A courthouse or court house is a structure which houses judicial functions for a governmental entity such as a state, region, province, county, prefecture, regency, or similar governmental unit. A courthouse is home to one or more courtrooms , the enclosed space in which a judge presides over a court , and one or more chambers , the private offices of judges. Larger courthouses often also have space for offices of judicial support staff such as court clerks and deputy clerks.
86-788: The Thurgood Marshall United States Courthouse (originally the United States Courthouse or the Foley Square Courthouse ) is a 37-story courthouse at 40 Centre Street on Foley Square in the Civic Center neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City , United States. Opened in 1936, the building was designed by Cass Gilbert and his son, Cass Gilbert Jr., in the Classical Revival style. The United States Court of Appeals for
172-605: A United States post office as well as court facilities for the District of New Jersey . Some branches of U.S. federal government courts are housed in rented office space in buildings housing commercial tenants; for instance, the United States Bankruptcy Court for the District of Delaware is located in an office building in Wilmington, Delaware , across the street from the main courthouse of
258-458: A canal to the north to encourage the water to drain into the river. The landfill was completed in 1811, and middle class homes were soon built on the reclaimed land . The landfill was poorly engineered. The buried vegetation began to release methane gas (a byproduct of decomposition ) and the area, still in a natural depression, lacked adequate storm sewers . As a result, the ground gradually subsided. Houses shifted on their foundations,
344-574: A paddle wheel on Collect Pond. On the boat with him was fellow inventor Robert Fulton , Robert R. Livingston , who was the first Chancellor of New York and a signer of the Declaration of Independence, and 16-year-old John Hutchings, steering. This was six years before Fulton and Livingston launched “ Fulton’s Folly ” on the Seine River in France . Hutchings claims to have been a “lad” at
430-478: A skating rink during the winter. Beginning in the early 18th century, various commercial enterprises were built along the shores of the pond in order to use the water. These businesses included Coulthards Brewery , Nicholas Bayard 's slaughterhouse on Mulberry Street (which was nicknamed "Slaughterhouse Street"), numerous tanneries on the southeastern shore, and the pottery works of German immigrants Johan Willem Crolius and Johan Remmey on Pot Bakers Hill on
516-415: A blast-resistant film. The base measures 321 by 234 feet (98 by 71 m). It is six stories high, excluding the basement story. The site slopes downward to the north; as a result, there are entrances to the building's basement from Pearl Street. The facade contains a colonnade of round columns on Centre Street, as well as flat pilasters on the other elevations. Built around three interior courtyards ,
602-489: A completely different continent. These characteristics include the materiality in terms of large stone construction, the repetitive rhythmic use of windows containing various sized arches and barrel vaults directing attention towards them, decorated spandrels (wall section connecting arches) and the inclusion of gabled walls (pointed sections). Old City Hall has been designated a National Historical Site since 1989. Collect Pond Collect Pond , or Fresh Water Pond ,
688-561: A cornice and a small attic. The top of the tower contains stone eagles at each corner, between which are low parapets . The eagles and parapets surround the steep pyramidal roof. The roof of the tower is pyramidal , pitched steeply, and made of terracotta clad in gold leaf . Before he was hired to design the United States Courthouse, Gilbert had designed the roof of the New York Life Building in
774-739: A depth of 381.25 feet (116 m). The courthouse is flanked by two high-rise government buildings: the Manhattan Municipal Building to the south and the Daniel Patrick Moynihan United States Courthouse to the north. Adjacent to the Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse, and also facing Foley Square, is the New York County Courthouse to the north. The building also abuts St. Andrew Church to
860-600: A federally owned building that houses courtrooms, chambers and clerk's offices. Many federal judicial districts are further split into divisions, which may also have their own courthouses. However, sometimes divisional court facilities are located in buildings that also house other agencies or offices of the United States government; for instance, the Mitchell H. Cohen United States Courthouse in Camden, New Jersey houses
946-517: A half years; it was among the first federal skyscrapers constructed. After Gilbert's death, his son Cass Gilbert Jr. supervised construction. The building opened on January 15, 1936, and was renovated in the 1990s. The United States Congress passed a bill renaming the building in honor of former United States Supreme Court justice Thurgood Marshall in 2001, and the courthouse was rededicated on April 15, 2003. The building underwent extensive renovations from 2006 to 2013. The United States Courthouse
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#17327660652731032-525: A new Civic Center municipal building and a plaza, although the United States Courthouse would have remained in place. The General Services Administration planned to rearrange the interior of the United States Courthouse, but a federal judge placed an injunction on the plans in 1963. The city presented a revised proposal for the neighborhood in April 1964. As part of the Civic Center redevelopment, in 1965,
1118-438: A reflecting pool to acknowledge the historic importance of this body of water. The pond occupied approximately 48 acres (190,000 m ) and was as deep as 60 feet (18 m). Fed by an underground spring, it was located in a valley, with Bayard Mount (at 110 feet or 34 metres the tallest hill in lower Manhattan) to the northeast and Kalck Hoek ( Dutch for Chalk Point , named for the numerous oyster shell middens left by
1204-539: A renovation of Collect Pond Park, using federal-relief funds distributed after the September 11 attacks . The park was closed for a total reconstruction in 2011. The granite foundation of The Tombs was uncovered in 2012, leading to a partial stop-work order pending archaeological investigation. The rebuilt park reopened in May 2014, with a pool evocative of the former Collect Pond. The project had cost $ 4.6 million. Although
1290-434: A severe pollution problem and environmental health hazard. Pierre Charles L'Enfant proposed cleaning the pond and making it a centerpiece of a recreational park, around which the residential areas of the city could grow. His proposal was rejected, and it was decided to drain and fill in the pond. This was accomplished with soil partially obtained from leveling the nearby hills of Bayard's Mount and Kalck Hoek, and by digging
1376-486: A similar style. The lowest section of the roof contains a small dormer window on each elevation. Above that are three additional levels of dormer windows. There is also a small open lantern, also gold- glazed terracotta, at the top. The base of the lantern is surrounded by a railing, while the lantern's corners and steep roof contain finials . The public interior spaces were intended as "ceremonial spaces". Under Gilbert's original plan, visitors would access these spaces in
1462-401: A specific order, passing through the portico, the lobby, and various hallways before reaching the courtrooms. The ceremonial spaces were then ornamented by details, such as plaster ceilings, in a particular color scheme. Gilbert died before the interior designs were finished; as a result, the interior spaces were executed in a different color palette than Gilbert had planned. The main hall spans
1548-540: A terms of boundary for night watch duties in 1731 under John Montgomerie's charter during the British rule in New York City. The pond was home to a copious amount of fish, and in 1734 legislation was passed preventing the use of nets in the pond. This was prior to the extreme pollution to the pond, which included the dumping of dead animals. In the 18th century, the pond was used as a picnic area during summer and
1634-703: Is equivalent to the city hall as the symbol of the municipium in European free cities . Courthouses are often shown in American cinema (i.e. " Peyton Place ", " Back to the Future ", and " My Cousin Vinny "). They range from small-town rural buildings with a few rooms to huge metropolitan courthouses that occupy large plots of land. The style of American architecture used varies, with common styles including federal , Greek Revival , neoclassicist , and modern . Due to
1720-447: Is in the Civic Center neighborhood of Lower Manhattan in New York City , United States. It occupies most section of the city block bounded by Centre Street and Foley Square to the northwest, Pearl Street to the north, Cardinal Hayes Place to the southeast, and St. Andrews Plaza to the south. The irregularly shaped land lot covers 74,180 square feet (6,892 m), with a frontage of 205.58 feet (63 m) on Pearl Street and
1806-403: Is rounded off. The first floor is mostly above ground level, except at the southwestern end, where it abuts St. Andrew Church. At that location, the first floor is the same height as the ground. Above the sixth story, the base has a green roof covering 21,000 square feet (2,000 m). The green roof also includes a 10,000-U.S.-gallon (38,000 L) rainwater tank , which was intended to reduce
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#17327660652731892-400: Is treated as an attic, with rectangular windows separated by pilasters. A bronze flagpole rises above the portico. On the other elevations of the base, there are pilasters topped by Corinthian capitals, which are similar to those above the columns in the portico. The pilasters face north toward Pearl Street and east toward Cardinal Hayes Place. The northeast corner of the building, facing east,
1978-619: The Italian-Argentine sculptor Luciano Garbati's work Medusa With the Head of Perseus (2008), a seven-foot-tall representation of Medusa carrying Perseus 's head, was installed in the center of the park as part of the NYC Parks Department's public art program. Garbati's work, a reversal of Cellini 's Perseus with the Head of Medusa , an Italian Renaissance bronze, was reimagined by MeToo movement advocates as
2064-556: The New York City Board of Estimate transferred the former site of Collect Pond to the New York City Department of Parks and Recreation for conversion into a park. Originally named "Civil Court Park" because of its proximity to the surrounding courthouses, it was renamed "Collect Pond Park" under Commissioner Henry J. Stern to represent the location's history. In 2006, the city received funding for
2150-594: The Oklahoma City bombing , the federal government proceeded to heavily fortify all large federal buildings, including many urban courthouses. Some courthouses in areas with high levels of violent crime have redundant layers of security. For example, when the Supreme Court of California hears oral argument in San Francisco or Los Angeles, visitors must pass through one security checkpoint to enter
2236-590: The government of New York City , selling the City Hall Post Office to the city. In addition, the city and the St. Andrew Church swapped two land parcels, since the church owned some property that was to be part of the courthouse. In July 1932, the federal government hired the George J. Atwell Foundation Corporation to excavate the site of the courthouse. The U.S. Treasury had approved the exterior design, but
2322-517: The indigenous Native American inhabitants) to the west. A stream flowed north out of the pond and then west through a salt marsh (which, after being drained, became a meadow by the name of "Lispenard Meadows") to the Hudson River , while another stream issued from the southeastern part of the pond in an easterly direction to the East River . The southwestern shore of Collect Pond was
2408-444: The 22nd floor, a denticulated cornice runs horizontally across all elevations of the facade. There are seven square windows on each elevation at the 23rd story. On the 24th and 25th floors, each elevation contains seven bays separated by double-height pilasters. On each elevation, each of the five central bays contains a double-height arched window, above which is a square window; the two outer bays contain narrow rectangular windows. At
2494-483: The 27th floor, the tower contains a small setback and is surrounded by a parapet. The setback section is marked by urns at the corners. Above the setback, the tower rises for three additional stories and contains five bays on each elevation. The bays are separated by triple-height engaged columns designed in the Ionic order , and there are two pilasters on each end of either elevation. These columns and pilasters support
2580-531: The 30th. The main hall, spanning the width of the building along Centre Street, is decorated with marble floors and walls and a coffered ceiling . The building also contains 35 courtrooms, as well as a double-height library on the 25th floor. The courthouse was proposed in 1928 because of overcrowding at the City Hall Post Office and Courthouse . Construction began in July 1932 and lasted three and
2666-456: The Greek key molding seen in the main hall also frames the ceilings of the tower courtrooms. The Court of Appeals courtroom ceiling also depicts nautical symbols. There are 11 elevators, of which four only operate to the 17th floor, the highest floor that is open to the public. The upper floors mostly contain offices, which retain little of the original decorations or layout. Within the tower, at
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2752-743: The Los Angeles Superior Court added such checkpoints to all entrances to its main courthouse in Downtown Los Angeles after a woman was shot and killed by her ex-husband in open court in September 1995. The Supreme Court of California ruled in 2002 that Los Angeles County (which at the time was responsible for maintaining the courthouses) was not liable to her three children under the California Government Tort Claims Act. After
2838-790: The Second Circuit and the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York hear cases in the courthouse, which is across the street from the Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York City . It is listed on the National Register of Historic Places and is a New York City designated landmark . The building is divided into two parts: a six-story base and a 31-story office tower. The facade of
2924-450: The U.S. government proposed constructing a new building (later the Jacob K. Javits Federal Building ) to house appellate courts and eleven federal agencies. This would free up about 32,000 square feet (3,000 m) in the courthouse building. The building's facade was also washed in mid-1965 for the first time in three decades. The New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission designated
3010-661: The United States acquired land on Church Street for a new federal office building . Federal jurists advocated for their own courthouse, leading the United States Department of the Treasury to approve a second building in 1930. As early as 1930, the architectural firm of McKim, Mead & White had drawn up designs for a federal courthouse at Centre and Pearl Streets, replacing the New York City Board of Health building. Architect Cass Gilbert
3096-405: The United States Courthouse as a New York City landmark on March 25, 1975. The same year, the adjacent Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York , jail opened to the east. The United States Attorney 's office was also relocated from the courthouse to the jail building. Although the new jail was not directly visible from Foley Square, it was connected to the courthouse via a footbridge. The building
3182-443: The base is irregularly shaped, following the outline of the site. On all elevations, the first four stories are clad with rusticated granite blocks. The building's cornerstone is made of granite and contains the names of Treasury secretary Ogden L. Mills , assistant Treasury secretary Ferry K. Heath , architect Cass Gilbert , and supervising architect James A. Wetmore . Massive granite steps flanked by large pedestals lead up to
3268-642: The building housing the courthouse may be named in some way or its function divided as between a judicial building and administrative office building. Philadelphia City Hall , for instance, serves as the seat of the legislative and executive functions of the consolidated city and county of Philadelphia , but most of its floor space is devoted to the Civil Division of the Philadelphia Court of Common Pleas . The Supreme Court of Pennsylvania shares space with three local governments and with
3354-545: The building was rededicated on April 15, 2003. In November 2006, the Second Circuit left the Marshall Courthouse while the building underwent extensive renovations. During this period, the Daniel Patrick Moynihan U.S. Courthouse across the street temporarily housed the Second Circuit. To make way for additional mechanical systems, four elevators in the tower were truncated to the 17th floor,
3440-533: The building's water consumption by 25 percent compared to a conventional building of the same size. The tower is a square measuring 100 by 100 feet (30 by 30 m). It is set back from the base parallel to the front of the building on Centre Street. On the first sixteen stories above the base (consisting of the 7th through 22nd floors), each elevation is divided vertically into multiple bays, each with one window. The bays are separated vertically by projecting piers and horizontally by rectangular spandrel panels. Above
3526-660: The building, and another to enter the courtroom. In Canada , each municipality constructs its own courthouse, or several in the case of large cities. In smaller communities the court is in the same building as the city hall and other municipal offices. In the past many courthouses also included the local prison. One well-known court house in Canada is the Romanesque Revival (Neo-Romanesque) Old City Hall in Toronto , Ontario . Designed by E.J. Lennox , Old City Hall
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3612-481: The building. After Gilbert's death in 1934, construction was supervised by his son Cass Gilbert Jr. until its completion. The courthouse was originally known as the Foley Square Courthouse and was among the first federal skyscrapers constructed. By early 1935, James Stewart & Co. planned to finish the building before that August. The Federal Courthouse was one of two skyscrapers in Manhattan completed in 1935,
3698-486: The coffers. Richly ornamental bronzework surrounds many of the interior doors , including those of the elevators . The elevator doors are made of steel, painted in a gold color; they were initially supposed to be made of brass, but these plans were changed to save money. This bronze detailing features an unusual combination of metaphorical images related to law and government, including dolphins , an erudite if somewhat obscure symbol of birth and democratic ideals. Among
3784-403: The construction of various city government buildings there. Just prior to the construction of the present courthouse, the site had contained the New York City Board of Health building. Prior to the construction of the current courthouse, the City Hall Post Office had contained federal offices and courtrooms. The post office building had become overcrowded by 1928, when the federal government of
3870-546: The courthouse after the late Supreme Court of the United States justice Thurgood Marshall . Before being elevated to the Supreme Court, Marshall had worked at the courthouse from 1961 to 1965 as a judge of the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. The United States Congress passed a bill in 2001, renaming the building in honor of Thurgood Marshall. The legislation was signed into law on August 20, 2001, and
3956-427: The courthouse also contains the main administrative office for the county government, or when a new courthouse is constructed, the former one will often be used for other local government offices. Either way, a typical courthouse will have one or more courtrooms and a court clerk's office with a filing window where litigants may submit documents for filing with the court. Each United States district court also has
4042-433: The courthouse out of granite, awarding a contract to James Stewart & Co. for $ 5.996 million on January 20, 1933. The contractor was given 720 business days to finish the job. Lawyers and federal officials laid the building's cornerstone on March 1, 1933. The next month, Bethlehem Steel subsidiary McClintic-Marshall Company received a contract to manufacture 10,500 short tons (9,400 long tons; 9,500 t) of steel for
4128-413: The credit for the era of steam navigation, Hutchings hoped, through the publication of this broadside, to shed some light on Fitch’s contributions as well. A plaque at Collect Pond Park, however, states that though Fitch's account "is often repeated, no evidence has been found to substantiate the story." The contaminated wastewater of the businesses surrounding the pond flowed back into the pond, creating
4214-641: The designer of the Woolworth Building took great pride," referring to how Gilbert had also designed the Woolworth Building nearby. Paul Goldberger of the same paper wrote that the United States Courthouse's staircase, along with that of the neighboring New York County Courthouse, "create a strong urban order that gives definition to the east side of Foley Square". The front steps of the Federal Courthouse, along with that of
4300-590: The district court. The United States District Court for the Eastern District of California has a courthouse in Yosemite to hear misdemeanors and petty crimes for Yosemite National Park . Most of the United States courts of appeals are based in the main courthouses of the federal district court in the city in which they are seated. The courthouse is part of the iconography of American life and
4386-523: The equivalent term is a palace of justice (French: palais de justice, Italian: palazzo di giustizia, Portuguese: palácio da justiça). In the United States , most counties maintain trial courts in a county-based courthouse, which also house other county government offices. The courthouse may be a part of a wider county government building or complex. The courthouse is usually located in the county seat , although large metropolitan counties may have satellite or annex offices for their courts. In some cases,
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#17327660652734472-406: The fifth-story frieze , which does not have any windows. The frieze is carved with a detailed floral design. The ends of the entablature above are embellished with roundels , designed to resemble ancient coins , on which are carved the heads of four ancient lawgivers: Plato , Aristotle , Demosthenes , and Moses . Above this entablature is a cornice with denticulated blocks. The sixth story
4558-440: The footprint of the building. Secure entrance vestibules provide court staff the opportunity to screen visitors to the building for contraband, such as weapons and narcotics, as well as for unauthorized access. Mid size to larger courthouses often have separate entrances to the building for the public, prisoners, judges, and witnesses. These entrances may be monitored remotely from a central security station. In lower risk settings,
4644-403: The highest story accessible by members of the public. Pipes and wiring were installed in the upper portions of these elevator shafts, and mechanical equipment was installed in the attic, which had a low ceiling. Some of the new wires and pipes were concealed behind existing decorations. For example, air-conditioning ducts were installed under the floor of the double-height library, while a sprinkler
4730-561: The interior arrangement was still being finalized. A groundbreaking ceremony for the building was held on July 20, 1932. The federal government solicited bids for the courthouse's construction in January 1933, with each bidder submitting three cost estimates for different construction materials. James Stewart & Co. submitted a low bid for granite, while the N. P. Severin Company submitted a low bid for limestone. The Treasury decided to build
4816-1125: The legislative and executive branches of the state government of Pennsylvania in Philadelphia City Hall in Philadelphia, the Pennsylvania State Capitol in Harrisburg , which it shares with the Pennsylvania General Assembly and the Governor of Pennsylvania , and the Pittsburgh City-County Building in Pittsburgh , which it shares with the governments of the City of Pittsburgh and of Allegheny County . Many judges also officiate at civil marriage ceremonies in their courthouse chambers. In some places,
4902-423: The main entrance on Foley Square. Gilbert intended the pedestals to bear two monumental sculptural groups, but they were never executed. On Centre Street, ten quadruple-height Corinthian columns form a colonnade, behind which is the main entrance portico . There are windows recessed behind this portico, as well as flat pilasters on either side of the colonnade. The words "United States Court House" are inscribed on
4988-405: The marble walls. The ceiling is made of plaster and wood and is divided into seven rectangular, coffered sections. These coffers are separated from each other by elaborate moldings with Greek key motifs. The coffers are decorated with large plaster rosettes tipped with 22- karat gold leaf on alternating backgrounds of crimson and peacock blue , with smaller rosettes at the junctions of
5074-465: The modalities involved in the hearing of complex cases, including civil, criminal, and family law disputes, the architecture of court buildings can present significant security challenges to enforcement officers. Architects typically use two main tools to mitigate security risks within the adjudicative space depending upon local needs, such as the proliferation of weapons: secure entrance vestibules and separation of circulation pathways and adjacencies within
5160-665: The neighboring New York County Courthouse, have also been used as a filming location. Court administrator Steven Flanders told The Wall Street Journal in 1989: "The steps are where fantasy and reality seem to merge into a spectacle that the public can't resist." Notes Sources Courthouse The term is commonly used in the English-speaking countries of North America. In most other English-speaking countries, buildings which house courts of law are simply called "courts" or "court buildings". In most of continental Europe and former non-English-speaking European colonies,
5246-419: The only place the systems of circulation, including hallways, stairwells, and elevators overlap is within the monitored setting of the courtroom. This reduces the risk of unauthorized access to court materials by the public, such as court clerk record vaults, as well as the risk of in-custody defendants intimidating witnesses or jurors while being escorted through the public areas of the courthouse. For example,
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#17327660652735332-445: The other being Rockefeller Center 's International Building . Judges did not move into the courthouse until January 15, 1936. The new building had 10 courtrooms for cases with juries and four courtrooms for cases that did not require juries. Notable events over the years that have occurred in the courthouse include the espionage conspiracy trial of Julius and Ethel Rosenberg ; the guilty plea of Ivan Boesky to conspiracy charges; and
5418-464: The other motifs are grasshoppers apparently feeding on stalks of wheat , accompanied by the Greek word meta , meaning "to transform", which conveys the idea that change, even conflict, is essential to growth; there are also owls , representing wisdom , and acorns and oak leaves , signifying strength and endurance. Variations on the decorative motifs employed within the main hall appear throughout
5504-416: The park was popular among residents and visitors, the pool had to be drained and repaired within months of the park's reopening; it was refilled in 2015. It is still possible to ascertain the rough boundaries of Collect Pond and original topography in the elevations of the streets in the area, with the lowest elevation being Centre Street which runs in the approximate center of the former pond. In 2020,
5590-510: The plan, the United States Courthouse would be the central structure of a new "civic center", surrounded by several public buildings. The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) also occupied nine stories in the United States Courthouse until 1952, when the FBI leased other space nearby. The government of New York City proposed redeveloping the Civic Center in 1962 as part of the "ABC plan". Several structures were to have been demolished to make way for
5676-509: The poor landfill job (completed in 1811) which created swampy, mosquito-ridden conditions on land that had originally had more well-to-do residents. Most middle and upper class inhabitants fled the area, leaving the neighborhood open to poor immigrants that began arriving in the early 1820s. This influx reached a height in the 1840s, with large numbers of Irish Catholics fleeing the Great Famine . New York's jail, nicknamed " The Tombs ",
5762-432: The rest of the interior. The building contains 35 courtrooms. Sixteen are original to the courthouse: five in the base and eleven in the tower, including the historic United States Court of Appeals courtroom. Many of the smaller courtrooms have been significantly modified, but many of the larger courtrooms retain their original decorations. All have wood- paneled walls with colossal round arches and fluted Ionic pilasters;
5848-654: The security screening may be more perfunctory and serve as an information desk to direct visitors to the various agencies and offices housed within the court building. Once users of the court have entered the building through security screenings and access control checkpoints, the circulation systems of passageways through the building provide discrete pathways by which the public, court staff, and in-custody defendants access to courtrooms and other court services, such as attorneys, pretrial and probation services, and clerks' offices. The circulation pathways and adjacency diagrams designed for newer and larger courthouses often ensure that
5934-509: The site of a Native American settlement known as Werpoes . A small band of Munsee, the northernmost division of the Lenape , occupied the site. The Munsee continued to live at Collect Pond until the Dutch settlement of New Amsterdam was established in the 17th century. It is possible that members of this band were the participants in the "sale" of Manhattan to the Dutch. Collect Pond was used as
6020-497: The south-southwestern shore. By the late 18th century, the pond was considered "a very sink and common sewer". Connecticut inventor John Fitch was an instrument maker working in the later part of the 18th century. As an early pioneer of steam navigation, Fitch tested several steamboats on the Delaware River between 1785 and 1788. Fitch’s real success, however, occurred in 1796 when he tested another ship equipped with
6106-404: The southeast and the Metropolitan Correctional Center, New York , jail to the east. Historically, the site of the Thurgood Marshall U.S. Courthouse was occupied by the southern portion of Collect Pond . By the mid-19th century, slums and tenements had been developed in the area, which had become known as Five Points . The area was redeveloped into the Civic Center in the early 20th century, with
6192-407: The structure is made of gray Minnesota granite. The base of the courthouse, built around three interior courtyards , occupies an irregular lot. The main entrance on Centre Street contains a portico accessed by massive granite steps, while the remainder of the base contains flat pilasters . A square tower, recessed from the base, rises to a small setback on the 27th floor and a pyramidal roof above
6278-430: The time who “assisted Mr. Fitch in steering the boat”. In a broadside issued in 1846, Hutchings asserts that it was in fact Fitch who designed the steam propulsion mechanism. He claims that both Fulton and Livingston were present during Collect Pond tests and in fact depicts both, as well as Fitch and himself, in a paddlewheel steam ship in the upper left quadrant of the broadside. Though Fulton seems to have received most of
6364-414: The trial of Martha Stewart . In 1942, the federal government sued the city government, requesting that the city pay $ 5.2 million as part of the land swap. The city government unsuccessfully petitioned the Supreme Court of the United States to rule on the dispute, and the city had paid for the land in full by the end of 1945. The city government was planning to redevelop the surrounding area by 1948. Under
6450-401: The twenty-fifth floor, a double-height library features large ceiling beams supported by brackets painted with stenciled foliate designs. The library largely retains its original design, although a balcony has been added to increase the capacity of the stacks . The library's high arched windows overlook of the Manhattan skyline . The courthouse was not unanimously well received when it
6536-568: The unpaved streets were often buried in a foot of mud and mixed with human and animal excrement, and mosquitoes bred in the stagnant pools created by the poor drainage. Several decades later, New York City obtained a new, plentiful supply of fresh water from the Croton Aqueduct . The neighborhood known as " Five Points ", a notorious slum , developed near the former eastern bank of the Collect and owed its existence in some measure to
6622-520: The width of the building along its principal elevation on Centre Street. It is very similar in design and ornamentation to the main hall of the United States Supreme Court building , which Gilbert designed at the same time. Twenty-nine feet in height, it has green- and black-veined white marble floors; the white marble that lines its walls has gold- and cream-colored veining. There are double-height Ionic pilasters superimposed onto
6708-580: Was a body of fresh water in what is now Chinatown in Lower Manhattan , New York City . For the first two centuries of European settlement in Manhattan , it was the main New York City water supply system for the growing city. A jail was later built on the former pond. In the 20th century, the site became Collect Pond Park ( 40°42′59″N 74°00′07″W / 40.7163°N 74.0019°W / 40.7163; -74.0019 ), which includes
6794-547: Was built on Centre Street in 1838 on the site of the pond and was constructed on a huge platform of hemlock logs in an attempt to give it secure foundations. The design, by John Haviland , was based on an engraving of an ancient Egyptian mausoleum . The building was 253 feet (77 m) in length by 200 feet (61 m) wide and it occupied a full block, surrounded by Centre, Franklin, Elm (today's Lafayette), and Leonard Streets. It initially accommodated about 300 prisoners. The prison building began to subside almost as soon as it
6880-623: Was commissioned to design a new federal courthouse at Foley Square, and Gilbert submitted plans for the courthouse to the Treasury Department in February 1932. The 38-story building, composed of a 7-story base and 31-story tower, would contain all offices for the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York . In June 1932, the federal government acquired the Health Department Building from
6966-658: Was completed and was notorious for leaks in its lowest tier and for its general dampness. The original building was replaced in 1902 with a new one on the same site connected by a "Bridge of Sighs" to the Criminal Courts Building on the Franklin Street side. When the original Tombs building was condemned and demolished at the end of the century, large concrete caissons were emplaced to bedrock , as much as 140 feet below street level, in order to give its replacement more secure foundations. That building
7052-640: Was completed in 1899 and has been functioning as a municipal building ever since. It was originally constructed to facilitate Toronto's City Council, legal and municipal offices and the city's courts however following the construction of the fourth city hall (adjacent to the third, on Queen Street) the building's purpose was limited to being solely a courthouse for the Ontario Court of Justice . The building can be described as Romanesque Revival due to multiple characteristics it shares with Romanesque architecture, despite being constructed seven centuries later in
7138-460: Was completed. Modernist architecture proponent and sociologist Lewis Mumford called it "the supreme example of pretentiousness, mediocrity, bad design and fake grandeur." Christopher Gray of The New York Times wrote: "The total composition, seen from Foley Square, is impressive but not inspirational." On the other hand, Lee E. Cooper of the Times wrote in 1935: "This is the type of work in which
7224-524: Was placed within the library's mezzanine. The Second Circuit returned to the Marshall Courthouse in early 2013 after renovations were completed. The building has two major parts: an irregular six-story base and a square tower with a lantern. In total, the building is 590 feet (180 m) tall and 37 stories . On all elevations of the facade , the building is clad with off-white Minnesota granite , mottled with peach and gray colors. The building's windows largely consist of single-glazed panes, coated with
7310-597: Was replaced in 1941 by one across the street on the east side of Centre Street with the entrance at 125 White Street, officially named the Manhattan Detention Complex , though still referred to colloquially as "The Tombs". The park is located on the block bordered by Lafayette Street , Leonard Street, Centre Street , and White Street, and sits between the three city courthouses: the Criminal Court , Civil Court, and Family Court. In 1960,
7396-490: Was slightly damaged by flooding in 1977, after a water main broke. The United States Courthouse was listed on the National Register of Historic Places on September 2, 1987. In 1992, three large historic courtrooms were restored. The courthouse was substantially renovated in 1999. The United States Courthouse originally did not have an official name. In 1999, the United States Congress proposed renaming
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