In local government, a city hall, town hall, civic centre (in the UK or Australia), guildhall, or municipal building (in the Philippines) is the chief administrative building of a city,[3] town, or other municipality. It usually houses the city or town council and at least some other arms of the local government. It also often functions as the office of the mayor (or other executive), if the relevant municipality has such an officer. In large cities, the local government is often administratively expansive, and the city hall may bear more resemblance to a municipal capitol building.
By convention, until the middle of the 19th century, a single large open chamber (or "hall") formed an integral part of the building housing the council and such other organs of government as supported it. The hall may be used for council meetings and other significant events. This large chamber, the "town hall" (and its later variant "city hall") became synonymous with the whole building, and, synecdochically, the municipal government headquartered there. The terms "council chambers", "municipal building" or variants may be used locally in preference to "town hall" if no such large hall is present within the building.
The local government may endeavor to use the building to promote and enhance the quality of life of the community. In many cases, "town halls" serve not only as buildings for government functions, but also have facilities for various civic and cultural activities. These may include art shows, stage performances, exhibits, and festivals. Modern town halls or "civic centres" are often designed with a great variety and flexibility of purpose in mind. In some European countries, the town hall is the venue for the declaration of Christmas Peace, such as Turku and Porvoo in Finland[4] and Tartu in Estonia.[5]
As symbols of local government, city, and town halls have distinctive architecture, and the buildings may have great historical significance – for example the Guildhall, London. City hall buildings may also serve as cultural icons that symbolize their cities. City Hall buildings often serve citizens in accessing government functions as well as providing vital symbolic roles for their communities.[6]
Nomenclature
In Commonwealth countries, the term "town hall" may be used even in a city.[8] This is often the case in the United Kingdom (examples being Manchester Town Hall and Liverpool Town Hall), Australia (Sydney Town Hall), New Zealand, and elsewhere.
People in some regions use the term "city hall" to designate the council offices of a municipality of city status. This is the case in North America, where a distinction is made between city halls and town halls. The term is also sometimes (but more rarely) used as a name in Commonwealth countries: for example, for the City Halls of Brisbane in Australia, and of Cardiff, Norwich and Bristol in the UK. City Hall in Dublin, Ireland, is another example. City Hall in London, opened in 2002, is an exceptional case, being the seat not of a conventional municipal authority, but of a regional strategic authority.
The Oxford English Dictionary sums up the generic terms:
- town hall: "A building used for the administration of local government, the holding of court sessions, public meetings, entertainments, etc.; (in early use also) a large hall used for such purposes within a larger building or set of buildings. ... By metonymy: the government or administration of a town; the town authorities."[9]
- city hall: "(The name of) the chief administrative building or offices of a municipal government. ... Originally and chiefly North American. Municipal officers collectively; city government."[10]
County Council administrations in parts of England and Wales generally operate from a base in a building called, by analogy, a "county hall" or "shire hall". Conversely, cities that have subdivisions with their councils may have borough halls. Scottish local government in larger cities operates from the "City Chambers".[11]
Other names are occasionally used. The administrative headquarters of the City of London retains its Anglo-Saxon name, the Guildhall, signifying a place where taxes were paid. In a few English cities (including Birmingham, Coventry and Nottingham) the preferred term is "Council House": this was also true in Bristol until 2012, when the building was renamed "City Hall". In Birmingham, there is a distinction between the Council House and the Town Hall, a concert and meeting venue that pre-dates it. In Sheffield, the distinction is between the Town Hall, the seat of local government, and the City Hall, a concert and ballroom venue. In Leeds, the Town Hall, built in the 1850s as a seat of local government, now functions primarily as a concert, conference, and wedding venue, many of its municipal functions having moved in 1933 to the new Civic Hall.
History
Large halls called basilicas were used in ancient Rome for the administration of justice, as meeting places, and for trade.
The development of the town hall as a setting for local governance meetings and decisions is historically related to the early cities in medieval Europe.[13] The objective was to have engagement with the citizens in a public space by a representative civic authority.[13] The oldest town hall in the world is Palazzo Senatorio in Rome, Italy, which is established in AD 1144.[1]
In the Early Middle Ages, the great hall, a single large open chamber, was the main, and sometimes only room of the home of a feudal lord. A great variety of activities took place in the hall, which was an all-purpose space. The lord would host banquets and other grand ceremonies in the hall, but most of the time it would be occupied by routine administrative and judicial functions. In a smaller manor, a lord might even live in the hall with his family and retainers. Inasmuch as the manor was the primary local jurisdiction of medieval society, the hall was a place of great local importance.
In the later Middle Ages or early modern period, many European market towns erected communal market halls, comprising a covered space to function as a marketplace at street level, and one or more rooms used for public or civic purposes above it. These buildings were frequently the precursors of dedicated town halls.
The modern concept of the town hall developed with the rise of medieval communes. Much as a lord was based in his hall, the new councils which formed to rule the cities required a headquarters. This building needed a debating chamber for council meetings, office space for city employees, an archive room for official documents, and some degree of fortification lest the city be attacked.
The Palazzo Senatorio has been the headquarters of the municipal government of Rome since 1144, making it the oldest city hall in the world.[1] The Cologne City Hall of 1135 is another early example. The Palazzo Pubblico of the Republic of Siena and the Palazzo Vecchio of the Republic of Florence, both late-medieval town halls, date from 1297 and 1299 respectively. In each case, the large, fortified building comprises a large meeting hall and numerous administrative chambers. Both buildings are topped by tall towers, have ancient clocks against which townsfolk measured time, and have space for local archives of official documents. These features became standard for town halls across Europe. The 15th-century Brussels Town Hall, with its 96-meter (315 ft) tower, is one of the grandest examples of the medieval era, serving as a model for 19th-century town halls such as the Rathaus, Vienna.
Over centuries, the idea of civic representation along with notions of urbanism and public space evolved.[13] Even the building form grew in size and the town hall concept expanded beyond Europe to become an established institution across the world.[13]
As the functions of government generally and municipal government in particular expanded in the 19th and 20th centuries, the role of town and city halls became broader. Many cities established a reading room in their city hall, which later grew into a public library, typically in its own building. The central room in a town hall (the "hall" proper) began to be used for a variety of other functions; some cities installed a large pipe organ to facilitate public entertainment.
In the 20th century, town halls served the public as places for voting, examinations, vaccinations, disaster relief, and disseminating information through noticeboards, as well as for the more usual civil functions, festivities, and entertainments. Local councils have increasingly tended to move administrative functions into modern offices. Where new premises are designed and constructed to house local governments, the functions of an administrative office and a civic town hall have become separated.
Language
Particularly in North America, "city hall" can be used as a metonym to mean municipal government, or government in general, as in the axiom "You can't fight city hall".[3] "Town hall" tends to have less formal connotations (cf. Town meeting).
See also
- List of city and town halls
- Ratusz
- Barangay hall
- Market hall
- Moot hall
- Town meeting
- Administrative centre
References
- ^ a b c Falconi, Fabrizio (2015). Roma segreta e misteriosa (in Italian). Newton Compton Editori. ISBN 9788854188075. Retrieved 19 August 2019.
- ^ Grynbaum, Michael M. (24 May 2012). "The Reporters of City Hall Return to Their Old Perch". The New York Times. Retrieved 6 December 2013.
- ^ a b "Definition - city hall (noun)". merriam-webster.com. 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
1: the chief administrative building of a city
2 a: a municipal government
b: city officialdom or bureaucracy - ^ "Christmas in Porvoo". visitporvoo.fi. Archived from the original on 29 September 2020. Retrieved 30 January 2021.
- ^ "Kahjumis Uppsala Maja viskab voodid välja". tartupostimees.ee (in Estonian). 28 April 2010. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ Friedrich, Anna Sellers (August 2020). "The Essential Business of City Hall". Places Journal. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ "Town of South Palm Beach - Town Hall's Current Condition" (PDF). southpalmbeach.com. 4 May 2022. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ "Meaning of town hall in English". dictionary.cambridge.org. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ "town hall". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- ^ "City Hall". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
- ^ "City Chambers: #4 in Best Things To Do in Glasgow". travel.usnews.com. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ "Wrocław – Old Town Hall". medievalheritage.eu. Retrieved 7 November 2024.
- ^ a b c d Chattopadhyay, Swati; White, Jeremy, eds. (2014). City Halls and Civic Materialism Towards a Global History of Urban Public Space. Routledge. ISBN 9780415819008.
Further reading
- Cunningham, Colin (1981). Victorian and Edwardian Town Halls. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 071000723X.
- Tittler, Robert (1991). Architecture and power: the town hall and the English urban community, c.1500–1640. Oxford: Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-820230-1.
- Drooker, Arthur (2021). City Hall: Masterpieces of American Civic Architecture. Schiffer Publishing. ISBN 978-0-76-436049-7.