Pittsburgh City-County Building

The Pittsburgh City-County Building is the seat of government for the City of Pittsburgh, and houses both Pittsburgh and Allegheny County offices. It is located in Downtown Pittsburgh at 414 Grant Street, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. Built from 1915-17 it is the third seat of government of Pittsburgh. Today the building is occupied mostly by Pittsburgh offices with Allegheny County located in adjacent county facilities. It also contains a courtroom for the Supreme Court of Pennsylvania when holding sessions in Pittsburgh.

Pittsburgh City-County Building
Location of the City-County Building in Pittsburgh
Location414 Grant Street (Downtown), Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA
Coordinates40°26′18.12″N 79°59′49.73″W
AreaDowntown
Built/founded1914-1917
ArchitectHenry Hornbostel
Governing body/ownerThe City of Pittsburgh & Allegheny County

History

At the start of the 20th century, City of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County officials began to realize that the current structure which housed the city and county government offices was insufficient for the city's rapid growth. The offices at that time were located in the Smithfield Street City Hall building, which was built in 1868-1872. The demand for new offices grew exponentially with the incorporation of Allegheny City into the City of Pittsburgh in 1907, which added 130,000 new residents to the city.[1] In 1909 plans for a new City Hall began. Mayor William A. McGee proposed selling the current offices in the Smithfield Street City Hall and the Public Safety building, and using these funds to buy the Allegheny County Courthouse and use it as the space for construction of a new City Hall.[2] By 1912 the plans moved forward substantially with both the City of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County approving a joint venture to purchase the land and both occupy the new building. The architect for the new building was to be chosen through a competition, only accepting architects residing and doing business within Allegheny County.[3] Regional favoritism was used in the building's construction as well, as in 1914 Mayor Joseph Armstrong claimed that all material for the building should come from manufactures who produce and are located in Pittsburgh, and that all labor employed should be obtained or taken from Allegheny County.[4] The plans for the development of the new building even extended to some of the prominent organization within Pittsburgh such as the Carnegie Library, and the Civic Club of Allegheny County who both had plans for space in the new building.[5][6] Construction was postponed for more than a year though as the general contracting firm of W. F. Trimble & Sons filed an injunction claiming that the selection of James L. Stuart as consulting and supervising engineer was done through an improper bidding process.[7] The case was eventually decided by the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and resolved by a legislative act, and development on the building was allowed to continue.[8] The groundbreaking on the building occurred with a ceremony on July 6, 1915 with County Commissioner I. K. Campbell striking the first blow with a pick and Joseph G. Armstrong Jr. lifting the first shovel of dirt. Both the pick and the shovel were later silver plated and preserved as mementos in the office of the Mayor.[9][10]Following significant progress in construction a cornerstone laying ceremony was planned to coincide with the celebration of Pittsburgh's Centennial.[11] On March 26, 1916 the celebration of the 100th anniversary of incorporation was held in Pittsburgh and a parade wound through downtown Pittsburgh ending at a steel-framework of what would become the new City-Council Building. Three cornerstones were laid during the celebration, including one for the City, one for the County, and one for the workers, each of which contained time capsules.[12][13][14] The construction on the new building finished in 1917, and was completed under budget.[15] In April 1917, the City Law Department was the first to switch into the new building, with the rest of the remaining offices allocated by June.[16] The building was nominated in January 2016 to become a City Historic Site by Preservation Pittsburgh.

Architecture

In 1914, a competition was held for a new Pittsburgh City Hall. The 16-entry competition led to the commissioning of Edward B. Lee, a respected Pittsburgh architect, with Palmer, Hornbostel, & Jones as associated architects. The completed design was done by Henry Hornbostel.[17]

The building was designed in the Beaux Arts style, with elements of the City Beautiful Movement. The City-County building is a representation of a distinctly American extrapolation of the Beaux Arts mode.[18] Hornbostel was known for this architectural style, and architectural historian James Van Trump has stated that Hornbostel kept the principles of the Beaux Arts central with his designs, but also frequently departed from the precepts, and integrated elements of other styles akin to industrially-inspired brutalism.[19] The design of the building was also influenced by the City Beautiful Movement. This movement featured urban planning with soaring Neoclassical buildings, clean and orderly designs, and included the concept of the “White City”. The City-County Building was one of Pittsburgh's first attempts at incorporating the City Beautiful Movement into its urban design.[20]

Some of the most significant design elements of the building include the Grand Lobby, which is a naturally lit atrium with a 47-foot high barrel-vaulted ceiling. The ceiling is held up by bronze columns crafted by Louis Tiffany Studios. They feature at their bases, the Seals of Pittsburgh and Allegheny County, frontiersman Guyasuta, and Pittsburgh's oldest surviving building, the Fort Pitt Blockhouse. The rooms ornate elevator doors feature a series of reliefs detailing the previous homes of municipal government. The reliefs age with the building's they clutch, reaching adulthood with the present City-County Building and Allegheny County Courthouse. [21]

The building is also unique in that most of the furniture was designed by the building's architect, Hornbostel. The Office of the Mayor, Council Chamber, and Supreme Court Room all feature 1917 furniture still in use today.

On the seventh floor of the building is a massive mural completed in 1940 entitled "Justice" by award-winning artist Harry Scheuch.[22]

1922's In the Name of the Law starred Pittsburgh Pirates great and future Hall of Famer Honus Wagner as the hero, as a Pittsburgh Police Superintendent pitched baseballs off the 144-foot-high roof in the film's climax.

Mayor Magee and the City Hall were featured in 1924's Fording the Lincoln Highway.[23]

1992's Lorenzo's Oil used the building to shoot scenes depicting Johns Hopkins Hospital.[24]

Many scenes of the Bruce Willis and Sarah Jessica Parker 1993 police drama Striking Distance were filmed both inside and on the Grant Street entrance to the building. Most notable is the nighttime scene of Dennis Farina's supervisor character arguing with Willis' "Tom Hardy" over the "Polish Hill" documents.

Scenes of the 1997-98 Superman remake Superman Lives were slated to be filmed in the building's "crystal palace" grand mezzanine and serving as Daily Planet offices but production was delayed by Warner Brothers.[25]

Trivia

See also

Media related to Pittsburgh City-County Building at Wikimedia Commons

References

  1. Allegheny City: A History of Pittsburgh’s North Side. Dan Rooney & Carol Peterson. University of Pittsburgh Press, 2014.
  2. “The Proposed City-County Building Trade”. The Pittsburgh Press, November 9, 1909.
  3. “Approved Agreement for City-County Building”. The Pittsburgh Press, May 22, 1912.
  4. “Home Industry Favored”. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 2, 1914.
  5. “Large Civic Center Plan is Announced.” Pittsburgh Daily Post, February 28, 1914.
  6. “Library Branch Offer”. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, June 25th, 1914.
  7. “City-County Building Case Argued in Court”. Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, October 9, 1914.
  8. "Trimble v. Pittsburgh et al.” Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, March 22, 1915.
  9. “Excavation Started for City-County Hall”. The Pittsburgh Daily Post, July 7, 1915.
  10. “Work is Begun on City-County Joint Building”. The Pittsburgh Press, July 6, 1915.
  11. “Cornerstone Exercises”, The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette, August 4, 1915.
  12. “City-County Building Workers Lay Their Own Cornerstone”, The Pittsburgh Daily Post, March 19, 1916.
  13. “Civic Pageant Draws Throngs of Spectators”, The Pittsburgh Daily Post, March 19, 1916.
  14. “City’s Cornerstone Contents Announced”, The Pittsburgh Daily Post, March 18, 1916.
  15. “File Figures on Cost of County-City Building”, The Pittsburgh Press, June 13, 1915.
  16. “City Law Department to Change Location”, The Pittsburgh Press, March 23, 1917.
  17. "City County Building - City of Pittsburgh". pittsburghpa.gov. Retrieved 13 September 2017.
  18. Leland Roth, American Architecture, p. 287.
  19. James Van Trump, Art and Architecture in Pittsburgh, Pittsburgh History and Landmarks Foundation, Pittsburgh, Pa., 1985, p.144.
  20. Walter Kidney, Henry Hornbostel: An Architect’s Master Touch, Lanham, Md., Roberts Rinehart Publishers., p.141.
  21. "City County Building - City of Pittsburgh". pittsburghpa.gov.
  22. Pitz, Marylynne (2009-04-20). "Legacy of FDR's public art program proves indelible | Pittsburgh Post-Gazette". Post-gazette.com. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  23. "Fording the Lincoln Highway - Ten Millionth Ford (1924)". YouTube. 2009-05-26. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  24. "The Digs: Pittsburgh Post-Gazette | Oct. 17, 1991: In the autumn of 1991, a 40-foot". Pgdigs.tumblr.com. 1991-10-17. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  25. "Can Pittsburgh Survive A 'Superman' Invasion? Business As Usual - tribunedigital-mcall". Articles.mcall.com. 1998-04-16. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  26. "The Pittsburgh Press - Google News Archive Search". news.google.com.
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