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Central
Courts Building
120 Schermerhorn Street
Brooklyn, NY 11201
Date Built: 1929
Architect: Collins and Collins
The Brooklyn Central
Courts Building is located between Schermerhorn, Smith and State Streets
in Brooklyn. It currently houses the Criminal and Supreme Courts, and
various City offices.
The Central Courts Building was designed by the architectural firm of
Collins and Collins. It was constructed between 1929 and 1932 at a cost
of $4 million. In 1982, new thermally efficient windows were installed
at a cost of $1,800,000.
This ten-story Renaissance Revival style building is a steel-framed structure
with limestone clad upper walls on a granite base. The front facade has
three, three-story arched entrances set in a four-story rusticated base.
A balustrade separates this element of the facade from the arched upper
floor windows which in turn are separated by Corinthian columns forming
a colonnade.
On the inside,
the two-story lobby has a coffered ceiling. There are bronze railings
and bronze elevator doors in the marble space. The now altered courtrooms
are paneled in wood, with decorative plaster ceilings and ornamental ironwork.
Located in the Civic Center, this august
classical style courthouse significantly adds to its cohesion. It
reflects, along with McKim, Mead & White's building at 110 Livingston
Street, the last 1920s wave of Renaissance Revival style buildings in the
area.
Photo by: Ralph
Selitzer, DCAS
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