Louis J. Lefkowitz State Office
Building
80 Centre
Street
(141 Worth
Street)
New York, NY
10013
Date Built:
1928-1930
Architect: William Haugaard
The Lefkowitz Building is adjacent to
Foley Square and is bounded by Worth, Centre, Leonard and Baxter
Streets. It houses offices of the Manhattan District Attorney
and various court offices.
The block-long building has
nearly 700,000 square feet of office space
in its nine
stories, plus
penthouse and basement levels. It is constructed of
Maine Coast granite. The Centre Street lobby is decorated
in an elaborate Art Deco Egyptian design.
The building opened in 1930 as a central home for state
government offices in Lower Manhattan. In 1984, it was renamed to honor
Louis J. Lefkowitz, New York State’s longest-serving Attorney General. The
building was transferred to City management in 2002.
The Office of the City Clerk and its Manhattan Marriage
Bureau moved to the building in 2009 from the Manhattan Municipal
Building. The Clerk’s Office is reached through a separate entrance at 141
Worth Street.
William Haugaard, state architect, designed 80 Centre Street
under a height restriction so that it would not overshadow the nearby
courthouses and symmetry of Foley Square. It was constructed by Cauldwell
Vingate Company at a cost of $6 million.
The new building was greeted with great fanfare at a
groundbreaking ceremony on December 17, 1928. The band played
“Sidewalks of New York” as Governor Alfred E. Smith laid the cornerstone
containing a time capsule with records, newspapers and photographs of that
day.
Photo by: Ralph Selitzer, DCAS
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