawaii's Westminster Abbey adds new building - Sept. 4, 2007
  • Pa. developer to raze Main Line estate - Aug. 30, 2007
  • It's not over for Miami Beach's Coral Rock House - Aug. 29, 2007
  • Farnsworth House survives flood unscathed - Aug. 28, 2007
  • Starbucks to replace 19th-century N.H. house - Aug. 27, 2007
  • Palm Beach Theater wins in court - Aug. 23, 2007
  • Brad Pitt visits Farnsworth House - Aug. 22, 2007
  • Baltimore moves to landmark 1967 Brutalist theater - Aug. 21, 2007
  • Cumberland rescinds nomination of two endangered buildings - Aug. 20, 2007
  • Chicago's Cook County Hospital saved - Aug. 16, 2007
  • Developer signs conservation easement to protect S.C. plantation's view - Aug. 15, 2007
  • Despite landmark status, 1937 Houston shopping center will fall - Aug. 14, 2007
  • Protesters decry decision to raze Ohio courthouse - Aug. 13, 2007
  • WW II battleship could be sunk - Aug. 9, 2007
  • Once a lost cause, Dallas County Courthouse has been restored as a museum - Aug. 8, 2007
  • Restored Buffalo Bill billboard now on display - Aug. 7, 2007
  • Iowa voters can decide 1896 school's future, judge says - Aug. 6, 2007
  • City OKs demolition of 1924 chapel for condos - Aug. 2, 2007
  • Manhattan diner will move to Wyoming - Aug. 1, 2007
  • Campbell's can raze 1927 Sears store - July 31, 2007 More News >>
  • All Rights Reserved    © Preservation Magazine    Contact Us