The Capitol Building, at 410 Asylum Street in Hartford, was built in 1926 as a retail and office block, a primary tenant being the newly chartered Capitol National Bank and Trust. The neo-Classical Revival structure was built by two partners, Joseph Ferrigno and Thomas Perrone and was designed by Thomas W. Lamb. Left vacant in the fall of 2007, the building was in danger of being demolished for a parking lot. City officials and preservationists successfully worked to have the Capitol Building listed on the National Register of Historic Places. Capitol Center, a group headed by Milton and Betty Ruth Hollander of Stamford, then donated the building to Common Ground, a New York-based nonprofit developer. Now known as the Hollander, the building has been converted into mixed-income apartments.

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Capitol Building (1926)

2 thoughts on “Capitol Building (1926)

  • September 1, 2012 at 6:19 pm
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    I would love it if you could find some information on 11 Asylum Street. I am the leasing agent for the property and I would love to know more about the history of the building.

  • September 2, 2012 at 1:19 am
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    I believe that’s the same building as 811 Main Street (with Burger King). If so, its the Corning Building, built in 1929, which replaced an earlier Corning Building built in the 1870s.

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