Arizona State Capitol

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by 63.224.135.113 (talk) at 15:52, 15 June 2008 (→‎History: wikilink to where there is info to explain what the 5 C's are). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

The Arizona State Capitol building in Phoenix, Arizona, formerly housed the Territorial and State Legislatures, as well as various executive offices. These have relocated to adjacent buildings, and the Capitol is now maintained as a museum.

History

View of the original capitol building

The building was created as part of an effort to demonstrate that the Arizona Territory was ready for statehood. A design contest was won by James Riely Gordon, whose design was based on a failed proposal for the Mississippi State Capitol. The original design called for the capitol to be much larger, incorporating a grand entrance staircase, more prominent rotunda, and large wings for both houses of the legislature on either side of the current building. Funding shortfalls meant the project had to be scaled down. The staircase was eliminated (which is why, to this day, a second floor balcony, and not an entrance, exists where the building's pillars originate and the "main" doors are located), along with the large wings and more prominent rotunda. Also as a result of the funding shortfall, several of the "five C's" of Arizona, present in the official state seal, are notoriously missing from the depiction of the seal on the main floor.

The Capitol broke ground in 1898, and opened in 1901. In 1918 and 1938, additions were added on the west side of the building, which followed the same architecture and brought the total square footage from the original 40,000 to a final 123,000 It was home to the Legislature until 1960, when the current house and senate buildings were constructed, and the Governor's Office until 1974, when the executive tower was built. After a restoration, the building became a museum in 1981.

Architecture

View from the east at sunset. (2007)

The building is made largely from materials indigenous to Arizona, including malapai, granite, and the copper dome. The design is optimized for the desert climate of Arizona, with thick masonry walls that insulate the interior, skylights, and round "bullseye" clerestory windows to let heat out of the legislative chambers. The building is topped with a windvane similar to the Winged Victory of Samothrace, visible through a skylight from within the rotunda.

Capitol Mall Renovation Proposal

As Arizona's population has rapidly grown, the capitol complex itself has been growing increasingly crowded. The senate and house buildings, built in the late 1950's, have been physically deteriorating. The senate in particular is prone to constant plumbing problems, and occasionally a broken pipe floods the entire building. The capitol itself is now utilized almost exclusively as a museum, and has little practical function. In addition, many complaints have arisen that the current site is not aesthetically pleasing, and compare the senate and house buildings as oversized "bunkers" which eclipse the beauty of the capitol. A task force appointed by the state legislature in 2008 reported that the complex is "barely" inadequate to suit the state's current needs and "wholly" inadequate to suit the state's future needs. [1] As a result, calls are now appearing to renovate or rebuild the capitol site, to a grander site more befitting of the current size, heritage, and culture of Arizona, as well as a site that will more adequately serve the needs of the government.

Recent proposals call for moving some office and meeting space back into the capitol building, while it maintains at least some function as a museum. The house and senate buildings have been recommended to undergo either a drastic rebuild and expansion, or a complete demolition and construction of new facilities for the house and senate. A recent Arizona State University study called for and planned a comprehensive redesign for the entire capitol mall and complex.[2]

References

External links

Template:Geolinks-US-streetscale