Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in this are you have to add in height. So once around Tysons, but there are two levels.
What about the Hirshorn? You take an escalator to the top, then circle down the ramp.
If you add in the floors of the national Gallery of Art, you'll add easily (though there's only the one tunnel, of course).
What about the American Art/National Portrait gallery - that's a giant city block and a bunch of floors.
OH. Duh. The largest place with underground tunnels - The Capitol Building and the Senate/House office buildings and the tunnels to the library of Congress. You'd have to map it out in advance, and there are some tunnels that are closed to the public, but most of the floors of the office buildings are open - I'd do the three big buildings on the house side, and then the library of Congress maybe? These buildings are way more accessible than most people think they are - I wouldn't wear exercise clothes and exercise walk, but normal clothes (sneakers are ok) and a brisk walk and you'd be fine.
Anyone can just go in and walk around the tunnels?
You can’t cross from the House to the Senate though the Capitol, but the tunnels in each respective chamber are open to the public.
Yes - you have to go through security to get into the building to start, but you can walk between the office buildings on each side. It used to be you could cross from the House buildings to the Senate buildings, which was awesome (and a long walk). I am almost certain a member of the public can get to the Library of Congress from the House side, too, so that can add up. If you started in Rayburn (which is the most annoying as you don't have a clear square path down, then hit Longworth then Cannon, you'd get in a long walk if you did all the floors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Crystal City has a huge underground mall that connects some (most?) of the nearby office buildings but I don’t know how big it is.
Its even longer when you (inevitably) get lost. I don't have the exact distance, but I heartily recommend this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in this are you have to add in height. So once around Tysons, but there are two levels.
What about the Hirshorn? You take an escalator to the top, then circle down the ramp.
If you add in the floors of the national Gallery of Art, you'll add easily (though there's only the one tunnel, of course).
What about the American Art/National Portrait gallery - that's a giant city block and a bunch of floors.
OH. Duh. The largest place with underground tunnels - The Capitol Building and the Senate/House office buildings and the tunnels to the library of Congress. You'd have to map it out in advance, and there are some tunnels that are closed to the public, but most of the floors of the office buildings are open - I'd do the three big buildings on the house side, and then the library of Congress maybe? These buildings are way more accessible than most people think they are - I wouldn't wear exercise clothes and exercise walk, but normal clothes (sneakers are ok) and a brisk walk and you'd be fine.
Anyone can just go in and walk around the tunnels?
You can’t cross from the House to the Senate though the Capitol, but the tunnels in each respective chamber are open to the public.
Yes - you have to go through security to get into the building to start, but you can walk between the office buildings on each side. It used to be you could cross from the House buildings to the Senate buildings, which was awesome (and a long walk). I am almost certain a member of the public can get to the Library of Congress from the House side, too, so that can add up. If you started in Rayburn (which is the most annoying as you don't have a clear square path down, then hit Longworth then Cannon, you'd get in a long walk if you did all the floors.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in this are you have to add in height. So once around Tysons, but there are two levels.
What about the Hirshorn? You take an escalator to the top, then circle down the ramp.
If you add in the floors of the national Gallery of Art, you'll add easily (though there's only the one tunnel, of course).
What about the American Art/National Portrait gallery - that's a giant city block and a bunch of floors.
OH. Duh. The largest place with underground tunnels - The Capitol Building and the Senate/House office buildings and the tunnels to the library of Congress. You'd have to map it out in advance, and there are some tunnels that are closed to the public, but most of the floors of the office buildings are open - I'd do the three big buildings on the house side, and then the library of Congress maybe? These buildings are way more accessible than most people think they are - I wouldn't wear exercise clothes and exercise walk, but normal clothes (sneakers are ok) and a brisk walk and you'd be fine.
Anyone can just go in and walk around the tunnels?
You can’t cross from the House to the Senate though the Capitol, but the tunnels in each respective chamber are open to the public.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think in this are you have to add in height. So once around Tysons, but there are two levels.
What about the Hirshorn? You take an escalator to the top, then circle down the ramp.
If you add in the floors of the national Gallery of Art, you'll add easily (though there's only the one tunnel, of course).
What about the American Art/National Portrait gallery - that's a giant city block and a bunch of floors.
OH. Duh. The largest place with underground tunnels - The Capitol Building and the Senate/House office buildings and the tunnels to the library of Congress. You'd have to map it out in advance, and there are some tunnels that are closed to the public, but most of the floors of the office buildings are open - I'd do the three big buildings on the house side, and then the library of Congress maybe? These buildings are way more accessible than most people think they are - I wouldn't wear exercise clothes and exercise walk, but normal clothes (sneakers are ok) and a brisk walk and you'd be fine.
Anyone can just go in and walk around the tunnels?
Anonymous wrote:Crystal City has a huge underground mall that connects some (most?) of the nearby office buildings but I don’t know how big it is.
Anonymous wrote:I think in this are you have to add in height. So once around Tysons, but there are two levels.
What about the Hirshorn? You take an escalator to the top, then circle down the ramp.
If you add in the floors of the national Gallery of Art, you'll add easily (though there's only the one tunnel, of course).
What about the American Art/National Portrait gallery - that's a giant city block and a bunch of floors.
OH. Duh. The largest place with underground tunnels - The Capitol Building and the Senate/House office buildings and the tunnels to the library of Congress. You'd have to map it out in advance, and there are some tunnels that are closed to the public, but most of the floors of the office buildings are open - I'd do the three big buildings on the house side, and then the library of Congress maybe? These buildings are way more accessible than most people think they are - I wouldn't wear exercise clothes and exercise walk, but normal clothes (sneakers are ok) and a brisk walk and you'd be fine.