New
York State Supreme Courthouse
60 Centre Street
New York, NY 10007
Date Built: 1919-1925
Architect: Guy Lowell
The Supreme Courthouse (New York County Court)
overlooks Foley Square and is located between Worth and Pearl Streets. The
building houses the Supreme Court and the Office of the County Clerk.
"In 1927 the New York
County Court moved from the old Tweed Courthouse to this spacious granite-faced
building. The Boston architect Guy Lowell won a competition in 1913
with a design for a round building. Construction was delayed and the
design altered to a hexagonal form; work finally began in 1919. The
Roman classical style chosen was popular for courthouse architecture
in the first decades of the 20th century."*
The courthouse was the first
major New York commission for the well-known Boston architect Guy Lowell
(1870-1927). He designed the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the building
plan for Philips Academy at Andover, Massachusetts. He was also a landscape
architect and designed formal gardens for Andrew Carnegie and J. Pierpont
Morgan in New York.
The courthouse rises above a
100-foot wide flight of steps to an imposing colonnade of 10 granite fluted
Corinthian columns. Above the columns are engraved words attributed to George
Washington: "The true administration of justice is the firmest
pillar of good government."
Above this is a triangular
pediment, 140-feet long, with 14 classical figures in high relief. Along
the huge roofline are three statues representing Law, Truth and Equity.
All of the pediment sculpture was carved by Frederick Warren Allen.
"The monumental character
of the exterior continues on the interior, with its central rotunda
and radial corridors. In the 1930s, under the sponsorship of the federal
government's artists' relief programs, Attilio Pusterla painted a series
of murals on the vestibule ceiling and on the rotunda dome."*
The New York
State Supreme Court building was designated a City Landmark in
1966.
Photos
by: Ralph Selitzer, DCAS
* Taken directly from "Guide
to NYC Landmarks"
Return to the Public Buildings Home
page