Howland Cultural Center

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Howland Cultural Center
U.S. National Register of Historic Places
The building in 2007, during exterior renovations
The building in 2007, during exterior renovations
Location: Beacon, NY
Coordinates: 41°30′07″N 73°57′57″W / 41.50194, -73.96583Coordinates: 41°30′07″N 73°57′57″W / 41.50194, -73.96583
Built/Founded: 1872
Architect: Richard Morris Hunt
Added to NRHP: 1973
NRHP Reference#: 73001180
Governing body: Howland Cultural Center

The Howland Cultural Center is the former public library building of Beacon, New York, USA. It is located on Main Street (NY 52 Business) in the city's downtown section, near Fishkill Creek.

It was built in 1872 by Richard Morris Hunt, brother-in-law of Joseph Howland, a Beacon resident who had served as a Union Army officer in the Civil War and, afterwards, as New York State Treasurer. He was one of a committee of ten local benefactors who had joined to establish a library for their city, and commissioned Hunt for the job. It was one of the architect's earliest works[1]; he would later design the base of the Statue of Liberty and the Metropolitan Museum of Art.[2]

Hunt's building uses Norwegian architectural elements. The roof features six gables and is tiled in Delaware slate; the walls are red Croton brick interlaid with lighter Jersey brick. The foundation is made of bluestone and granite quarried at nearby Breakneck Ridge.[1]

The interior of the building boasts a 34-foot (10 m) ceiling supported by handwrought Georgia pine pillars, with a balcony on the second story. Floors are of English cane felt overlaid with hemlock, to dampen sound, and topped with strips of Georgia pine.[1]

When the library opened, its 2,200-volume collection was available only to subscribers. Later it became open to all, but by 1976 more space was needed so the library moved down Main to a newer building. The current building is now in the hands of a private non-profit organization, the Howland Cultural Center, which presents art exhibitions and other cultural activities.

In 2007, the center announced that it would be installing geothermal heating to cut its energy costs and reduce the use of fossil fuels. A system using water in vertical pipes to be dug 250 feet (76 m) into the earth beneath the center will both heat and cool the building.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ a b c About This Building. Retrieved on 2007-09-11.
  2. ^ Richard Morris Hunt. Retrieved on 2007-09-13.
  3. ^ Howland Going GREEN. Retrieved on 2007-09-13.

[edit] External links