Philadelphia's City Hall is the largest, tallest and most expensive of all city halls in the United States.

William
Penn's 1683 plan for Philadelphia set Center Square,
the largest of five rectangular squares, aside for public
buildings.
Until the 19th century Center Square was
far from central as most of the population lived near
the Delaware river, close to the
Independence
Hall.
As the population started to move westward
and the need for a larger city hall became imminent,
a move to Center Square was approved in 1870. By then
Center Square had been renamed Penn Square in honor
of the city's founder, William Penn.
Construction of the building started
the following year after a design by John McArthur,
Jr. in the then very popular Second Empire style. The
ambitious project was to result in the tallest building
in the world but by

the
time it was completed in 1901 after 30 years of construction,
it had been eclipsed by the
Washington
Monument and the
Eiffel
Tower.
The enormous city hall is still the
tallest and largest masonry building in the world. Since
no steel frame was used, the walls at the first floor
are up to 22ft thick to support all the weight from
the floors above. The eight floors, each about 16ft
high, look like just three floors from the outside.
The central tower reaches a height of 511ft. It is topped
by a statue of William Penn. The massive statue is 37ft
high and weighs 27 ton. It is just one of 250 sculptures
created by Alexander Calder for both the interior and
exterior of the city hall.
The building's more than 600 rooms are organized around
a central courtyard, which can be

reached
via the large archways on each of the four sides. Many
of the rooms are lavishly decorated, including the Reception
Room with blue and gold ceiling and red marble columns,
and the Conversation Hall which boasts a magnificent
chandelier.
In 1987
One
Liberty Place dethroned the Philadelphia City Hall
as the tallest building in the city. Until then an agreement
between developers would not allow any building in the
city center to be higher than the hat of William Penn's
statue on top of the City Hall.
The tower has an observation deck open
to the public. Some of its beautiful interior can also
be visited; go to the City Hall Tour Information Center
Room 121 at the East City Hall Entrance for information
and tickets.