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- Q1010274 subject Q17303273.
- Q1010274 subject Q7841065.
- Q1010274 subject Q8264950.
- Q1010274 subject Q8379784.
- Q1010274 subject Q8495687.
- Q1010274 subject Q8495886.
- Q1010274 subject Q8665591.
- Q1010274 subject Q8818933.
- Q1010274 abstract "Burbank City Hall is the site of the municipal government of Burbank, California, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Designed by architects William Allen and W. George Lutzi in the Moderne or Art Deco style, ground was broken in February 1941 and construction was completed in 1943. The structure was partially funded by the Federal Works Agency, Works Project Administration (WPA). It was completed at a total cost of $409,000.Burbank City Councilman Ted McConkey told the Los Angeles Daily News in 1996: "Anyone walking into City Hall would recognize that it's something unique. It's special because of the period in which it was built, because of the way it's been maintained and because of all the murals at City Hall. We get an inordinate number of requests to use City Hall from film companies." When it was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1996, it became the second listed building in Burbank — the first being Burbank's main post office.The structure's 77-foot tower serves as the main lobby and features art deco detailing and more than 20 types of marble, which can be found in the city seal on the floor, the trim, walls and in the treads and risers of the grand stairway. Its artisitc features include several works: cast medallions, one bas-relief sculpture by Bartolo Mako titled 'A Tribute to Craftsmen" along Third Street, two bas-relief sculpture panels on the front facade of an unknown artist and a framed painting titled "Justice, also by Mako, for hanging in the City Attorney's office.Burbank City Hall's most notable artistic features are the large murals painted by famed muralist Hugo Ballin. Ballin also painted the murals at the Griffith Observatory and Wilshire Boulevard Temple. There are two major Ballin murals at the Burbank City Hall: "The Four Freedoms" in the Council Chamber and "Burbank Industry" in the rotunda. In 2001, the building underwent a renovation project that included restoration of the Ballin murals.The Council Chamber located on the second floor is noted for its teakwood-panelled walls and Ballin's "Four Freedoms" mural. The mural was inspired by Franklin Roosevelt’s 1941 "Four Freedoms" speech and is considered one of Ballin's finest works. The chamber has built-in rails and tables. In 1978, the original carved wooden pews were replaced by padded theater-style seating, and the checkered floor was carpeted. During the 2001 renovation, the ceiling was returned to its original height revealing the top of the Four Freedoms mural that had been obscured for decades.The "Burbank Industry" in the rotunda features Burbank-built airplanes, the motion picture industry, agriculture, and a power plant. In 1964, the bottom portion of the Burbank Industry mural was removed to make room for a bridge to an adjacent municipal building. After being stored for 37 years rolled in a plastic sheet at various times under a street bridge at the city's yards, in a bedroom on Amherst Drive, and at the Burbank Historical Society's Gordon Howard Museum, the 1964 building (and the bridge to it) were demolished and the lower section returned to its place and reattached by art conservators. The unveiling ceremony for all the restored art took place on September 10, 2001.".
- Q1010274 added "1996-04-18".
- Q1010274 architecturalStyle Q928960.
- Q1010274 location Q39561.
- Q1010274 nrhpReferenceNumber "96000426".
- Q1010274 thumbnail Burbank_City_Hall.JPG?width=300.
- Q1010274 wikiPageExternalLink city_hall.html.
- Q1010274 wikiPageExternalLink WMDEW.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q1200079.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q17303273.
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- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q3719.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q3787466.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q39561.
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- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q575901.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q646350.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q7841065.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8264950.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8379784.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8495687.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8495886.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8665591.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q8818933.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q928960.
- Q1010274 wikiPageWikiLink Q99.
- Q1010274 yearOfConstruction "1943".
- Q1010274 added "1996-04-18".
- Q1010274 architecture "Moderne".
- Q1010274 built "1943".
- Q1010274 location "275".
- Q1010274 name "City Hall–City of Burbank".
- Q1010274 refnum "96000426".
- Q1010274 point "34.18194444444445 -118.3075".
- Q1010274 type Place.
- Q1010274 type ArchitecturalStructure.
- Q1010274 type Building.
- Q1010274 type Location.
- Q1010274 type Place.
- Q1010274 type Thing.
- Q1010274 type SpatialThing.
- Q1010274 type Q41176.
- Q1010274 comment "Burbank City Hall is the site of the municipal government of Burbank, California, and is listed on the National Register of Historic Places.Designed by architects William Allen and W. George Lutzi in the Moderne or Art Deco style, ground was broken in February 1941 and construction was completed in 1943. The structure was partially funded by the Federal Works Agency, Works Project Administration (WPA).".
- Q1010274 label "Burbank City Hall".
- Q1010274 lat "34.18194444444445".
- Q1010274 long "-118.3075".
- Q1010274 depiction Burbank_City_Hall.JPG.
- Q1010274 name "City Hall–City of Burbank".