General Information
Project Type
Function / usage: |
City or town hall |
---|---|
Material: |
Masonry structure |
Architectural style: |
Neo-Romanesque |
Awards and Distinctions
1980 |
for registered users |
---|
Location
Location: |
Alameda, Alameda County, California, USA |
---|---|
Address: | 2263 Santa Clara Avenue |
Coordinates: | 37° 45' 59.40" N 122° 14' 36.66" W |
Technical Information
There currently is no technical data available.
Significance
The Alameda City Hall is the major civic landmark remaining from the city's initial period of economic prosperity created by the expansion of the railroad network in the closing decades of the 19th century. Constructed a little over twenty years after the City received its charter in 1872, the building summed up the civic aspirations of the Alameda citizenry. Because the City of Alameda was the first in California and the second in the United States to operate its own power plant, opened in 1886, the City Hall had the benefit of incandescent lighting, a significant luxury. Monumentally conceived by George Percy of the firm Percy and Hamilton, the design reflects the current fashion for the Romanesque Revival Style initiated in this country by Henry Hobson Richardson and used in his famous Allegheny County Courthouse design of 1884-1890. The Alameda City Hall modestly echoes that building in its general format. The firm of Percy & Hamilton designed about 200 buildings in the San Francisco Bay Area including the notable Stanford University Art Museum and the Children's Playhouse in Golden Gate Park.
Historic American Building Survey (HABS CA-415)
Participants
Relevant Web Sites
- About this
data sheet - Structure-ID
20048888 - Published on:
30/10/2009 - Last updated on:
19/05/2020