Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse
Northeast view of the Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse
General information
Address1729 5th Avenue North, Birmingham, AL 35203
Coordinates33°30′59″N 86°48′42″W / 33.516418°N 86.811546°W / 33.516418; -86.811546
Completed1987
Design and construction
Architecture firmKPS Group[1]

The Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse is a United States courthouse of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama. Located at 1729 North 5th Avenue in Birmingham, Alabama,[2] it was completed in 1987, and named in honor of U.S. Supreme Court Justice Hugo Black on November 10, 1987,[1] through legislation introduced in the U.S. House of Representatives by Representative Ben Erdreich of Alabama.[3]

Funds for the construction of a new courthouse in Birmingham were appropriated by Congress in December 1982, and the following June, the General Services Administration chose the Birmingham architectural firm of Kidd/Ploaser/Sprague Architects Inc to design the building.[4] A location for the courthouse not yet having been determined, the City of Birmingham proposed a lot diagonal to the federal courthouse in use at the time, as part of an effort to promote the downtown area.[4] In 1984, it was reported that the building would be nine stories and 184,000 square feet, with construction to begin in April 1985 and end in February 1987.[5] A 1987 evaluation of work in the city by the architects noted of the building that it "has all of the right monumental materials, but they are organized in a carnival of geometry that fits irregular spaces in a familiar context", further describing it as "a kind of geometrical sculpture of reflective glass atop a stone pedestal that both respects and reflects the two monumental buildings (old US Courthouse and Federal Reserve Bank) across the street".[6]

In June 2020, vandals protesting a nearby Confederate monument threw rocks that damaged windows of the courthouse, prompting officials to note that this was a federal offense.[7] In June 2023, Joran van der Sloot was arraigned at the courthouse for the murder of Natalee Holloway.[8]

References

  1. 1 2 Ruzic, Emily (Summer 2017). "The Federal Courthouses of Birmingham". 11th Circuit Historical News. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  2. "Birmingham". Northern District of Alabama - United States District Court. Retrieved 7 January 2024.
  3. "An act to designate the new United States courthouse in Birmingham, Alabama, as the "Hugo L. Black United States Courthouse"". Act No. H.R.614 of November 10, 1987 (PDF). 100th United States Congress.
  4. 1 2 Viola Gienger, "Courthouse start may be 2 years off", Birmingham Post-Herald (June 17, 1983), p. C1.
  5. Mitch Mendelson, "City's center born again", Birmingham Post-Herald ((April 4, 1984), p. F2.
  6. Mitch Mendelson, "Variety characterizes KPS portfolio", Birmingham Post-Herald (March 2, 1987), p. A8.
  7. WBRC Staff (June 1, 2020). "Alabama's AG says he may pursue new civil complaint over Confederate monument in Birmingham". WBRC.
  8. Paepcke, Jon; Lang, Taylor (June 21, 2023). "Joran van der Sloot pleads 'not guilty' to federal charges of extortion, wire fraud". WVTM.


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