Beginning January 1, 1994, all federal construction projects
must be designed using the metric system. The
National Institute of Standards and Technology,
the agency in charge of
the conversion, hired a construction firm to build its new
buildings according to metric measure. A NIST official noted
that "obviously, a lot of products used in the construction
industry in this country are not in metric yet."
NIST is also behind a move to promote a new standard size for a sheet of paper according to metric measurement. Instead of 8.5 by 11 inches, NIST has endorsed a size called "A4." The new size is equivalent to 8.3 by 11.7 inches.
Early in 1994 the Federal Highway Administration began seeking comments on a plan to change road signs to the metric system (1 mile = 1.609 kilometers). The choices being considered were replacing miles with kilometers over seven years; making the change in one year along with an education program; giving the states two years to change all signs to display both miles and kilometers; or just leaving the whole damn thing alone.