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词条 Arizona State Capitol
释义

  1. Arizona Capitol Museum

  2. History

  3. Architecture

  4. Capitol Mall renovation proposal

  5. Arizona State Capitol Museum gallery

  6. See also

  7. References

  8. External links

{{update|date=March 2018}}{{refimprove|date=March 2018}}{{Infobox NRHP
| name = Arizona State Capitol Building
| nrhp_type =
| image = Arizona Capitol Museum 2014.jpg
| caption = Front view of the original capitol building (2014)
| location= 1700 W. Washington St., Phoenix, Arizona
| coordinates = {{coord|33|26|53|N|112|5|47|W|display=inline,title}}
| locmapin = Arizona#USA
| built = 1900
| architect = James Riely Gordon
| architecture = Classical Revival
| added = October 29, 1974
| area = {{convert|2|acre}}
| governing_body = State of Arizona
| refnum = 74000455
}}

The Arizona State Capitol in Phoenix, Arizona, United States, was the last home for Arizona's Territorial government, until Arizona became a state in 1912. Initially, all three branches of the new state government occupied the four floors of the statehouse. As the state expanded the branches relocated to adjacent buildings and additions. The 1901 portion of the Capitol is now maintained as the Arizona Capitol Museum with a focus on the history and culture of Arizona. The Arizona State Library which occupied most of the 1938 addition until July 2017 re-opened in late 2018 as a part of the Arizona Capitol Museum.[1]

Arizona Capitol Museum

Museum exhibits, events, and programs focus on the evolution of Arizona from Territory to State. The Arizona Takes Shape exhibit provides school-age visitors curriculum-related information for Arizona State History and government studies. The museum has over 20 exhibits featuring contemporary, historical and artifacts from the Arizona state-owned collections. Permanent exhibits include the sinking of USS Arizona, the formal silver service from USS Arizona, a timeline of events pivotal in making Arizona a state, the Governor and Secretary of State's original offices, the historical senate, and house.

Visitors can enter the Historic House Chamber where the people can sit at the desks. There is also a room dedicated to the 140 changes in the Arizona Constitution over 100 years of statehood. The Governor's office on the second includes artifacts from several of Arizona's governors as well as a flag used by Teddy Roosevelt's Rough Riders.

One impressive display shows the enormous silver and copper punchbowl service from {{USS|Arizona|BB-39|6}}, as well as a bronze sculpture that was ensconced outside the Admiral's stateroom and used as a centerpiece at state dinners wherever USS Arizona was docked. Both of these historical artifacts survived the sinking of Arizona because they had been removed from the ship for cleaning prior to the attack on Pearl Harbor. The punchbowl service is the only one of its kind and is composed of etched copper panels depicting desert scenes set into a silver bowl ornamented with mermaids, dolphins, waves, and other nautical themes.

Of particular interest is the display of a collection of gifts received by Arizona as part of the "Merci Train" sent by France to the United States following World War II. The French wanted to thank America for sending 250 railroad cars full of fuel, oil, and food in 1948 during a time that the European countries were devastated by World War II. Tens of thousands of French citizens donated objects to be sent to the United States and it was decided that because the outpouring of goods was so great, one boxcar would be sent to each state with one being shared between the District of Columbia and the Territory of Hawaii. All of the items were to be loaded in "Forty and Eight"-type boxcars, named after the sign painted on them which stated that 40 men or 8 horses could be loaded inside. Each car was to be adorned with the coats of arms of all of the provinces of France. The capitol building displays work by the noted Arizona artist Lon Megargee.

The museum is launching a rental program for private rental. For the first time in history, this historic building will be the backdrop for receptions, business dinners, and weddings.

History

The building was created as part of an effort to demonstrate that the Arizona Territory was ready for statehood.[2] A design contest was won by James Riely Gordon, whose original plan called for the Capitol to be much larger, with a more prominent rotunda and large wings for both houses of the legislature on each side of the current building.[2] Funding deficits meant the project had to be reduced, so the legislative wings were discarded from the plan and a small lead-alloy top substituted for Gordon's decorative dome.[2]

Construction of the Capitol began in 1898, and it began operation in 1901. In 1918 and 1938, expansions were added on the west side of the building, which had the same architecture and increased the total square footage from the original 40,000 to a final 123,000. It was home to the Legislature until 1960, when the current house and senate buildings were constructed, and the Governor's Office until 1974, when the executive tower was built. The state at that time had a plan of converting the original Capitol into a museum dedicated to Arizona's history. The original opening of the Arizona Capitol Museum was announced by Governor Bruce Babbitt at his inauguration in 1978 and hosted over 40,000 schoolchildren in that first year in 1979. After a restoration, the building was re-opened as a museum in 1981. In the 1990s, more than $3 million was spent to renovate the Capitol and rooms were restored to their original design. Again, due to budget deficits, construction was stopped on a few rooms on the third floor and they remain incomplete. The Capitol is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.

On January 14, 2010, the Arizona State Department of Administration reported that it had sold the surrounding state buildings to private investors: the tower, the two flanking legislative buildings, and other state structures. The Old Capitol was not part of this transaction.[3][4]

Architecture

The building is made largely from materials indigenous to Arizona, including malapai, granite, and the copper dome. The design is optimized for the desert climate of Arizona, with thick masonry walls that insulate the interior, skylights, and round "bullseye" clerestory windows to let heat out of the legislative chambers. The building is topped with a weather vane similar to the Winged Victory of Samothrace, visible through a skylight from within the rotunda.

Capitol Mall renovation proposal

As Arizona's population has grown, the Capitol complex itself has become increasingly crowded. The Senate and House buildings, opened in 1960, have been deteriorating. The Senate, in particular, is prone to constant plumbing problems, and occasionally a broken pipe floods the entire building. The Capitol itself is now used exclusively as a museum, and serves over 70,000 visitors each year, including more than 50,000 school children. In the past complaints had been made that the site was not pleasing aesthetically, and compare the Senate and House buildings as oversized "bunkers" which eclipse the beauty of the Capitol. A task force appointed by the state legislature in 2007 reported that the complex is "barely" adequate to suit the state's current needs and "wholly" inadequate to suit the state's future needs.[5] As a result, proposals were made in 2008 to renovate or rebuild the Capitol site, to a grander site, as well as a site that will serve the needs of the government more adequately. To date, keeping the integrity of the 1901 building in original condition, including the "cramped" spaces occupied by some of the Senate and the House staff have been the main focus for the Capitol Museum administrator and staff. The building's original usage is part of the state history.

Proposals for relocating some office and meeting space back into the Capitol included the House and Senate buildings undergo either a drastic rebuilding and expansion or a complete demolition and construction of new facilities for the House and Senate. A past Arizona State University study planned a comprehensive redesign for the entire Capitol mall and complex.[6]{{dead link|date=March 2018}}

Arizona State Capitol Museum gallery

{{Gallery
|title=Arizona State Capitol Museum
|width=180px
|height=200px
|align=center
|lines=4
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-3.JPG|Another view of the Arizona State Capitol was built in 1901 which is now the Arizona State Capital Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-Rotunda.JPG|The rotunda floor of the Arizona State Capitol Building.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-Piece of the USS Arizona hull.JPG|A piece of USS Arizona{{'}}s superstructure which was salvaged and which is on display at the Arizona State Capitol Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-US Arizona Flag.JPG|The U.S. flag that flew on the battleship USS Arizona when it sank during the Pearl Harbor. The flag is on display in the first floor of the Arizona State Capitol Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-USS Arizona Silverware-2.JPG| The Arizona Capitol Museum is home to the silver service (silverware) that was donated to USS Arizona by the citizens of Arizona in 1919. This service is composed of 59 distinct pieces on display at the Capitol Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-USS Arizona Silverware-1.JPG| Additional silver service (silverware) that was donated to USS Arizona by the citizens of Arizona in 1919. on display at the Arizona Capitol Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-Model of USS Arizona.JPG|Model of USS Arizona at the Arizona State Capitol Museum.
|File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-House Chamber.JPG|Inside the historic House Chamber. The Chamber is located on the third floor of the Arizona State Capitol Museum.
|19=File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-Senate.JPG|20=On the 4th floor of the Arizona State Capitol Museum you can look down into the original House Chamber from the gallery.|21=File:Phoenix-Arizona State Capital-1901-House of Representatives.JPG|22=On the 4th floor of the Arizona State Capitol Museum you can look down into the original House of Representatives from the gallery.}}

See also

  • USS Arizona salvaged artifacts
  • List of state and territorial capitols in the United States

References

{{commons category|Arizona State Capitol}}
1. ^{{Cite web|url=https://www.azlibrary.gov/azcm|title=Arizona Secretary of State's Website|last=|first=|date=|website=|access-date=}}
2. ^{{Cite journal |last1=Silverstein |first1=Ken |authorlink=Ken Silverstein |date=July 2010 |title=Tea Party in the Sonora |journal=Harper's |publisher=Harper's Magazine Foundation |volume=321 |issue=1,922 |pages=35–42 |url= |accessdate= |quote= }}
3. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.azcentral.com/arizonarepublic/local/articles/2010/06/11/20100611building0611.html|title=State-building sales net $300 mil for Arizona budget|website=www.azcentral.com|accessdate=27 August 2018}}
4. ^{{Cite web |url=http://www.azdoa.gov/news/011410release.pdf |title=Archived copy |access-date=2010-10-28 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20101025225047/http://azdoa.gov/news/011410release.pdf |archive-date=2010-10-25 |dead-url=yes |df= }}
5. ^{{cite web|url=http://www.azcentral.com/specials/special12/articles/0121newcapitol.html#comments|title=Group wants new home for Arizona Legislature|website=www.azcentral.com|accessdate=27 August 2018|archive-url=https://www.webcitation.org/6GJOuFEAc?url=http://www.azcentral.com/specials/special12/articles/0121newcapitol.html#comments|archive-date=2013-05-02|dead-url=yes|df=}}
6. ^Arizona Capitol Mall District Revitalization Plan {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20090506043310/http://design.asu.edu/azcapitalmall/ |date=May 6, 2009 }}

External links

  • {{HABS |survey=AZ-112 |id=az0207 |title=Arizona State Capitol Building, 1700 West Washington Street, Phoenix, Maricopa County, AZ |photos=4 |color= |dwgs= |data= |cap=1}}
  • [https://web.archive.org/web/20170314152244/http://www.bohonus.com/hosted/azcm/ Virtual Tour of the Capitol Museum and Grounds]
{{s-start}}{{succession box
|before=unknown
|title=Tallest building in Phoenix
|years=1900-1924
28m
|after=Luhrs Building
}}{{s-end}}{{Arizona}}{{US State Capitols}}{{NRHP in Arizona by county}}{{Phoenix, Arizona}}

14 : State capitols in the United States|Buildings and structures in Phoenix, Arizona|Government buildings with domes|Government buildings in Arizona|History museums in Arizona|Museums in Phoenix, Arizona|1900s in Arizona Territory|Government buildings completed in 1900|Government buildings on the National Register of Historic Places in Arizona|National Register of Historic Places in Phoenix, Arizona|Historic American Buildings Survey in Arizona|Tourist attractions in Phoenix, Arizona|James Riely Gordon buildings|Neoclassical architecture in Arizona

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