United States Courthouse

The design of the new United States Courthouse in Salt Lake City emanates from Thomas Phifer and Partners search for a form that is strong, iconic, transparent, and metaphorically egalitarian as a symbol of the American judiciary system.

Thomas Phifer and Partners, United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah
The cubic mass of the new United States Courthouse – designed in Salt Lake City by Thomas Phifer and Partners – like the monumental buttes of southern Utah, is just such a primary form, projecting grounded dignity, immovable order, and an equal face to all sides.
The 37,000 square meter, 10-story courthouse resides in a garden setting on a level terrace encompassing the entire city block including an existing, historic Federal Courthouse. This garden terrace unites the two courthouses in a public-access amenity for the downtown area of Salt Lake City while establishing a required federal security setback from the street.
Thomas Phifer and Partners, United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah
Thomas Phifer and Partners, United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah

The building contains ten courtrooms for the District Court of Utah, fourteen judges’ chamber suites, administrative Clerk of the Court offices, the United States Marshal Service, United States Probation, and other federal agencies. Courts parking and service for both new and existing courthouses occurs on two underground levels. Eight future courtrooms can be accommodated within the constructed volume by office relocation. The main public entry occurs on West Temple Street, linking the courthouse to the civic core of the downtown area.

The building’s encompassing glass and aluminum façades expose the life of the courthouse to the city while providing expansive views from the public and office spaces within. A quilt-work pattern of exterior, vertical aluminum sun screens tempers this transparency with a variable, protective veil that changes quietly with the solar orientation and the interior use. The softly reflective anodized finish along with the crystalline transparency of glass accentuates the distinctive quality of natural light in this pastorally urban setting as the sun passes over the luminescent Wasatch Mountains and across the Great Salt Lake.

Thomas Phifer and Partners, United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah
Thomas Phifer and Partners, United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah

This LEED Gold building, in its interior planning, celebrates daylight as an intrinsic quality of both public and individual space. The three-story main entry lobby occupies the southwest corner of the building serving as a beacon to the two primary streets and marking a cornerstone of the broader downtown area. In the core of the building, a sky-lit atrium extending the height of the building brings natural daylight to the centrally located public elevator lobbies. This atrium will contain a 10-story sculptural glass art installation by the renowned American glass artist James Carpenter that further siphons natural daylight into the space. From here, public waiting areas extend north and south to the building perimeter creating a light-filled central axis. The primary functions of the building – the courtrooms – occupy the four corners of the building, bathed in filtered natural daylight, bringing clarity and context to the proceedings within.

The new United States Courthouse in Salt Lake City strives to embody the ideals and aspirations of the American judiciary system – clarity of order, transparency of process, fairness of disposition and timeless relevance – in a building that invites participation, illuminates its civic purpose, and celebrates the extraordinary qualities of nature that characterize this region.


United States Courthouse, Salt Lake City, Utah
Program: courthouse
Architects: Thomas Phifer and Partners
Project Team: Thomas Phifer, Stephen Dayton, Mitch Crowder, Ina Ko, Katie Bennett, Robert Chan, Rebecca Garnett, Andrew Mazor, Jon Benner, Chien Ho Hsu
Executive Architect: Naylor Wentworth Lund Architects
Landscape Architect: E. A. Lyman Landscape Architects
Civil Engineer: McNeil Engineering
Mechanical Engineer: Van Boerum & Frank Associates
Structural Engineering: Reaveley Engineers & Associates
Blast Engineering: Weidlinger Associates
Electrical Engineering: BNA Consulting Engineers
Lighting Design: Fisher Marantz Stone
Building Enclosure: James Carpenter Design Associates
Acoustics: Arup
Graphics: Piscatello Design Centre
LEED Consultant: CRSA Architecture
Elevators: Lerch Bates Associates
Pool Design: Water Design Inc.
Cost Estimating: Parametrix Inc.
Artwork: James Carpenter Design Associates
General Contractor: Okland Construction
Client: General Services Administration
Area: 37,000 sqm
Completion: 2014

Latest on Architecture

Latest on Domus

Read more
China Germany India Mexico, Central America and Caribbean Sri Lanka Korea icon-camera close icon-comments icon-down-sm icon-download icon-facebook icon-heart icon-heart icon-next-sm icon-next icon-pinterest icon-play icon-plus icon-prev-sm icon-prev Search icon-twitter icon-views icon-instagram