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Cincinnati City Hall

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Location
  
Cincinnati, Ohio

Area
  
8,094 m²

Added to NRHP
  
11 December 1972

NRHP Reference #
  
72001017

Phone
  
+1 513-591-6000

Architect
  
Samuel Hannaford

Cincinnati City Hall

Address
  
801 Plum St, Cincinnati, OH 45202, USA

Hours
  
Closed today SaturdayClosedSundayClosedMonday8AM–5PMTuesday8AM–5PMWednesday8AM–5PMThursday8AM–5PMFriday8AM–5PM

Architectural styles
  
Romanesque architecture, Richardsonian Romanesque

Similar
  
Samuel Hannaford House, Brittany Apartment Building, Saxony Apartment Building, Balch House, Lombardy Apartment Building

Protest at cincinnati city hall


Cincinnati City Hall is a registered historic building in Cincinnati, Ohio, listed in the National Register on December 11, 1972.

Contents

The main building comprises four and a half stories with a nine story clock tower. An optical trick known as forced perspective makes the building appear even larger than it actually is. As it becomes taller, its windows get smaller.

The building was constructed by the David Hummel company of Cincinnati using stone quarried in Wisconsin, Ohio, Missouri, and Indiana. Marble stairways and wainscoting originated in Italy and Tennessee, while granite columns were obtained from Vermont. Stained glass windows were installed which depict Cincinnatus and illustrate Cincinnati's early history. A granite statue of Jesus was contributed by the Archdiocese of Cincinnati in 1864 and displayed in the alcove on the south side of the building until 2003.

The first city hall was built on this site in 1852 and was demolished in 1888 to make way for the current structure. Construction costs for the building totaled $1,610,000 of which $54,000 was paid to Samuel Hannaford as architect and construction superintendent.

"Cincinnati's City Hall represents the prevailing architectural tastes at the time of its construction and the influence of H. H. Richardson on its designer, Samuel Hannaford. Richardson's winning design for the Cincinnati Chamber of Commerce building was executed in the 1880's; however, the building's demolition in 1911 left City Hall the best remaining example of Richardson Romanesque in Cincinnati. Samuel Hannaford practiced from 1858 until 1897 and made a significant contribution to the architectural heritage of the Cincinnati area."

The building bears a striking resemblance to the city hall buildings in Minneapolis, Toronto, and Wellesley, Massachusetts, as well as the Greene County Courthouse in Xenia, Ohio.

Margaret cho no prop 8 cincinnati city hall


References

Cincinnati City Hall Wikipedia