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Photos show the vice president's official residence where JD Vance will live

Number One Observatory Circle is the official residence of the US vice president.
  • The vice president's official residence is on the grounds of the US Naval Observatory.
  • Different vice presidents have added amenities such as a pool, a jogging track, and a garden.
  • The residence may be haunted — Walter Mondale's daughter once said she saw a ghost in her bedroom.

Vice President Kamala Harris and her husband, Doug Emhoff moved into the vice president's official residence at Number One Observatory Circle in 2021. They set their sights on the White House, but former President Donald Trump's election victory means that Number One Observatory Circle's next residents will be Vice President-elect JD Vance and his family.

The historic home features personal touches added by past vice presidents ... and even a few ghost stories. Here's a closer look at the vice president's residence.

The vice president's official residence is located on the grounds of the United States Naval Observatory in Washington, DC.
A satellite image of the United States Naval Observatory.

Established in 1830, the US Naval Observatory is one of the oldest scientific agencies in the US where scientists collect astronomical data for accurate navigation, according to the official website of the Commander, Naval Meteorology and Oceanography Command.

The movements of planets and stars are used to accurately provide positioning, navigation, and timing for the Navy and Department of Defense.

Measuring 9,150 square feet, Number One Observatory Circle contains 33 rooms.
Number One Observatory Circle is the official residence of the US vice president.

The home features six bedrooms, a dining room, a garden room, a study, and an attic.

The home was built in 1893 for the Naval Observatory's superintendent and began housing its chief of naval operations in 1923.
Number One Observatory Circle pictured in 1977.

Vice presidents used to live in their own homes until Congress devoted funds to refurbishing the home for vice presidential use in 1974, according to the White House.

Number One Observatory Circle became the official vice presidential residence in 1974.
Number One Observatory Circle.

President Gerald Ford's vice president, Nelson Rockefeller, hosted events at the home but didn't live there.

In 1977, Vice President Walter Mondale, who served under President Jimmy Carter, became the first vice president to live in the residence full-time.

Mondale's daughter, Eleanor, once called the Secret Service when she said she saw a ghost in her bedroom.
Walter Mondale and Eleanor Mondale.

Eleanor Mondale wrote in a 1998 issue of Swing magazine that the Secret Service was less than pleased when they found out she had reported a ghost sighting, not an actual intruder.

"I was so scared, I fainted," she wrote, according to Deseret News. "Upon coming to, I phoned the Secret Service Command Post. I whispered that there was a man in my room and hung up. Minutes later, two agents busted into the room, guns drawn. When I told them the 'man' was actually a ghost, they requested that I NEVER DO THAT AGAIN!"

Vice presidents can redecorate the home according to their tastes.
George H.W. Bush and Barbara Bush at the vice president's residence.

Money for maintaining the home, as well as for additions or renovations, comes from private funds or donations to the Vice President's Residence Foundation, which was founded in 1991.

Dick and Lynne Cheney decorated the residence in neutral colors.
Dick Cheney bidding farewell to Joe Biden following their visit at the vice president's residence.

They enlisted interior designer Frank Babb Randolph to help with the transformation, The Washington Post reported.

Vice presidents have added various amenities over the years, such as a jogging track, exercise room, and horseshoe pit.
President George H.W. Bush jogs at the vice president's residence in 1992.

President George H.W. Bush installed a quarter-mile jogging track at the residence, and he liked it so much that he continued running there even after he became president.

The house also features a pool, which was added by Dan Quayle.
The pool at the vice president's residence.

Biden told reporters in 2010 that "no one can say a negative thing about Dan Quayle" because he added the pool to the vice president's residence, USA Today reported.

"He's my favorite vice president," Biden said. "And my granddaughters love it."

Joe Biden surprised his wife, Jill, with a tree swing on the grounds of the residence for Valentine's Day in 2010.
Joe Biden's tree swing on the grounds of the vice president's residence.

The commemorative plaque reads "Joe loves Jill. Valentine's Day 2010."

Jill Biden added the Family Heritage Garden where stones memorialize all the home's previous occupants and their family members, including pets.
The Family Heritage Garden.

The garden also features a bronze sculpture of the Bidens' dog Champ, who died at age 13.

The Bidens' favorite room in the home was the Solarium.
The Solarium.

"I love to go in that room and sit on the couch and grade papers or have meetings," Jill Biden told The Washington Post in 2017. "Often, they put a round table in there and we would have dinner or lunch."

When the Pences moved into the residence, Karen Pence installed a beehive to raise awareness of the declining honeybee population.
Karen Pence with a beehive on the vice president's residential grounds.

Karen Pence previously kept bees at the Indiana governor's residence, unveiling a hive there in 2014. The hive she added to the vice presidential residence in 2017 held 20,000 bees.

"All types of pollinators, such as bees, butterflies, birds, and bats, are critical to providing our nation's food, fiber, fuel, and medicine," Pence said at the unveiling.

Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff, who is Jewish, became the first residents to affix a mezuzah to the door of the home.
The mezuzah is affixed to the right side of the doorpost.

In November 2021, the second couple put a white mezuzah — a small scroll of Hebrew text from the Torah in a decorative case — on the right side of the doorway of their residence.

When they affixed the object, which marks the space as sacred and holy, Emhoff's parents came to the ceremony, Harris told Vanity Fair.

"My mother-in-law, Barbara, is very pleased and proud of her son," she said. 

 

Harris and Emhoff also planted a pomegranate tree on the grounds to mark the first anniversary of the October 7 attacks in Israel.
Kamala Harris and Doug Emhoff with a pomegranate tree at the vice president's residence.

"For years to come, this pomegranate tree will stand here, spreading its roots and growing stronger to remind future vice presidents of the United States, their families, and all who pass through these grounds not only of the horror of October 7, but of the strength and endurance of the Jewish people," Harris said in her speech before planting the tree. "It will remind us all not to abandon the goal of peace, dignity, and security for all, and it will remind us all to always have faith."

There's rumored to be a secure bunker underneath the residence.
The residence in 2000.

When loud blasts and construction noises were heard at Number One Observatory Circle in 2002, neighbors complained and received letters that read, "Due to its sensitive nature in support of national security and homeland defense, project specific information is classified and cannot be released."

The letter sparked rumors that a secure bunker was being built after the attacks of September 11, 2001.

A spokesperson for the US Navy told the BBC in 2002 that the construction was "an infrastructure and utility upgrade."

Newsweek's Eleanor Clift reported in 2009 that Biden revealed the existence of the bunker at an annual Gridiron Club dinner, but Biden's spokeswoman told Fox News that his comments were not reported accurately.

"What the vice president described in his comments was not — as some press reports have suggested — an underground facility, but rather, an upstairs workspace in the residence, which he understood was frequently used by Vice President Cheney and his aides," the spokeswoman said. "That workspace was converted into an upstairs guestroom when the Bidens moved into the residence. There was no disclosure of classified information."

Vice presidents have more freedom of movement at their residence than presidents do in the White House.
Joe Biden and Jill Biden at a barbecue for wounded service members at the vice president's residence.

Presidents can't just walk out of the White House whenever they want. At One Observatory Circle, though, vice presidents have more space and privacy to live normal lives.

At a CNN town hall in 2021, Biden likened the White House to a "gilded cage."

"The vice president's residence was totally different," he said. "You're on 80 acres, overlooking the rest of the city. And you can walk out, and there's a swimming pool. You can walk off a porch in the summer and jump in a pool, and go into work. You can ride a bicycle around and never leave the property and work out. But the White House is very different."

Harris occasionally hosts meetings in the official residence.
Kamala Harris at a breakfast meeting in the vice president's residence.

Harris welcomed Irish Prime Minister Leo Varadkar to the residence for a St. Patrick's Day breakfast in March.

JD Vance and his family will move into Number One Observatory Circle after Donald Trump's inauguration.
Usha Vance and JD Vance on election night.

Vance, 40, will be one of the youngest vice presidents in US history and the first millennial vice president.

Vance is married to Usha Chilukuri Vance, a fellow Yale Law School graduate and former litigator. They have three children: Ewan, Vivek, and Mirabel.

Read the original article on Business Insider

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