Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Edmonton City Hall

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Type
  
City hall

Location
  
Edmonton, Alberta

Opened
  
August 28, 1992

Province
  
Alberta

Architectural style
  
Postmodern

Construction started
  
June 1990

Phone
  
+1 780-442-5311

Architect
  
Gene Dub

Edmonton City Hall

Cost
  
C$48.9 million ($73.8 million in 2016 dollars)

Address
  
1 Sir Winston Churchill Square, Edmonton, AB T5J 2R7, Canada

Hours
  
Open today · 9AM–5PMSaturday9AM–5PMSunday11AM–5PMMonday7AM–10PMTuesday7AM–10PMWednesday7AM–10PMThursday7AM–10PMFriday7AM–10PM

Similar
  
Art Gallery of Alberta, Alberta Legislature Building, Francis Winspear Centre for, Citadel Theatre, Fort Edmonton Park

Profiles

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Edmonton's City Hall is the home of the municipal government of Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. Designed by Dub Architects, the building was completed in 1992. It was built to replace the former city hall after it had become outdated and expensive to operate.

Contents

The Edmonton Transit System Customer Services centre relocated to City Hall in February 2013.

Shooting news in the old days at edmonton city hall part 1


Design

The building features two steel and glass pyramids, one 43 metres high (ground to peak), on top of a three-storey concrete structure. One pyramid provides natural light for the main atrium, the other for the council chambers. The building also features a 200-foot clock Friendship Tower topped with a 23 carillon bells. Located on the eastern edge of the financial district in Edmonton's downtown, the building is the main feature on Sir Winston Churchill Square. In the winter, the fountain is converted to a skating rink.

The design for the city hall met with some controversy when it was first announced. The original design called for the building to be topped with four cones. The cones were meant to pay tribute to the tipis that the First Nations once lived in on the site. The design met with negative feedback from the public as they felt it looked like dunce caps and nuclear reactors. Dub Architects then revised their design to replace the cones with the pyramids, with the pyramids designed to be evocative of the Rocky Mountains. The design was received much more warmly by the public, and was dubbed "Pyramid Power" by the press.

References

Edmonton City Hall Wikipedia


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