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Irvington Town Hall

Irvington Town Hall
Irvington Town Hall full.jpg
Front (south) elevation, 2006
Location Irvington, NY
Nearest city Yonkers
Coordinates 41°02′20″N 73°52′05″W / 41.03889°N 73.86806°W / 41.03889; -73.86806Coordinates: 41°02′20″N 73°52′05″W / 41.03889°N 73.86806°W / 41.03889; -73.86806
Built 1902
Architect Alfred J. Manning
Architectural style Colonial Revival
Part of Irvington Historic District (#01300195)
NRHP Reference # 84000205
Added to NRHP 1984

Irvington Town Hall is located on Main Street in the village of Irvington in the U.S. state of New York. In addition to being home to the village government, police department, and until 2000 the public library, it has a public reading room in keeping with the requirements of the original land deed. A 432-seat theatre, used for many local gatherings such as school graduations, was also built on the second story.

The Town Hall was built in 1902 from a design by local architect Albert J. Manning, an early use of the Colonial Revival architectural style for a civic building. The inside also features glasswork and mosaics by Louis Comfort Tiffany, whose father, Charles Lewis Tiffany, had an estate in the village. These two factors led to its listing on the National Register of Historic Places in 1984, and has also been a contributing property to the Irvington Historic District since 2014.

The two-story brick building is seven bays square on a raised basement of randomly coursed stone. The facade is trimmed in terra cotta and stone. The former is used for the window lintels and sills as well as an intermediate cornice; the latter for the water table. It is topped with a shallow hipped roof that has some of its original metal sheathing.


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