Joel M. Pritchard Building

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Joel_M._Pritchard_Building an entity of type: Thing

The Joel M. Pritchard Building at the Washington State Capitol campus in Olympia was built in 1957–1958 to house the Washington State Library, which had outgrown its previous location in the basement of the Washington Supreme Court's Temple of Justice. The building's architect, Paul Thiry who also designed the Century 21 Exposition complex in Seattle, used Modern design incorporating the Wilkeson sandstone quarried a few tens of miles away and used in the state capitol and other buildings. It was the last monumental building added to the capitol campus and one of the few departures from the Olmsted Brothers' 1928 campus plan. It was described as "among the most important regional archetypes of mid-century architectural design and thought...a textbook on how Washingtonians looked at the fut rdf:langString
rdf:langString Joel M. Pritchard Building
rdf:langString Joel M. Pritchard Building
rdf:langString Joel M. Pritchard Building
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xsd:float -122.904899597168
xsd:integer 52839958
xsd:integer 1054618860
rdf:langString Modern or New Formal
rdf:langString Library, later office building
rdf:langString Joel M. Pritchard Building, 2020
<usDollar> 2450000.0
rdf:langString State administrative offices
rdf:langString Washington State Library building, Joel M. Pritchard Library
xsd:date 1958-11-15
rdf:langString United States
xsd:date 1957-11-05
xsd:string 47.0345 -122.9049
rdf:langString The Joel M. Pritchard Building at the Washington State Capitol campus in Olympia was built in 1957–1958 to house the Washington State Library, which had outgrown its previous location in the basement of the Washington Supreme Court's Temple of Justice. The building's architect, Paul Thiry who also designed the Century 21 Exposition complex in Seattle, used Modern design incorporating the Wilkeson sandstone quarried a few tens of miles away and used in the state capitol and other buildings. It was the last monumental building added to the capitol campus and one of the few departures from the Olmsted Brothers' 1928 campus plan. It was described as "among the most important regional archetypes of mid-century architectural design and thought...a textbook on how Washingtonians looked at the future in the 1950s". It was named for Joel M. Pritchard, a U.S. Congressman from Washington and the state's Lieutenant Governor. Thiry won the American Institute of Architects/American Library Association Library Building Award for the design, the first such award to be presented. The building was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015. After the 2001 Nisqually Earthquake, the damaged state capitol building was evacuated, and the library collection and staff were moved out; Pritchard building's main floor became the chamber of the Washington State Senate, and parts were used for other activities. As of the 2010s it was occupied by the Code Reviser and other administrative staff.
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xsd:string November 5, 1957
<usDollar> 2450000.0
rdf:langString Washington State Library building, Joel M. Pritchard Library
xsd:date 1958-11-15
xsd:double 36.576
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