Sandra Day O'Connor United States Courthouse

The Sandra Day O'Connor United States Courthouse is a courthouse at 401 West Washington Street in Phoenix, Arizona. Pursuant to Pub.L. 106–166, enacted by the United States Congress, it is named after Sandra Day O'Connor, who served as an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from September 21, 1981, to January 31, 2006.

Sandra Day O'Connor United States Courthouse
General information
StatusComplete
TypeCourthouse
Address401 West Washington Street
Town or cityPhoenix, Arizona
CountryUnited States
Coordinates33°26′52″N 112°4′50″W
Current tenants  United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
  United States District Court for the District of Arizona
InauguratedOctober 2000
Cost$123 million[1]
Technical details
Floor countSix
Floor area550,000 square feet (51,000 m2)
Design and construction
Architect  Richard Meier[1]
  Langdon Wilson Architecture
Other information
ParkingNo public parking

Description

The building is home to the United States District Court for the District of Arizona, and also hosts Circuit Judges William C. Canby, Jr.; Michael Daly Hawkins; Mary H. Murguia; Mary M. Schroeder; Andrew D. Hurwitz; and Barry G. Silverman of the United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit.

Built at a cost of $123 million[1] and dedicated in October 2000, the building was championed by Senior United States District Judge Robert C. Broomfield. It was designed by architect Richard Meier,[1] with local executive architects of Langdon Wilson Architecture in Phoenix. The building is in Meier's signature monochrome style. Standing six stories tall, it encompasses more than 550,000 square feet (51,000 m2). The building's public atrium features a six-story glass curtain wall on the north face, and contains a drum-shaped special-proceedings courtroom with a glass-lens ceiling, the work of James Carpenter, an American light artist and designer. There is no public parking.

Climate-control problems

Although part of the General Services Administration's initiative to bring design excellence to public buildings, the building has been plagued with climate-control problems with its evaporative-cooling system. Temperatures in the atrium have been known to reach 100 °F (38 °C) in the summer, and the ceiling was open to dust storms, but now motorized louvers prevent infiltration during storms.

Inside the Sandra Day O'Connor United States Courthouse (August 2007)
gollark: On the plus side, Project Treble means that the drivers/hardware mess on ARM is somewhat mitigated, and you can flash generic-system-image ROMs on most modern devices which allow bootloader unlocking and have stuff mostly work.
gollark: I like having a smartphone and would really not want to not have one, but oh something or other the software choices are so awful.
gollark: They probably receive money™ to do so.
gollark: Basically that. Although it's not that much work if you have... basic familiarity with command prompts and such?
gollark: > Is it possibleTechnically speaking, yes, and you won't even have to destroy the phone!

See also

References

  1. Santos, Fernanda (August 4, 2012). "Where Indoors Can Become Too Much Like Outdoors". The New York Times (via the Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). Retrieved August 6, 2012.
  • Meier, R. & Frampton, K. & Rykwert, J. & Holl, S. (2004). Richard Meier Architect. New York City: Rizzoli International Publications, Inc.. Page 174. ISBN 978-0-847-82702-2.
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