Showing posts with label New York County Supreme Court. Show all posts
Showing posts with label New York County Supreme Court. Show all posts

Sunday, August 14, 2011

Summer Streets 2011 At Foley Square: Play > Run > Walk > Bike




Sponsored by the New York Department of Transportation and its partners, Summer Streets is an annual program which temporarily closes Park Avenue and connecting streets from the Brooklyn Bridge to Central Park to motor vehicles and open it up to people on three consecutive Saturdays in August (August 6, 13, & 20).

The Foley Square Rest Stop, at Duane and Centre Streets, feature sand boxes for everyone to enjoy and live sand sculpting by Matt Long of Sand Masters. Sand sculpting workshops take place each day at 9 am, 10:30 am and noon. The Rest Stop also hosts Learn to Ride bicycle classes from Bike New York, a self-portrait booth hosted by DOT's Urban Art program, free bike valet parking and a water station. These images were taken yesterday at Foley Square.

Monday, January 28, 2008

NEW YORK COUNTY SUPREME COURT BUILDING


On my way to the courthouse to serve jury duty last Jan 24, I took photos of the main building of the New York County Supreme Court at 60 Centre Street across from Foley Square. The supreme court is located in several buildings in Manhattan: the main New York County Courthouse building at 60 Centre Street (photos above), and three others at 80 Centre Street (across Worth Street), 111 Centre Street, and 71 Thomas Street. The criminal branch is at 100 Centre Street, shared with the Manhattan Criminal Court, the Office of the District Attorney and other agencies, and at 111 Centre Street, shared with the New York County Civil Court. The Supreme Court in Kings County and in Richmond County are similarly housed in their respective counties. In Richmond County several "Parts" of the Supreme Court are located in the former U.S. Navy Home Port (each Part is usually where one Supreme Court judge sits).
The building houses the Supreme Court and the Office of the County Clerk. It was designed by the well-known Boston architect Guy Lowell who won a competition in 1913 with a design for a round building. The design was altered to a hexagonal form. The Roman classical style chosen was popular for courthouse architecture in the first decades of the 20th century. Lowell also designed the Boston Museum of Fine Arts and the building plan for Philips Academy at Andover, Massachusetts. He was also a landscape architect and designed formal gardens for Andrew Carnegie and J. Pierpont Morgan in New York. The courthouse rises above a 100-foot wide flight of steps to an imposing colonnade of 10 granite fluted Corinthian columns. Above the columns are engraved words of George Washington: "The true administration of justice is the firmest pillar of good government." Above this is a triangular pediment, 140-feet long, with 14 classical figures in high relief. Along the huge roofline are three statues representing Law, Truth and Equity. All of the pediment sculpture was carved by Frederick Warren Allen.