Pittsburgh City-County Building

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City-County Building
Pittsburgh City-County Building in 2016.jpg
Front view of the Pittsburgh City-County Building across from Grant St.
Alternative names City Hall
General information
Type Neo-Classical, Beau-Arts
Architectural style Classical Revival
Location Pittsburgh, USA
Address 414 Grant Street
Coordinates 40.4381, -79.9969
Construction started July 5, 1915
Completed December 1917
Cost $2.771 million
$60.3 million in 2024 dollars
Owner City of Pittsburgh, County of Allegheny
Height 144 feet
Dimensions
Diameter 300 feet X 183 feet
Technical details
Floor count 10
Design and construction
Architect Henry Hornbostel
Architecture firm Palmer, Hornbostel & Jones
Structural engineer McClintic-Marshall & Co.
Other designers R. Gustavino, Charles Keck
Main contractor James L. Stewart

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.

Design

Architect’s rendering, published in 1916

The building was designed by Henry Hornbostel and opened in 1917. Its main hall is surrounded by gilded classical columns 47 feet high, supporting a vaulted ceiling of Gustavino terra cotta tile. Architectural sculpture on the building was created by Charles Keck.

The Pittsburgh City-County Building (right) is adjacent to the Allegheny County Courthouse (left)

It is one of four city/county service buildings in the neighboring blocks. The Allegheny County Courthouse sits directly across Forbes Avenue. The County Office Building sits directly across Ross Street. The old Allegheny County Jail, now the Family Division of the Allegheny County Court of Common Pleas sits diagonally at Forbes Avenue and Ross Street. Up until the 1960s, the corrections department had its offices to the northeast of the structure.[1] On the seventh floor of the building is a massive mural completed in 1940 entitled "Justice" by award winning artist Harry Scheuch.[2]

Popular culture

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.[3]

1992's Lorenzo's Oil used the building to shoot scenes depicting Johns Hopkins Hospital.[4]

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.[5]

The USA Network show Suits used the Grant Street exterior for establishing shots in 2011.[6]

Trivia

Pittsburgh City-County Building Portico along Grant Street

External links

Media related to Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found. at Wikimedia Commons

References

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