City Hall
| Type | Government building / Landmark |
|---|---|
| Address | 1401 John F. Kennedy Boulevard |
| Map | View on Google Maps |
| Neighborhood | Center City |
| Phone | (215) 686-2840 |
| Website | Official site |
| Established | 1901 |
| Hours | Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm (tower tours vary) |
Philadelphia City Hall is the seat of Philadelphia's government and the largest municipal building in the United States. Topped by the 37-foot bronze statue of William Penn, it's the architectural heart of the city. When it was finished in 1901, City Hall stood as the world's tallest habitable building and anchored Philadelphia's street grid.[1]
History
Construction
Three decades. That's what it took to build this thing:
- 1871 — Construction began
- 1901 — Completed
- Architects John McArthur Jr. and Thomas U. Walter designed it
- 548 feet tall (to top of Penn's hat)
- World's tallest occupied building at completion
- Second Empire and French Renaissance style mixed together
The Penn Statue
Alexander Milne Calder created the William Penn statue:
- 37 feet tall, 27 tons of bronze
- Largest single sculpture atop any building in the world
- Faces northeast toward Penn Treaty Park
- The "curse" — no building could be taller
- Curse "broken" in 1987 when One Liberty Place went up
The Curse
Philadelphia operated under an unwritten rule for over a century:
- No building exceeded City Hall's height until 1987
- One Liberty Place broke the tradition, and things changed
- Philadelphia sports teams won no championships from 1983 to 2008
- The Phillies' 2008 World Series win supposedly ended it all
- A small Penn statue was placed atop Comcast Center as acknowledgment
Architecture
Exterior
The building catches your eye from blocks away:
- French Second Empire style throughout
- White marble exterior with granite base
- Over 250 sculptures carved by Alexander Milne Calder
- Elaborate ornamental details everywhere you look
- Four facades facing the cardinal directions
Interior
Step inside and you're walking through history:
- Ornate public spaces that still impress visitors
- Conversation Hall served as the historic council chamber
- Mayor's Reception Room hosts official events
- Historic murals and decorative work cover the walls
- Government offices still operate in these spaces today
Scale
The numbers tell you something:
- Floors — 9 above ground
- Rooms — Nearly 700
- Area — 14.5 acres of floor space
- Construction cost — $24 million in 1901 dollars
Tower Tours
Observation Deck
The view's worth the climb. You can reach the observation deck:
- 360-degree views of Philadelphia unfold beneath you
- See all directions from where Penn stands
- An elevator gets you most of the way up
- There's a small fee for tower access
- Space is limited, so show up early if you want in
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Tower Hours | Mon-Fri 9:30am-4:15pm (tours every 15 min) |
| Cost | ~$8-10 adults |
| Tickets | Purchase in Room 121 |
| Capacity | Limited per tour |
| Duration | ~15 minutes at top |
Location
Center of the City
City Hall sits exactly where William Penn wanted it:
- The intersection of Broad and Market Streets anchors everything
- Traffic circles around the building in all directions
- Subway stations run underneath
- You can walk to most major attractions from here
- Dilworth Park sits on the south side
Dilworth Park
The south plaza got a major upgrade:
- Opened in 2014 after renovation
- Summer brings a café and fountain
- Winter transforms it into an ice skating rink
- The Octavius Catto Memorial stands nearby
- Subway access is direct
Visiting
| Detail | Information |
|---|---|
| Building Hours | Mon-Fri 9am-4:30pm |
| Admission | Free (tower tour has fee) |
| Guided Tours | Available; check schedule |
| Best view of exterior | Broad Street, north or south |
Getting There
Multiple ways to reach it:
- SEPTA Subway — City Hall Station has direct access
- Market-Frankford Line — Get off at 15th Street or City Hall
- Broad Street Line — City Hall Station puts you right there
- Walking — The central location makes it accessible from anywhere
- Parking — Nearby garages are your best bet