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IBM Rochester is the facility of International Business Machines in Rochester, Minnesota. The initial structure was designed by Eero Saarinen, who clad the structure in blue panels of varying hues after being inspired by the Minnesota sky (though IBM being known as "Big Blue" was no small factor). The building was first dedicated in 1958, but has been expanded considerably since then. Today, the mile-long facility is best known as the plant that produces the AS/400 computer system (currently marketed as the eServer iSeries or i5). RS/6000 (now pSeries) and hard drive development has also occurred at the site at points in the past. Along with the Mayo Clinic, the IBM plant is one of the biggest employers in the Rochester area, reportedly numbering around 5,000 in 2002.
The AS/400 division at the plant received the Malcom Baldridge National Quality Award in 1990. In November 2004, the facility claimed the top spot in the TOP500 list of fast supercomputers with a prototype Blue Gene/L system containing 32,768 processors. It clocked in at 70.72 teraflops.
Groundbreaking for the facility took place on July 31, 1956. When it was first completed, there was 576,000 square feet (53,500 m²) of floor space. There is 3.6 million square feet (330,000 m²) today, more than half the size of the Pentagon in Arlington, Virginia. Employment at the site has gone through several cycles of growth and collapse, but is over twice what it was in the 1950s. Rumors have appeared over the years suggesting that the structure was designed to look like a punch card from above, but this is more due to the facility's expansion over the years rather than an intention by Saarinen.
The plant, which is near U.S. Highway 52 in the northern part of Rochester, was recognized in 1990 by the National Building Museum as one of the significant contributions of IBM to the built environment of the United States, along with IBM's New York City headquarters and the IBM building in Atlanta, Georgia.
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