The first professional architect and engineer to work in America, Latrobe modified Thornton's plan for the south wing to include space for offices and committee rooms he also introduced alterations to simplify the construction work. To oversee the renewed construction effort, Benjamin Henry Latrobe was appointed architect. A year earlier, the office of the commissioners had been abolished and replaced by a Superintendent of the City of Washington. In 1803, Congress allocated funds to resume construction. Even so, some third-floor rooms were still unfinished when the Congress, the Supreme Court, the Library of Congress, and the courts of the District of Columbia occupied the U.S. By August 1796 the commissioners were forced to focus the entire work effort on the building's north wing so that it at least could be ready for government occupancy as scheduled. Hallet (an entrant in the earlier competition) and George Hadfield were eventually dismissed by the Commissioners because of inappropriate design changes that they tried to impose James Hoban, the architect of the White House, saw the first phase of the project through to completion.Ĭonstruction was a laborious and time-consuming process: the sandstone used for the building had to be ferried on boats from the quarries at Aquia, Virginia workers had to be induced to leave their homes to come to the relative wilderness of Capitol Hill and funding was inadequate. Work progressed under the direction of three architects in succession. Capitol in the building's southeast corner on September 18, 1793, with Masonic ceremonies. President Washington laid the cornerstone of the U.S. President Washington commended the plan for its "grandeur, simplicity and convenience," and on April 5, 1793, it was accepted by the commissioners Washington gave his formal approval on July 25. The central section, which was topped by a low dome, was to be flanked on the north and south by two rectangular wings (one for the Senate and one for the House of Representatives).
Thornton's plan depicted a building composed of three sections. William Thornton, a Scottish-trained physician living in Tortola, British West Indies, requesting an opportunity to present a plan even though the competition had closed.
None of the 17 plans submitted, however, were wholly satisfactory. In March of that year the commissioners announced a competition, suggested by Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, that would award $500 and a city lot to whoever produced "the most approved plan" for the U.S. However, he refused to produce any drawings for the building, claiming that he carried the design "in his head" this fact and his refusal to consider himself subject to the commissioners' authority led to his dismissal in 1792. Capitol Building and to supervise its construction. The site was, in L'Enfant's words, "a pedestal waiting for a monument." He located the Capitol at the elevated east end of the Mall, on the brow of what was then called Jenkins' Hill. The commissioners, in turn, hired the French engineer Pierre Charles L'Enfant to plan the new city of Washington. He also selected three commissioners to survey the site and oversee the design and construction of the capital city and its government buildings.
In accordance with the "Residence Act" passed by Congress in 1790, President George Washington in 1791 selected the area that is now the District of Columbia from land ceded by Maryland.