I'm dedicating a whole post to the New York State Department of Education building because I took so many pictures of it. The building was completed in 1912 and was home to the New York State Museum and the State Library.
The museum and library moved out the building in the 1970s when the new Cultural Education Center opened on the south mall of the capitol. I remember going to the old museum on school field trips when I was a kid. The building always impressed me. Something important must go on in there, I thought.
The building's thirty-six massive corinthian columns line Washington Avenue and supposedly form the longest colonnade in the United States, among the longest in the world. The historic building was listed in the National Register of Historic Places in 1971.
The state's Department of Education is still located in the building and its annex, a nine-story office building constructed next door in 1959. The colonnade faces West Capitol Park on the north. Directly opposite the Education Building is the modern Legislative Office Building on the south side of the park, a building similar in size and color but completely opposite in style.
On the east and west sides of the park are the capitol itself and the A.E. Smith building. The four buildings make an impressive ensemble of monumental proportions, at least in my eyes. I wish I could have gone inside, but it was Saturday and the building was closed. These days, with security issues, I probably couldn't get in anyway.
Lovely photos, especially the one of the shadows.
ReplyDeleteI had no idea Albany is such a grand place.
PS I love the shiny handrail photo.
ReplyDeleteI love these photos, too, and, like Jean, I LOVE the handrail photo:))
ReplyDeleteVERMONT! Where did you go, what did you see, what did you eat!? :))
Judy
You make me want to go to Albany some day. Hope you had fun in Vermont in sunshine.
ReplyDeleteEXTREMELY super fantastic pictures!
ReplyDeleteThat's a building worthy of the national mall. Thanks for the photos.
ReplyDeleteBeautiful. Too bad they're so expensive to build now, it would be great to have more.
ReplyDeleteI love old architecture like this. It is sad they no longer make such lovely detailed buildings.
ReplyDelete