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  1. United States Supreme Court Building. Das Supreme Court Building ist der Sitz des Obersten Gerichtshofs der Vereinigten Staaten und befindet sich in Washington, D.C. an der 1 First Street, NE, einen Block östlich des Kapitols. Das Gebäude gehört zum Zuständigkeitsbereich des Architect of the Capitol. Im Jahr 1987 wurde das Supreme Court ...

  2. United States Supreme Court building. The front of the United States Supreme Court building. The Supreme Court building is home of the Supreme Court of the United States. It is in Washington, D.C. It was designed in the neoclassical style by an architect named Cass Gilbert.

  3. Public access. On May 3, 2010, citing security concerns and as part of the building's modernization project, the Supreme Court announced that the public (including parties to the cases being argued, the attorneys who represent them, and visitors to Oral arguments or the building) would no longer be allowed to enter the building through the main door on top of the steps on the west side. [29]

  4. Byggnaden ritades av arkitekten Cass Gilbert men han avled under konstruktionen av Supreme Court Building, hans son Cass Gilbert, Jr. och John R. Rockart tog över arkitektansvaret och byggnaden stod färdig 1935. [1] Byggnaden övervakas av domstolens egna polismyndighet Supreme Court of the United States Police. [2] Se även

  5. The Supreme Court Building, located at One First Street, NE, in Washington, DC, is the permanent home of the Court. Completed in 1935, the Building is open to the public Monday–Friday, 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. and is closed on weekends and federal holidays. Visitors should be aware that the business of the Court may affect public access to the ...

  6. United States (1908), the Court overruled a federal law which forbade "yellow dog contracts" (contracts that prohibited workers from joining unions). Adkins v. Children's Hospital (1923) involved a decision that a District of Columbia minimum wage law was unconstitutional. In 1925, the Supreme Court made a landmark ruling in Gitlow v.

  7. President Theodore Roosevelt appointed Holmes to the Supreme Court in 1902, where he served for nearly 30 years, retiring at the age of 90. He died in 1935 and is buried at Arlington National Cemetery. Photograph by Harris & Ewing, Collection of the Supreme Court of the United States. Click on the arrows or dots to see the first photograph.