Whose City Hall Is It? Architecture and Identity in New Orleans
Document Type
Article
Source Publication Title
Journal of Urban Design
First Page
279
Last Page
308
Abstract
New Orleans has had three city halls, all still standing. Built in 1795, 1845, and 1957, these city halls represent different facets of the public image of the city as a modern world metropolis, reflecting cosmopolitan French, Spanish, English, and American fashions. In the wake of Hurricane Katrina in 2005, a proposal emerged in 2006 to demolish the third city hall, an International Style office tower, and replace it with a National Jazz Center designed by Santa Monica-based Morphosis. A culturally and historically situated discussion of how each of the three city halls reflects New Orleans’s cultural identity can provide a context for debating the present desire to replace public civic architecture with an architecture of private entertainment.
Disciplines
Architecture
Publication Date
8-1-2009
Language
English
License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Holliday, Kathryn E., "Whose City Hall Is It? Architecture and Identity in New Orleans" (2009). School of Architecture Faculty Publications. 28.
https://mavmatrix.uta.edu/architecture_facultypubs/28