Barco Law Building

Barco Law Building

Barco Law Building is an academic building housing the University of Pittsburgh School of Law on the campus of the University of Pittsburgh in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, United States. The $8.5 million six-story building was opened in January 1976. [http://digital.library.pitt.edu/cgi-bin/t/text/pageviewer-idx?c=pittmiscpubs;cc=pittmiscpubs;g=documentingpitt;xc=1;xg=1;q1=law%20building;rgn=full%20text;idno=00c50130m;didno=00c50130m;view=image;seq=0426] ] The Barco Law Building is a classic example of brutalist architecture.

History

The University of Pittsburgh has offered law classes since 1843. The School of Law was officially founded in 1895, making it one of the oldest law schools in the nation. In 1900, the law school joined with 31 other schools to form the Association of American Law Schools.

Namesake

On June 19, 2003, Pitt’s School of Law Building was renamed as the Barco Law Building, in memory of George J. Barco and his daughter, Yolanda G. Barco. The Barcos were graduates of Pitt’s School of Law and former trustees who were long-standing supporters of the law school, both in life and through their estates. George Barco served as trustee from January 1972 to March 1980, when he was elected as an emeritus trustee.

Barco Law Library

The largest element in the building, the Barco Law Library on floors three, four, and five, serves as the "laboratory" for the work of both students and faculty and is an important information center for practicing lawyers and for scholars from other disciplines. The current collection numbers some 325,000 volumes and volume equivalents and has a seating capacity, in both the individual carrels and in private reading areas, of over 400. The fourth floor is the library's nerve center, containing the circulation desk, the reference desk and reference collection, modern indexing tools, group-study rooms, a microform room, an audiovisual room, and the Harold Obernauer Computerized Legal Research Center. The Obernauer Center, opened in 1987, gives Pitt Law students access to personal computer equipment for research, word processing, and programmed courses of instruction. A permanent endowment helps ensure that the school can maintain the quality of the library and respond fully to the teaching and research missions of the law school, as well as to provide a continuing learning resource for practitioners in the law. Faculty offices ring the perimeter of the library on floors three and five. [http://www.law.pitt.edu/about/facilities.php Facilities | University of Pittsburgh School of Law ] ]

Classrooms

The assembly areas are the next largest element of the building. The facilities are all on the first floor with direct circulation to the main entrance. The spatial arrangements make it possible for the four main classrooms, situated on this floor, to fill and discharge without interference with other activities in the school.

Teplitz Memorial Moot Courtroom

A special feature of the Law Building is the Teplitz Memorial Moot Courtroom on the ground floor. The courtroom, with oak-paneled appointments, is named for the late Benjamin H. Teplitz and includes a seven-seat judges' bench, jury and press boxes, counselors' tables, judges' chambers, and jury room. It is used primarily by trial tactics classes and by the growing number of moot court programs. It is equipped to handle special sessions of the Commonwealth and Federal Appellate Courts and hearings before various administrative tribunals.

A focus of visual interest is the large (24 by 36 foot) mosaic mounted on the wall behind the judges' bench. Designed and created by the University's Virgil Cantini, the mosaic is a dramatic compound of 126 porcelain-on-steel pieces and represents the artist's conception of the harmony of the law and the rich tapestry of the American legal system. The circle symbolizes the "total process of law." The intersection of the red and blue fields at the top symbolize the opposing sides in a controversy, within the total process of law. The band across the middle of the mural symbolizes a lie detector tape and Morse Code message below read "The truth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth."

Lobby

The ground floor of the building is the center for student activity including a large student lounge and vending machine area just off the lounge. Lining the north wall are three student activity rooms designed for more formalized gatherings. On the opposite side of the lounge is the locker area, where each student has an assigned locker. Most of the school's student organizations have offices on the ground floor. Three--the Moot Court Board, the Law Review, and the Journal of Law and Commerce--are located on the fifth floor to afford them easy access to both faculty counselors and the library.

William Wallace Booth administrative offices

The administrative offices, named in honor of William Wallace Booth, are located on the second floor. The faculty lounge, furbished in part by a grant from the Alcoa Foundation, is adjacent to the administrative suite.

External links

* [http://www.umc.pitt.edu/tour/tour-030.html University of Pittsburgh Virtual Tour: Barco Law Building]
* [http://www.law.pitt.edu University of Pittsburgh School of Law]
* [http://www.law.pitt.edu/library Barco Law Library]
* [http://www.pitt.edu/~ciddeweb/classrooms/law.html Barco Law Building Media Enhanced Classrooms]

References

*cite book | author=Alberts, Robert C. | title=Pitt: The Story of the University of Pittsburgh 1787-1987 | location=Pittsburgh | publisher=University of Pittsburgh Press | year=1987 | id=ISBN 0-8229-1150-7

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