Looking at the original DC planning map (from 1792), we see the clear depiction of a somewhat shortened pentagram (the southern point of which falls on the
White House), with New Hampshire Avenue (in yellow, below right) passing through two of it's corners.

Playing connect the dots with the other side, and closing the base, produces an isosceles triangle that is shortened just like the pentagram, and which has
base angles of 52 degrees, like the Great Pyramid. You may know about the Ellipse, the shortened circle, just south of the White House. These three
shortened figures suggest that they were all part of a larger template that was itself shortened.

Looking a bit further, we can see that all the geometric elements of the tree/cube that were introduced before, are contained in the DC map with reduced
height. All eleven points on the tree correlate to monuments in the map layout. The address for the National Archives Bldg, located at sphere number 7,
is 700 Pennsylvania Avenue.

Not only is the A-shaped Tree of Life depicted on the axis of 16th Street, with the White House occupying sphere six, but 11 of the 13 circles in the original
Metatron's Cube figue are marked by monuments in the map.

The Capitol Building marks the SE corner of the large rectangle, with Georgetown, at the opposite end of Penn Ave, marking the NW corner, reflecting the
rivalry that existed between people who lived in those two areas in the late 18th Century. The NE corner is distinguished only by an intersection, while the
SW corner is not marked at all.

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