06/11/2025
In an era long before modern hydraulics and computer modeling, engineers achieved one of the most astonishing feats of structural relocation in history. The Indiana Bell Telephone Company needed to rotate its massive headquarters to make room for expansion — but instead of demolishing it, they decided to move the entire building while people were still inside working.
Using a network of hydraulic jacks, rollers, and wooden beams, the 22-million-pound building was lifted and carefully rotated 90 degrees at a rate of about 15 inches per hour. During this time, gas, water, and electricity were rerouted through flexible connections, allowing the company to stay fully operational. Not a single day of service was lost.
This incredible move remains one of the most precise engineering operations ever completed without digital tools. It showcased early 20th-century ingenuity, planning, and confidence in engineering methods — a reminder that human innovation doesn’t always need modern tech to achieve impossible results.
Watch the video: https://engineerine.com/the-building-that-moved/