Anyone out there need to buy a research lab? There's a
big one available. Lucent
Technologies Inc. recently announced
that it is considering the sale of its Bell Labs
facility in Holmdel, N.J. This is a humongous
building—more than 185 000 square meters of usable
space, surrounded by 191 hectares of manicured grounds.
Designed by the famous architect Eero Saarinen, the
six-story rectangular building has a central foyer that
rises to the roof. The exterior is all glass and was
meant to reflect the clouds and the surrounding
countryside. The entrance road passes by a large water
tower in the shape of Bell Labs' most famous
invention—the transistor.
Today, however, the parking lot outside looks empty,
and inside it is said to be like a ghost town. A
building where 6000 people once worked is occupied by
only about 1200. Since the building's construction, Bell
Labs has been split among five companies, and downsizing
in the industry has further diminished the need for such
a large research and development facility.
For many of us, it is the passing of an era. Even for
technology itself, it is an ominous reminder of how the
world has changed. When I drive by that lifeless
building today, I remember these lines from Percy Bysshe
Shelley's "Ozymandias:"
And on the pedestal
these words appear:
"My name is
Ozymandias, king of kings:
Look on my works, ye
Mighty, and despair!"
Nothing beside
remains. Round the decay
Of that colossal
wreck, boundless and bare
The lone and level
sands stretch far away.
In early 1962, I had just joined Bell Labs and was one
of the first employees to be assigned to the new
building, which consisted at that time of only a quarter
of the finished structure. It was the era of the proud
industrial research laboratories—IBM, GE, RCA, Bell
Labs, and many others. For a new engineering graduate,
those great labs were the places to be.
I drove up to the Holmdel lab for the first time on a
foggy morning, and that big box of a building
materialized slowly out of the fog. Mist was rising from
what was supposed to be a reflecting pond in the front
of the building. The glass exterior reflected nothing
but a spooky blackness. (All the glass was later changed
to provide better reflectivity.)
I was proud to be there, and later I watched from
inside the glass walls as a small wooden lab that had
preceded the new structure was burned to the ground. The
baton had been passed to this new generation with its
modern and palatial facility. Like Ozymandias, we felt
like kings amidst our splendor.
Oh what splendor it was! As the building reached
completion, we enjoyed a comprehensive library, medical
facility, bank, spacious cafeteria with a service dining
area and conference dining rooms, and other features
that we thought were the entitlements of our profession.
We were spoiled, but we didn't realize it.
There was also intellectual splendor. Among Bell Labs'
accomplishments had been research recognized with two
Nobel Prizes in physics. Even the nearby grounds were
hallowed. It was there in 1933 that Karl Jansky first
discovered radio emissions from space and began the
science of radio astronomy. On the hill across the way,
the radiation from the Big Bang that created the
universe was first detected, and from that spot a
message from President Dwight D. Eisenhower was beamed
into space to inaugurate satellite communications.
Coincidentally, it was from the Atlantic coastal waters
close by that Guglielmo Marconi had transmitted one of
the first radio messages in the United States, in 1899.
A few miles to the south of the Holmdel lab is the
U.S. Army Communications and Electronics Command at Fort
Monmouth, where through the decades the Signal Corps
Laboratories conducted all the communications research,
development, and procurement for the U.S. Army. But it
too is about to be deserted. The Base Realignment and
Closure Commission has recommended closing Fort Monmouth
and moving communications work elsewhere.
The land at the Holmdel lab may be hallowed to
technologists, but to real estate developers, it may
elicit awe of another kind. If only that big glass
building weren't sitting in the middle of it! I suppose
that in the near future some developer will blanket the
property with McMansions. It may not be like the sand
sweeping over the legacy of Ozymandias, but somehow I
think it worse.
Those days of glory and accomplishment will be long
forgotten. As I said, it is the passing of an era.