North Carolina State Legislative Building


The North Carolina State Legislative Building was opened in 1963 and is the current meeting place of the North Carolina General Assembly, the state legislature of the U.S. state of North Carolina.

Location

The building is located in Raleigh, across from the North Carolina Museum of Natural Sciences and Bicentennial Mall and one block north of the Capitol in.

Design and Construction

In 1959 a commission was formed to guide the construction of a new legislative building to replace the North Carolina State Capitol, which had served as the home of the legislature since 1840. Architect Edward Durrell Stone was selected to design the building in partnership with North Carolina firm Holloway & Reeves. The building opened in February 1963.
The building and furnishings cost $5.5 million, or $1.24 for each citizen of North Carolina. Construction required of concrete, 145,000 masonry blocks, and of terrazzo.

Architectural Details

The building contains separate chambers for the North Carolina House of Representatives and North Carolina Senate. Architectural details include a, red-carpeted stair that leads from the front entrance to the third floor galleries for the House and Senate, roof gardens and garden courts at the four interior corners. Each pair of brass doors that leads to the House and Senate chambers weighs. A in the rotunda weighs. Brass chandeliers in the chambers and the main stair are and weigh each. The building entrance features a diameter terrazzo mosaic of the Great Seal of the State of North Carolina.
The building is open to the public seven days a week and tours are available.