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Chicago, IL

Black and white photo of a gothic-style university building with several cars on the street at the front.
The Metallurgical Laboratory at the University of Chicago during the Manhattan Project, home of the world's first self-sustaining nuclear reactor.

Courtesy of the Atomic Heritage Foundation and the National Museum for Nuclear Science & History

Begun by the need to determine whether a nuclear chain reaction could be created and controlled, Manhattan Project administrators selected the University of Chicago as the site of the Metallurgical Laboratory (Met Lab), a code-named facility that would bring together dozens of top scientists to research whether a controlled nuclear reaction, a key step in atomic bomb creation, could be achieved.

Led by Arthur Compton, the Met Lab assembled a team of scientists that included Enrico Fermi, Leo Szilard, Eugene Wigner, and Leona Woods Marshall Libby, the youngest member and only female member of the team. On a squash court underneath the university’s unused Stagg Field football stands, the scientists and workers built a 20-foot-tall (6 meter) stack of graphite and uranium blocks over a two-week period, creating space for control rods and purifying the graphite and uranium.

Unlike other nuclear reactors that would come later, the Met Lab’s experiment had no safety features- no shielding from radiation and no way to cool the reactor. Fermi assured Compton that the likelihood of a catastrophic failure (on the campus of one of the country’s most populous cities no less) was slim, but the outcome was never certain.

On December 2, 1942 at 3:53 pm CST, with the control rods carefully removed, their creation, dubbed the Chicago Pile (CP-1), reached criticality. It was the first time in history that a self-sustaining nuclear reaction had been achieved. The scientists celebrated with a bottle of Chianti, as a vital step toward the nuclear age had proved successful.

The outcome of CP-1's success led to the construction a few months later of Oak Ridge’s X-10 Graphite Reactor, the world’s first full-scale experimental reactor that served as the basis for the massive plutonium-producing reactors at Hanford. Though CP-1 was disassembled shortly after the experiment, the site of its construction was dedicated a National Historic Landmark in 1967.

Manhattan Project National Historical Park

Last updated: June 21, 2023