The Secret City in the Desert
Hanford Site
The Hanford Site was more than reactors and research - it was a city of tens of thousands, operating in secrecy, powered by urgency, and shaped by war.
The Epicenter of Plutonium Production
Spanning nearly 600 square miles, the Hanford Site was one of the largest and most secretive wartime projects in American history. At its peak, more than 50,000 people worked on-site: building reactors, processing plutonium, and maintaining a massive support infrastructure, all without knowing the full extent of the mission.
From B Reactor to T Plant, the site was a model of wartime industrial might. Entire train systems, underground waste pipelines, and water-cooling systems powered the production process. The scale of the operation was matched only by the secrecy that surrounded it.
Today, the Hanford Site is undergoing long-term environmental cleanup and is partially open for public education and interpretation through guided tours and museums. It remains a powerful symbol of scientific achievement, moral complexity, and the enduring legacy of World War II.