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The design for Fresno City Hall creates a landmark structure for that city. The 190,000 square foot building will be the northern focus of the twelve-block Mariposa Mall. This central civic zone is the site for a large courthouse, a library, and State and Federal buildings. This solution will anchor and frame this family of institutions with a gently rising pyramidal roof which is split at its apex to allow light into the Council Chambers. A gradually lowered plaza completes the Mall. Shaded by trees and cooled by fountains, this terrace and performance space is contiguous to a cafe on the ground level and, by symmetrically arranged staircases, is accessible from the main lobby on the second floor. Fresno City Hall is organized internally around a high lobby space which offers views back down the Mall, provides a reference location for departments on the upper floors, and gathers those using the directly-accessed Council Chambers itself. The roof is cut on axis with the Mall. Built of ribbed stainless steel, green glass, and limestone paving, Fresno City Hall is intended as a civil and elegant monument for a progressive city, acting both as needed governmental office space and a forum for public events. |
| Client | City of Fresno Publics Works Department |
| Area | 190,000 square feet |
| Cost | $28 million |
| Date | 1991 |
| Associated Firm | Lew/Patnaude & Edwin S. Darden & Associates |
copyright 2000 arthur erickson