Baltimore City Circuit Courthouses

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Clarence M. Mitchell Jr., Courthouse

Building information
Location Downtown
Town Baltimore City
Country United states of America
Coordinates 39°17′27″N 76°36′47″W / 39.2907, -76.613Coordinates: 39°17′27″N 76°36′47″W / 39.2907, -76.613
Architect Wyatt and Nolting
Client Mayor and City Council of Baltimore
Construction start date 1896
Completion date 1900
Cost $2.25 million
Style Greek Rivival
Size 6 floors

The Baltimore City Circuit Courthouses are located in downtown Baltimore. Facing each other in the 100 block of North Calvert Street, the Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr, Courthouse and Courthouse East (the old Baltimore Post Office) house the 30 judges of the 8th judicial circuit for the state of Maryland. In addition to the criminal, civil and family courts, the courthouses also contain the Office of the State's Attorney for Baltimore City, the Clerk of the Court, the Baltimore City Law Library, the Sheriff's Office, the Baltimore Courthouse and Law Museum, the Pretrial Release Division of the Maryland Division of Corrections, several pretrial detention lockups, jury assembly rooms, land records, court medical offices and Masters hearing rooms.

Contents

[edit] Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr, Courthouse

In 1894, 79 local and national architectural firms responded to a design competition for the new courthouse. Of the entries, a Greek Rivival styled courthouse proposed by the Baltimore firm of Wyatt and Nolting was chosen. The cornerstone for the Baltimore Courthouse was laid in 1896 and the building was dedicated at a public ceremony on January 8, 1900.[1] Concerns over the austere nature of several courtrooms and lobby interiors gave cause for the addition of murals executed between 1902 and 1910 by international artists. A joint study of the structure was completed in 1946 by architect O.E. Adams and Henry Adams (mechanical engineer), after which it was expanded and renovated to serve modern judicial needs.[2] In 1985, Baltimore City's main courthouse, located in the midst of the downtown business district, was rededicated in honor of Baltimore's Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr.[3] A study of the original Baltimore Courthouse was presented in 1989, though substantial exterior improvements did not proceed until after 2000.[4] The study by architectural firm Richter Cornbrooks Gribble again concluded that the building should be re-used, rather than abandoned in favor of new facilities; actual renovation then proceeded at the direction of architect Kann & Associates. Despite their criticism of the earliest renovation, the architects recognized that the earlier reconfiguration "probably prevented it from being demolished altogether".[5] Further study continued into 2002, when architects Richter Cornbrooks Gribble Inc. of Baltimore and Ricci Associates of New York suggested a remodel that returned the interior formal spaces to configuration closer to the pre-1940s arrangement.[6]

[edit] Description

The courthouse occupies a full city block. Eight Ionic columns, each weighing 35 tons and measuring 31 feet in height, support the base of the roof facing Calvert Street. These columns are seven feet taller than those surrounding the United States Capitol. Granite, quarried from Woodstock, Maryland, wraps the basement level and provides a solid base for the white marble-six story courthouse facade.

[edit] Courthouse East (old Baltimore Post Office)

Courthouse East, Baltimore, Maryland
Courthouse East, Baltimore, Maryland

Renovation of the Baltimore Courthouse East was complete by 1990. Hord Coplan Macht Inc. was the architect and interior designer for the adaptive reuse of the old Baltimore Post Office; the restoration contractor was Lake Falls Construction Inc.[7]


[edit] References

  1. ^ (1989) Master Plan for the Restoration and Renovation of the Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. Courthouse. Baltimore, Maryland: Richter Cornbrooks Gribble, Inc.. 
  2. ^ Courthouse Plan Mapped, Renovation Program Recommended To Mayor, Baltimore (Morning) Sun, Wednesday, November 6, 1946
  3. ^ Baltimore African American Heritage Guide. Baltimore Area Convention and Visitors Association. Retrieved on 2008-05-07.
  4. ^ Shabby courthouse robs law of dignity; A slum: Baltimore's circuit courthouses need major repair, deep cleaning and renovation.; The Sun. Baltimore, Md.: Mar 13, 2000. pg. 8.A
  5. ^ 'Temple of justice' fraying Mitchell Courthouse deserves a better fate than deterioration.; ARCHITECTURE; Edward Gunts. The Sun. Baltimore, Md.: Oct 1, 2000. pg. 6.E
  6. ^ Court building obsolete, city told ; New criminal courthouse, renovations would cost $293 million, report says; Edward Gunts. The Sun. Baltimore, Md.: Dec 9, 2002. pg. 1.A
  7. ^ Martin Azola named `Remodeler of the Year' (other awards included); Edward Gunts. The Sun. Baltimore, Md.: Dec 2, 1990. pg. 1.K