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Jet Propulsion Laboratory

Coordinates:34°12′00″N118°10′18″W / 34.20000°N 118.17167°W /34.20000; -118.17167
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(Redirected fromJPL)
Research and development center and NASA field center in California, United States
"JPL" redirects here. For other uses, seeJPL (disambiguation).

Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Clockwise from the top: aerial view of JPL,NISAR testing in theSpace Simulator,Sojourner at JPL's Mars Yard,Mars 2020 rover, and JPL Mission Control
EstablishedOctober 31, 1936; 89 years ago (1936-10-31)
Research typeApplied
DirectorDave Gallagher
Staff~5500
Address4800 Oak Grove Drive
LocationPasadena,California, United States
34°12′00″N118°10′18″W / 34.20000°N 118.17167°W /34.20000; -118.17167
Subdivision
JPL Science Division
Operating agency
Managed forNASA byCaltech
Websitejpl.nasa.gov
Map
Jet Propulsion Laboratory is located in California
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Location in California
Show map of California
Jet Propulsion Laboratory is located in the United States
Jet Propulsion Laboratory
Jet Propulsion Laboratory (the United States)
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TheJet Propulsion Laboratory (JPL) is afederally funded research and development center inLa Cañada Flintridge, California, Crescenta Valley, United States.[1] Founded in 1936 byCalifornia Institute of Technology (Caltech) researchers, the laboratory is now owned and sponsored byNASA and administered and managed by Caltech.[2][3]

The primary function of the laboratory is the construction and operation of planetaryrobotic spacecraft, though it also conducts Earth-orbit and astronomy missions. It is also responsible for operating theNASA Deep Space Network (DSN).

Among the major active projects at the laboratory, some are theMars 2020 mission, which includes thePerseverance rover; theMars Science Laboratory mission, including theCuriosity rover; theMars Reconnaissance Orbiter; theJuno spacecraft orbitingJupiter; theSMAP satellite for Earth surface soil moisture monitoring; theNuSTARX-ray telescope; and thePsyche asteroid orbiter. It is also responsible for managing theJPL Small-Body Database, and provides physical data and lists of publications for all knownsmall Solar System bodies.

JPL'sSpace Flight Operations Facility andTwenty-Five-Foot Space Simulator are designatedNational Historic Landmarks.[4]

History

[edit]
The "Suicide Squad" of (left to right) Rudolph Schott,Apollo Milton Olin Smith,Frank Malina, Ed Forman andJack Parsons testing their first liquid-fueled rocket engine.[5]

JPL traces its beginnings to 1936 in GALCIT (theGuggenheim Aeronautical Laboratory at theCalifornia Institute of Technology) when the first set ofUnited States rocket experiments were carried out in theArroyo Seco.[6] This initial venture involved Caltech graduate studentsFrank Malina,Qian Xuesen,[7][8] Weld Arnold[9] andApollo M. O. Smith, along withJack Parsons andEdward S. Forman, often referred to as the "Suicide Squad" due to the dangerous nature of their experiments.[10] Together, they tested a small, alcohol-fueled motor to gather data for Malina's graduate thesis.[11] Malina's thesis advisor was engineer/aerodynamicistTheodore von Kármán, who eventually secured U.S. Army financial support for this "GALCIT Rocket Project" in 1939.

Rocketry beginnings

[edit]

In the early years of the project, work was primarily focused on the development of rocket technology. In 1941, Malina, Parsons, Forman,Martin Summerfield, and pilot Homer Bushey demonstrated the first jet-assisted takeoff (JATO) rockets to the Army. In 1943, von Kármán, Malina, Parsons, and Forman established theAerojet Corporation to manufacture JATO rockets. The project took on the name Jet Propulsion Laboratory in November 1943, formally becoming an Army facility operated under contract by the university.[12][13][14][15] In the same year, Qian and two of his colleagues drafted the first document to use the name Jet Propulsion Laboratory.[16]

Theodore von Kármán sketching out a plan on the wing of an airplane. From left to right:Clark B. Millikan,Martin Summerfield, von Kármán, Frank J. Malina and pilot, Capt. Homer Boushey.

In a NASA conference on the history of early rocketry, Malina wrote that the work of the JPL was "considered to include" the research carried out by the GALCIT Rocket Research Group from 1936 on.[17] In 1944, Parsons was expelled due to his "unorthodox and unsafe working methods" following one of several FBI investigations into his involvement with the occult, drugs and sexual promiscuity.[18]

During JPL's Army years, the laboratory developed two significant deployed weapon systems, theMGM-5 Corporal andMGM-29 Sergeant tactical ballistic missiles, marking the first US ballistic missiles developed at JPL.[19] It also developed several other weapons system prototypes, such as the Loki anti-aircraft missile system, and the forerunner of theAerobee sounding rocket. At various times, it carried out rocket testing at theWhite Sands Proving Ground,Edwards Air Force Base, andGoldstone, California.[15]

Transition to NASA

[edit]

In 1954, JPL teamed up withWernher von Braun's engineers at theArmy Ballistic Missile Agency'sRedstone Arsenal inHuntsville, Alabama, to propose orbiting a satellite during theInternational Geophysical Year. The team lost that proposal toProject Vanguard, and instead embarked on a classified project to demonstrate ablative re-entry technology using aJupiter-C rocket. They carried out three successful sub-orbital flights in 1956 and 1957. Using a spareJuno I (a modified Jupiter-C with a fourth stage), the two organizations then launched the United States' first satellite,Explorer 1, on January 31, 1958.[13][14] This significant achievement marked a new era for JPL and the US in the space race.

Less than a year later in December 1958, JPL was transferred to the newly formedNational Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA).[20] As a result of this transition, JPL became the agency's primary planetary spacecraft center, leading the design and operation of various lunar and interplanetary missions. The transfer to NASA marked the beginning of a "Golden Age" of planetary exploration for JPL in the 1960s and 1970s.[21] JPL engineers designed and operatedRanger andSurveyor missions to theMoon that paved the way for theApollo program. JPL proved itself a leader ininterplanetary exploration with theMariner missions toVenus,Mars, andMercury, returning valuable data about our neighboring planets.[13]

Notably, JPL was early to employ female mathematicians. In the 1940s and 1950s, using mechanical calculators, women in an all-female computations group performed trajectory calculations.[22][23] In 1961, JPL hiredDana Ulery as the first female engineer to work alongside male engineers as part of theRanger andMariner mission tracking teams.[24]

Deep space exploration

[edit]

Building on the momentum from the successes of the 1960s and early 1970s, JPL initiated an era of deep space exploration in the late 1970s and 1980s. The highlight of this period was the launch of the twinVoyager spacecraft in 1977.[25]

JPL Mission Control

Initially set on a trajectory to explore Jupiter and its moon Io,Voyager 1's mission parameters were adjusted to also provide a close flyby ofSaturn's moonTitan.[26] The spacecraft sent back detailed images and data from both gas giants, revolutionizing the understanding of these distant worlds.[27] TheVoyager 2 spacecraft followed a more extensive trajectory, conducting flybys of not just Jupiter and Saturn, but also Uranus and Neptune.[28] These encounters provided firsthand data from all four gas giants, offering insights into the nature and dynamics of the outer planets. Both Voyager spacecraft, after fulfilling their primary mission objectives, were directed towardsinterstellar space, carrying with them theGolden Records – phonograph discs containing sounds and images selected to portray the diversity of life on Earth.[29]

The 1980s also saw the inception of theGalileo mission which launched in the late 1980s.[30] TheGalileo spacecraft was designed to studyJupiter and its major moons in detail.[31] Although the probe only entered the gas giant's orbit in the 1990s, its inception and planning during the 1980s signified JPL's continued commitment to deep space exploration.


Native sulfur on Mars! Discovered May 30, 2024, when theCuriosity rover drove over this outcrop and cracked it open.

Mars exploration

[edit]

The 1990s and 2000s saw a resurgence inMars exploration, driven by JPL'sMars Pathfinder andMars Exploration Rover missions.[32] In 1997, the Mars Pathfinder mission deployed the first successful Mars rover,Sojourner, demonstrating the feasibility of mobile exploration on the Martian surface. In 2004, the Mars Exploration Rovers,Spirit andOpportunity, landed on Mars.Opportunity outlived its expected lifespan by 14 years, providing a wealth of scientific data and setting the stage for future Mars missions.[33]

Earth science and robotic exploration

[edit]
MSL mockup compared with theMars Exploration Rover andSojourner rover by the Jet Propulsion Laboratory on May 12, 2008

In the 2000s and 2010s, JPL broadened its exploration scope, including the launch of missions to study the outer planets, like theJuno mission to Jupiter and theCassini-Huygens mission to Saturn.[34][35] Concurrently, JPL also began to focus on Earth science missions, developing satellite technology to study climate change, weather patterns, and natural phenomena on Earth. JPL also opened the Near-Earth Object Program Office for NASA in 1998, which had found 95% of asteroids a kilometer or more in diameter that cross Earth's orbit by 2013.[36][37]

Entering the 2010s and 2020s, JPL continued its Mars exploration with theCuriosity rover and the Mars 2020 mission, which included thePerseverance rover and theIngenuity helicopter.[38]Perseverance's core objective is to collect samples for a future Mars Sample Return (MSR) mission. In addition, JPL ventured into asteroid exploration with theOSIRIS-REx mission which returned a sample from asteroidBennu.[39]

2020s and beyond

[edit]

As JPL moves forward, its focus remains on diverse interplanetary and even interstellar missions. Future Mars missions will aim to return the samples collected by the Perseverance rover back to Earth.[40] Additionally, JPL'sEuropa Clipper mission launched in 2024 to study Jupiter's moonEuropa, believed to harbor a subsurface ocean.[41] Building on the Voyager program's success, JPL continues to push the boundaries of deep-space exploration. TheInterstellar Probe concept, though not yet formalized, proposes to send a spacecraft ten times the distance from the Sun as Pluto, to explore the interstellar medium and the outermost reaches of theSolar System.[42]

JPL has been recognized four times by theSpace Foundation: with the Douglas S. Morrow Public Outreach Award, which is given annually to an individual or organization that has made significant contributions to public awareness of space programs, in 1998; and with the John L. "Jack" Swigert, Jr., Award for Space Exploration on three occasions – in 2009 (as part of NASA's Phoenix Mars Lander Team[43]), 2006 and 2005.

In January 2025, JPL was closed and evacuated due to theEaton Fire raging in the nearby towns ofPasadena andAltadena, with operations like the DSN getting relocated offsite.[44][45] Although the facility has not sustained damage from the wildfires, it has experienced minor wind damage and as well as numerous employees losing their homes.[46]

Location

[edit]
JPL-developed Sergeant (left) and Corporal (right) missiles on display at JPL in April 2006

When it was founded, JPL's site was immediately west of a rocky flood-plain – theArroyo Seco riverbed – above the Devil's Gate dam in the northwesternpanhandle of the city of Pasadena inSouthern California, nearLos Angeles. While the first few buildings were constructed in land bought from the city of Pasadena,[1] subsequent buildings were constructed in neighboring unincorporated land that later became part ofLa Cañada Flintridge. Nowadays, most of the 168 acres (68 ha) of theU.S. federal government-owned NASA property that makes up the JPL campus is located in La Cañada Flintridge.[47][48] Despite this, JPL still uses a Pasadena address (4800 Oak Grove Drive, Pasadena, CA 91109) as its official mailing address.[49] There has been occasional rivalry between the two cities over the issue of which one should be mentioned in the media as the home of the laboratory.[48][50][51][52]

Employees

[edit]
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After the 2024 layoffs, there are only approximately 5,500 full-time Caltech employees and contractors working on any given day. NASA also has a resident office at the facility staffed by federal managers who oversee JPL's activities and work for NASA. There are also some Caltechgraduate students, college student interns and co-op students.

JPL officially endedDEI hires and practices stemming from federal pressure in 2025 by removing its Chief Diversity Leader.

Education

[edit]
A 1960s advert reads: "When you were a kid, science fiction gave you a sense of wonder. Now you feel the same just by going to work."

The JPL Education Office serves educators and students by providing them with activities, resources, materials and opportunities tied to NASA missions and science. The mission of its programs is to introduce and further students' interest in pursuingSTEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) careers.[53]

Internships and fellowships

[edit]

JPL offers research, internship and fellowship opportunities in the summer and throughout the year to high school through postdoctoral and faculty students. (In most cases, students must be U.S. citizens or legal permanent residents to apply, although foreign nationals studying at U.S. universities are eligible for limited programs.) Interns are sponsored through NASA programs, university partnerships and JPL mentors for research opportunities at the laboratory in areas including technology, robotics, planetary science, aerospace engineering, and astrophysics.[54]

In August 2013, JPL was named one of "The 10 Most Awesome College Labs of 2013" by Popular Science, which noted that about 100 students who intern at the laboratory are considered for permanent jobs at JPL after they graduate.[55]

The JPL Education Office also hosts the Planetary Science Summer School (PSSS), an annual week-long workshop for graduate and postdoctoral students. The program involves a one-week team design exercise developing an early mission concept study, working with JPL's Advanced Projects Design Team ("Team X") and other concurrent engineering teams.[56]

Museum & Informal Education Alliance Alliance

[edit]

JPL created the NASA Museum Alliance in 2003 out of a desire to provide museums, planetariums, visitor centers and other kinds of informal educators with exhibit materials, professional development and information related to the then-upcoming landings of theMars roversSpirit andOpportunity.[57] The Alliance now has more than 500 members, who get access to NASA displays, models, educational workshops and networking opportunities through the program. Staff at educational organizations that meet the Museum Alliance requirements can register to participate online.[58]

The Museum Alliance is a subset of the JPL Education Office's Informal Education group, which also serves after-school and summer programs, parents and other kinds of informal educators.[59]

OnDecember 9, 2020, the Museum Alliance officially announced a rebrand to the Museum & Informal Education (MIE) Alliance. In an announcement to members, they said, "Pronounced 'My' Alliance, our new name better reflects the diversity of organizations you represent."

Educator Resource Center

[edit]

The NASA/JPL Educator Resource Center, which is moving from its location at the Indian Hill Mall in Pomona, California, at the end of 2013,[60] offers resources, materials and free workshops for formal and informal educators covering science, technology, engineering and science topics related to NASA missions and science.

Keck Institute for Space Studies

[edit]
Asteroid capture gripper to grasp and secure a boulder from an asteroid. Conceptual design, 2015

In 2008, Caltech and JPL jointly established theKeck Institute for Space Studies (KISS), an interdisciplinarythink tank designed to foster early-stage innovation in space science and engineering.[61] Based at Caltech, KISS organizes intensive study programs that bring together researchers from JPL, Caltech, and experts in specialized fields from a range of institutes to explore and implement mission concepts and technologies for space exploration and technology. Centered on the research and instrumentation strengths of Caltech and JPL, KISS convenes experts from academia, government, and industry to develop new mission concepts in planetary science, Earth science, and astrophysics.[62] The institute also engages graduate students and postdoctoral researchers in its studies and promotes public outreach through lectures and online dissemination.[63] While KISS does not directly manage space missions, several of its studies have seeded proposals that evolved into JPL-led projects for NASA.

Some of the JPL missions influenced by KISS include:[64][65]

  • Asteroid Redirect Mission – Conceptualized in a 2011 KISS-led study on asteroid retrieval, the idea evolved into NASA's Asteroid Redirect Robotic Mission.
  • InSight Mars Lander – A KISS planetary seismology workshop in 2010 directly influenced the mission's payload and design.
  • Geochronology on Mars (Curiosity) – Techniques for dating Martian rocks, proposed during a 2009 KISS study, were implemented on Curiosity.
  • SPHEREx andLunar Trailblazer – Both missions, selected in 2019, feature PIs affiliated with Caltech/KISS (Bethany Ehlmann and Jamie Bock) and deploy designs rooted in KISS-conceived concepts.

Open house

[edit]
A display at the May 19, 2007 Open House

The lab had an open house once a year on a Saturday and Sunday in May or June, when the public was invited to tour the facilities and see live demonstrations of JPL science and technology. More limited private tours are also available throughout the year if scheduled well in advance. Thousands of schoolchildren from Southern California and elsewhere visit the lab every year.[66] Due to federal spending cuts mandated bybudget sequestration, the open house has been previously cancelled.[67] JPL open house for 2014 was October 11 and 12 and 2015 was October 10 and 11. Starting from 2016, JPL replaced the annual Open House with "Ticket to Explore JPL", which features the same exhibits but requires tickets and advance reservation.[68] Roboticist and Mars rover driverVandi Verma frequently acts asscience communicator at open house type events to encourage children (and particularly girls) intoSTEM careers.[69][70][71]

Other works

[edit]

In addition to its government work, JPL has also assisted the nearby motion picture and television industries, by advising them about scientific accuracy in their productions. Science fiction shows advised by JPL includeBabylon 5 and its sequel series,Crusade.

JPL also works with theDepartment of Homeland Security Science and Technology Directorate (DHS-S&T). JPL and DHS-S&T developed a search and rescue tool forfirst responders called FINDER. First responders can use FINDER to locate people still alive who are buried in rubble after a disaster or terrorist attack. FINDER usesmicrowave radar to detect breathing and pulses.[72]

Additionally, JPL is home to the JPL-RPIF (Jet Propulsion Laboratory – Regional Planetary Image Facility) which is chartered as a repository for all robotic spacecraft hard-copy data and thus provides a valuable resource to NASA funded science investigators, and an important conduit for the distribution of NASA generated materials to local educators in the Los Angeles/southern California area.[73][74]

Funding

[edit]

The predominant source of JPL's financial support is NASA.[75] As a field center of NASA, JPL's primary activities and projects are generally aligned with NASA's mission objectives in space exploration, Earth sciences, and astrophysics. The funding allocated to JPL comes as a portion of NASA's annual budget, which is itself part of the United States federal budget approved by Congress.[76] The scale of the budget is contingent on the projects that JPL undertakes as missions can range from flagship interplanetary missions costing billions of U.S. dollars to smaller Earth observation systems with budgets in the hundreds of millions.

Aside from NASA, JPL secures funding for specialized projects from other federal agencies, including but not limited to theNational Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration (NOAA) theUnited States Geological Survey (USGS), and the U.S.Department of Defense (DoD).[77][78] Occasionally, JPL engages in joint missions or research endeavors with international space agencies or research institutions. While these partnerships contribute a relatively small portion of JPL's overall budget, they serve to enhance the scope and impact of its scientific research and technological development.

The total budget for JPL is subject to annual fluctuations based on both the federal allocation to NASA and the life cycle of ongoing projects. High-profile missions may receive significant long-term funding commitments, whereas smaller or shorter-term projects may have more modest financial support. These agencies often commission projects that leverage JPL's unique expertise in areas likeremote sensing, robotics, and systems engineering. Although these projects form a smaller part of JPL's overall budget, they are integral to fulfilling the diverse set of objectives that these federal agencies oversee.

In fiscal year 2022, the laboratory's budget was approximately $2.4 billion, with the largest share going to Planetary Science development.[79]

In February and November 2024, due to the overall budget situation and budget shifts inMars Sample Return (MSR), the institute laid off approximately 1000 employees and contractors.[80]

Peanuts tradition

[edit]
Linda Spilker explains the tradition of lucky peanuts at a gathering for Cassini mission team members, family and friends in Von Karman Auditorium at JPL, 2017

There is a tradition at JPL to eat "luckypeanuts" before critical mission events, such as launches, orbital insertions, or landings. As the story goes, after theRanger program had experienced failure after failure during the 1960s, the first successful Ranger mission to impact the Moon occurred after either theRanger 7 project manager,Harris "Bud" Schurmeier,[81] or the mission trajectory engineer, Dick Wallace,[82][83] had decided to pass out peanuts to relieve tension. The staff jokingly decided that the peanuts must have been a good luck charm, and the tradition persisted.[81][84][85]

Missions

[edit]
A poster of the planets and moons visited during the Voyager program
Curiosity rover self-portrait inGale Crater, 2012

These are some of the missions partially sponsored by JPL:[86]

List of directors

[edit]

All of the lab directors hold doctorates in engineering, physics, geology, geochemistry or planetary science. Acting/interim directors tend to be retired military officers with a strong science and organizational background.[87][88]

No.ImageDirectorTerm startTerm endRefs.
1Theodore von Kármán19381944[89]
2Frank Malina19441946[90]
actingLouis Dunn19461947[91][92]
31947August 31, 1954
4William Hayward PickeringSeptember 1, 1954March 31, 1976[93][94][95]
5Bruce C. MurrayApril 1, 1976June 30, 1982[96][97]
ActingCharles Terhune Jr.July 1, 1982October 1982[98]
6Lew Allen, Jr.October 1982December 31, 1990[99][100]
7Edward C. StoneJanuary 1, 1991April 30, 2001[101][102]
8Charles ElachiMay 1, 2001June 30, 2016[103][104][105]
9Michael M. WatkinsJuly 1, 2016August 20, 2021[106][107][108]
interimLarry D. JamesAugust 21, 2021May 15, 2022[107]
10Laurie LeshinMay 16, 2022May 31, 2025[109][110]
11Dave GallagherJune 1, 2025present[111]

Team X

[edit]

The JPL Advanced Projects Design Team, also known as Team X, is an interdisciplinary team of engineers that utilizes "concurrent engineering methodologies to complete rapid design, analysis and evaluation of mission concept designs".[112]

Controversies

[edit]

Employee background check lawsuit

[edit]
Main article:NASA v. Nelson

On February 25, 2005,Homeland Security Presidential Directive 12 was approved by theSecretary of Commerce.[113] This was followed by Federal Information Processing Standards 201 (FIPS 201), which specified how the federal government should implement personal identity verification. These specifications led to a need for rebadging to meet the updated requirements.

On August 30, 2007, a group of JPL employees filed suit in federal court against NASA, Caltech, and the Department of Commerce, claiming their constitutional rights were being violated by the new, overly invasive background investigations.[114] 97% of JPL employees were classified at the low-risk level and would be subjected to the same clearance procedures as those obtaining moderate/high risk clearance. Under HSPD 12 and FIPS 201, investigators have the right to obtain any information on employees, which includes questioning acquaintances on the status of the employee's mental, emotional, and financial stability. Additionally, if employees depart JPL before the end of the two-year validity of the background check, no investigation ability is terminated; former employees can still be legally monitored.

Employees were told that if they did not sign an unlimited waiver of privacy,[115] they would be deemed to have "voluntarily resigned".[116] TheUnited States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit found the process violated the employees' privacy rights and issued a preliminary injunction.[117] NASA appealed and the US Supreme Court grantedcertiorari on March 8, 2010. On January 19, 2011, the Supreme Court overturned the Ninth Circuit decision, ruling that the background checks did not violate any constitutional privacy right that the employees may have had.[118]

Coppedge v Jet Propulsion Laboratory

[edit]

On March 12, 2012, theLos Angeles Superior Court took opening statements on the case in which former JPL employee David Coppedge brought suit against the lab due to workplace discrimination and wrongful termination. In the suit, Coppedge alleges that he first lost his "team lead" status on JPL'sCassini-Huygens mission in 2009 and then was fired in 2011 because of his evangelical Christian beliefs and specifically his belief inintelligent design. Conversely, JPL, through theCaltech lawyers representing the laboratory, allege that Coppedge's termination was simply due to budget cuts and his demotion from team lead was because of harassment complaints and from on-going conflicts with his co-workers.[119] Superior Court Judge Ernest Hiroshige issued a final ruling in favor of JPL on January 16, 2013.[120]

Gallery

[edit]
  • A 2015 photo of JPL from above
    A 2015 photo of JPL from above
  • Human computers in the control room at JPL tracking Mariner 2
    Human computers in the control room at JPL trackingMariner 2
  • Galileo spacecraft in JPL's High Bay
    Galileo spacecraft in JPL's High Bay
  • Spacecraft assembly room at JPL
    Spacecraft assembly room at JPL
  • Aerodynamic noise facility at JPL (c. 1970)
    Aerodynamic noise facility at JPL (c. 1970)
  • Pneumatic cannon in JPL's impact testing facility
    Pneumatic cannon in JPL's impact testing facility
  • JPL employees celebrate the landing of the Perseverance rover in JPL's mission control.
    JPL employees celebrate the landing of thePerseverance rover in JPL's mission control.
  • Mars Perseverance rover team in front of JPL's administration building
    MarsPerseverance rover team in front of JPL's administration building

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[edit]
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