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Essential
Architecture- the North
East Allegheny County Courthouse |
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architect
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Henry Hobson Richardson, FAIA |
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location
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Pittsburgh, PA |
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date
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1886 |
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style
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Richardsonian Romanesque |
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construction
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Stone |
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type
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Government |
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The Allegheny County Courthouse is a government building of Allegheny
County located in the county seat, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.
Previous Courthouses
Pittsburgh's original courthouse, first occupied in
1794, was a wooden structure located next to the market place. Land for
a new courthouse was purchased in April, 1834. This was a tract of land
on the corner of Fourth and Grant Streets, on Grant's Hill. Construction
took place between 1836 and 1840. This court house was built with
polished gray sandstone, quarried at Coal Hill (present-day Mount
Washington), opposite Ferry Street. The building was designed by John
Chislett. The Greek Revival design included a domed cupola housing a
rotunda 60 feet in diameter and 80 feet high. The building was completed
in 1841. Due to corrosion caused by coal smoke, the building
deteriorated: the dressed surface of the facade dropped off, some of the
cornices near the roof began to fall, and the building had a scaly
appearance. Even in its deteriorated state, it was a handsome structure.
On May 7, 1882, a fire broke out and ruined the building. Subsequently,
it was demolished. The third, and present, courthouse was erected on the
same spot.[2]
The Current Allegheny County Courthouse
Following the destruction of the second courthouse,
Allegheny County Commissioners decided to hold a competition to design a
replacement. The winner of the competition was Boston architect H.H.
Richardson and construction of the buildings was begun by the Norcross
Brothers, Richardson's construction firm of choice, in 1884. The jail
portion of the complex was completed in 1886, the year of Richardson's
death and the entire court house was finished in 1886 by Sheply, Rutan
and Coolidge, Richardson's successor firm. The total cost of the project
up to that time was over two and a quarter million dollars.
The design of the main building, which Richardson considered to
be his finest, was innovative in that the building is built around an
interior courtyard, thus allowing natural light and fresh air to reach
most of the building. The courtyard is surrounded by four stories in
three sides. A tower rises five stories from the courtyard's open side.
As was usually the case with Richardson's buildings, the roof is steep
with dormers placed at all the corners.
The prison is connected to the main building by the "Bridge of
Sighs." The entire complex was built of large rusticated blocks of
granite, with the entrance ways and windows toped with wide arches. This
gives the building a heavy, stable and dignified appearance.
The design of the Allegheny County Courthouse has influenced
buildings in many cities across America.
In 1974, the building was placed on the National Register of
Historic Places.
References
^ National Register Information System. National
Register of Historic Places. National Park Service (2006-03-15).
^ "A century and a half of Pittsburg and her people," Boucher,
John Newton; The Lewis Publishing Company, 1908, prgs. 371, 372
"Pittsburgh, The Story of an American City," 5th edition, Stefan
Lorant, Esselmont Books, LLC., Pittsburgh, PA, 1999.
Kvaran, Einar Einarsson, Pilgrimage to H.H. Richardson,
unpublished manuscript
Ochsner, Jeffrey Karl, H.H. Richardson:Complete Architectural
Works, MIT Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts, 1984
Van Rensselaer, Mariana Griswold, Henry Hobson Richardson and His
Works, Dover Publications, NY, 1969, a reprint of the 1888 edition
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links
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www.essential-architecture.com
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