Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex | |
Nrhp Type: | NHLD |
Nocat: | yes |
Coordinates: | 40.265°N -76.8822°W |
Architect: | Brunner, Arnold |
Added: | September 14, 1977 |
Designated Nrhp Type: | September 20, 2006 |
Increase: | February 27, 2013 |
Increase Refnum: | 13000287 |
Area: | 48acres |
Refnum: | 77001162 |
The Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex is a large complex of state government buildings in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania. Set on more than 50acres of downtown Harrisburg, it includes the Pennsylvania State Capitol and a landscaped park environment with monuments, memorials, and other government buildings. It is bounded on the north by Forster Street, the east by North 7th Street, the south by Walnut Street, and the west by North 3rd Street. Most of this area (bounded on the north by North Street) is a National Historic Landmark District, recognized in 2013 as a fully realized example of the City Beautiful movement landscape and planning design of Arnold Brunner.[1]
The Pennsylvania State Capitol Complex is located in central downtown Harrisburg, four blocks east of the Susquehanna River. Its centerpiece is the Pennsylvania State Capitol, constructed in 1902 - 1906 to a design by Joseph Miller Huston. The capitol is a nationally recognized example of Beaux Arts architecture, and is known for its interior opulence and artwork. On the east side of the capitol is the East Wing, a 1987 extension that greatly expands the building's capacity without detracting from the surrounding landscape. Flanking the East Wing to the north and south are the North and South Office Buildings, begun in 1927 and 1919 respectively; they are similarly scaled and both built of Indiana limestone in the Classical Revival style, but have slightly different styling. South of the Capitol is the Ryan Office Building, the oldest building (completed 1894) of the complex. Between the two buildings a semicircular walkway provides access to them as well as the East Wing entrance to the Capitol, with a fountain in the center.[1]
Across Commonwealth Avenue east of the North and South Office Buildings, a pair of buildings extend the line of the North and South Buildings, with the Soldiers' and Sailors' Memorial Grove, a park setting with many memorials and monuments in between. On the south side of the grove is the Forum, and the Finance Building is to the north. Both continue the use of Indiana limestone and Classical Revival styling. The easternmost portion of the complex is the Soldiers' and Sailor's Bridge, which connects the complex to neighborhoods across the railroad tracks that run east of North 7th Street.[1]
The complex has been extended across North Street to include the Modernist State Museum of Pennsylvania building and the adjacent Department of Transportation building.
The complex and greater area is protected full-time by the Pennsylvania Capitol Police—its dedicated law enforcement agency—as well as the Harrisburg Bureau of Police, which patrols the entire city.
A Gathering at the Crossroads is a monument on the southern end of the complex near the corner of North Fourth Street and Walnut Street. It commemorates the 100 and 150-year anniversaries of the passing of the Fifteenth Amendment and Nineteenth Amendment.[2]
Building | Image | Address | Height | Floors | Built | Notes | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
501 North 3rd Street | 5 | 1906 | Contains the House of Representatives, Senate, offices for the governor and lieutenant governor, and the Supreme Court's Harrisburg chamber | ||||
Rachel Carson State Office Building | 400 Market Street | 230feet | 17 | 1990 | Named for environmentalist Rachel Carson. Contains the Departments of Conservation and Natural Resources and Environmental Protection | ||
Labor and Industry Building | 651 Boas Street | 18 | 1955 | Contains the Department of Labor and Industry. | |||
Governor's Residence | 2035 North Front Street | 2 | 1968 | Official residence of the governor of Pennsylvania | |||
Health and Welfare Building | 625 Forster Street | 11 | 1955 | Contains the Departments of Health and Public Welfare | |||
Matthew Ryan Legislative Office Building | Southwardly adjacent to the Capitol Building | unknown | 2 | 1893 | Named for former Speaker of the Pennsylvania House Matthew J. Ryan. Contains offices for members of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives. | ||
Commonwealth Keystone Building | 400 North Street | unknown | 10 | 2001 | Houses offices of the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation and other state agencies. Replaced the 13-story Transportation and Safety Building which was built in 1963 and demolished in 1998 after being heavily damaged in a fire in 1994. | ||
K. Leroy Irvis Office Building | 450 Commonwealth Avenue | unknown | 7 | 1921 | Named for former Speaker of the Pennsylvania House K. Leroy Irvis | ||
North Office Building | 401 North Street | unknown | 7 | 1928 | |||
Northwest Office Building | Capital and Forster Streets | unknown | 7 | 1939 | Contains the Pennsylvania Liquor Control Board. | ||
Forum Building | 607 South Drive | unknown | 6 | 1931 | Contains the State Library | ||
Finance Building | 613 North Street | unknown | 5 | 1939 | Contains the Pennsylvania Department of Finance. | ||
Pennsylvania Judicial Center | 601 Commonwealth Avenue | unknown | 9 | 2010 | Contains the Pennsylvania Commonwealth Court. | ||
Pennsylvania State Archives | 350 North Street | unknown | 20 | 1964 | |||
North 3rd and North Streets | unknown | 5 | 1964 | ||||
Strawberry Square | 303 Walnut Street | 16 | 1980 | Houses the offices of the State Civil Service Commission as well as the State Department of Revenue | |||
Forum Place | 555 Walnut Street | unknown | 9 | 1996 | Houses Office of Budget and Social Security | ||
333 Market Street Tower | 333 Market Street | 22 | 1978 | Houses the Pennsylvania Department of Education. Tallest Building in Harrisburg and the tallest building in Pennsylvania outside of Pittsburgh and Philadelphia |
Harrisburg's Capitol Hill has been the seat of Pennsylvania state government since 1822, when its first capitol building was dedicated. That structure, much altered over the 19th century. In 1893 work began on what is now the Ryan Office Building. The first capitol burned down in 1897, and its replacement was abandoned in an unfinished state in 1899 after negative public and legislative response to its exterior. The present capitol was begun in 1902 and completed in 1906.[1]
In the 1910s the state recognized the need for additional space, and acquired the area then known as the Eighth Ward, between Commonwealth Avenue and North 7th Street. Arnold Brunner was selected to develop a master landscaping and design plan for this space, which he did using then-fashionable City Beautiful principles. Although only small portions of his vision were realized in his lifetime (he died in 1925), the resulting landscape is very much in keeping with his original plans. The principal deviation is the area now occupied by the East Wing. Brunner had planned this as a "People's Forecourt", an open space whose landscaping would tie the Capitol and the North and South Buildings together visually. In execution, the area became a parking lot serving the capitol until the East Wing was built, providing a different and more modern type of visual unity.[1]
The Capitol building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1977, and was designated a National Historic Landmark in 2006. The latter designation was expanded to include the entire area of the complex south of North Street in 2013.[1]