CONTEMPORARY NY
Pict0711.jpg (121024 bytes) New York Architecture Images-Seaport and Civic Center

New York County Courthouse Landmark

architect

John Kellum

location

52 Chambers St. 

date

1861-1881

style

Neo-Classicism 2

construction

limestone

type

Government Courthouse
 

 

 

 
 
 
 
 

notes

"Tweed Courthouse" is located on the north side of City Hall Park, behind City Hall, on Chambers Street.

This building was designed and built for use as the New York County Courthouse. According to the Guide to New York City Landmarks, it was New York City's second permanent government building, following the 1811 City Hall. At the time, the north end of City Hall Park was crowded with buildings, and a large almshouse was demolished to make room for this courthouse.

It took 20 years to build, from 1861 to 1881, with the Civil War and political corruption contributing to delays, and is estimated to have cost between $11 million and $12 million. Political boss William Marcy Tweed and his "Tweed Ring" used the construction of the courthouse to embezzle large sums of money. The longer construction went on, the more money they took. After the Tweed Ring was broken up, work stopped on the building from 1872 to 1876. Tweed was tried in 1873 in an unfinished courtroom in his own County Tweed EntranceCourthouse; he died in jail in 1878.

The three and one half story marble courthouse sits on a low granite curb with a rusticated marble basement. The building is composed of a central section with two projecting wings, with an addition in the center on the south facade. The entrance is marked by a pedimented portico supported by four Corinthian columns. The windows have arched and flat stone pediments. There is a massive stone cornice and an octagonal skylight at the roof, replacing a planned dome.

John Kellum was the building's primary architect. After he died in 1871, Leopold Eidlitz was hired to finish the building. Thomas Little, a member of the New York City Board of Supervisors, was given credit along with Kellum on a small box placed beneath the cornerstone, but it is believed that the major design credit belongs to Kellum.

John Kellum began his career as a house carpenter, studying architecture on his own. He formed the firm King & Kellum in 1846 with Gamaliel King, architect of Brooklyn Borough Hall. The firm designed commercial buildings, including the landmarked Cary Building at 105-107 Chambers Street, one of the earliest cast-iron-fronted buildings in New York City. Kellum started his own practice in 1860, and designed several buildings for Alexander T. Stewart, including his department store at Broadway and 10th Street, which burned down in 1956, and the plan for Garden City on Long Island.

Leopold Eidlitz, best known for his work on the New York State Capitol, was hired in 1876 to finish the courthouse. Eidlitz supervised its completion and was responsible for the south wing, which contains the spectacular medieval style stone second floor courtroom, and for part of the rotunda.

Tweed AerialThe architectural style of the Tweed Courthouse is "Anglo-Italianate," a major feature of which is its interior octagonal rotunda, which the skylight tops. The rotunda extends from the first floor to the roof. On the east and west sides of the rotunda are sets of cast iron stairs that run from the first to the third floors. The "marble" pillars on these floors are really plaster and the "wood" railings are actually cast iron. The Guide to New York City Landmarks characterizes the building as containing "some of the finest mid-19th century interiors in New York." The building has served as a background in "The Verdict," "Dressed to Kill," and "Kramer versus Kramer."

A recent two-year restoration of the Tweed Courthouse has replaced or restored splendid interior and exterior detail. Outside, marble cornices were replaced and leaf detail on the Corinthian columns was rebuilt. A new roof was designed to replicate the original, which was discovered to have been made of metal, and skylights were restored. The grand entrance stairway on the north side was rebuilt, with the addition of 17 new Vermont granite steps. The stairway had been removed during World War II in 1944, for the widening of Chambers Street.

Within the building, successful efforts were made to use original ventilation shafts in the building's walls, so that modern heating, ventilation, and air conditioning systems would intrude as little as possible. As many as 18 layers of old paint were removed from walls and cast iron, revealing both the detail in the cast iron, and the multi-colored pattern of painting on the brick walls. This and other historic painting schemes were replicated, and marble and glass-tile floors were reconstructed.

In 2002, Tweed became the new home of the Department of Education. In addition to offices, the building houses an educational and demonstration center called City Hall Academy. The Academy hosts short-term "residencies" for elementary and middle school classes, and leadership and scholarship programs for high school students. It will also serve as a center for professional development for teachers, facilitating the transfer of best practices, and an educational center for family and public programs.

NYC LandmarkThe building was designated as a New York City Landmark in 1984. It is also listed on the New York State and National Registers of Historic Places.

Special thanks to www.nyc.gov 

contact

nyc-architecture.com

links