Exterior Façade to the Plaza de San Francisco The façade is developed with marked horizontality articulated by a precise architectural composition, distributed in five modules. The structure has two floors, surmounted in places by a third, covered with Plateresque reliefs. These vibrant sculptural carvings include Florentine
grotesques; heraldic shields; emblems alluding to justice, harmony and good government; and representations of characters linked to the city, such as
Hercules,
Julius Caesar (who created the first Cabildo), and the Emperor Charles V (who made Seville one of the capitals of his empire). The carving was carried out by artists from many different places, including Juan de Begines,
Diego Guillén Ferrant, Hernando de la Teja, Pedro de Pamanes, Pedro de Guadalupe and Toribio de Liébana. The arcade that at the time gave way to the convent of San Francisco, and that currently communicates with the
Plaza Nueva, was built under the direction of Juan Sánchez, the successor to Diego de Riaño, who supervised the work between 1535 and 1540.
Main façade to Plaza Nueva The main façade facing Plaza Nueva was completed in 1867, executed by
Demetrio de los Ríos and
Balbino Marrón.
Interior Ground floor On the ground floor are located the following: • Apeadero (access to the building), a rectangular room parallel to the façade on the Plaza de San Francisco, with hybrid elements between the Gothic and the Plateresque Renaissance. • Antecabildo, with the staircase, which is divided into two sections, one with an almost flat vault and the other covered by a dome, both executed by Juan Sánchez. • Cabildo bajo or lower chapter house, with a magnificent
vault with coffers in which are sculpted images of kings. The hall is covered by a double row of benches; the walls have a frieze with medallions and grotesques. • Chamber of the Court, next to the arch; it does not communicate with the aforementioned sections. File:Apeadero del Ayuntamiento de Sevilla.JPG|Apeadero, formerly where those who entered dismounted their horses File:Interior del Ayuntamiento de Sevilla.jpg|Main staircase File:Techo de la Sala Capitular Baja.JPG|Roof of the lower chapter house, which shows the monarchs of the Hispanic kingdoms up to Carlos V File:Relieves en Sala Capitular Baja.JPG|Reliefs in the lower chapter house. Shield of Carlos V flanked by Hercules and Julius Caesar. On one side is the cross of Burgundy and on the other the columns of Hercules. File:Relieves en la Sala Capitular Baja 2.JPG|Reliefs in the lower chapter house of the Seville City Hall, where the virtues that should govern the public are represented. Justice is in the center.
First floor The staircase leads to the lobby on the top floor, where the following are located: • Library, from which one can access the upper chapter house. • Upper chapter house, covered in a coffered wood
alfarje. Some of the most important municipal paintings are on display here, such as the
Immaculate Conception and the
Portrait of Friar Pedro de Oña by
Francisco de Zurbarán and
The Procession of Santa Clara and
The Defeat of the Saracens by
Juan de Valdés Leal. • Columbus Hall, also known as the Bourbon hall, where a series of royal portraits can be found. Here the municipal plenaries have been celebrated since 2008. • Gala dining room, with a gallery of portraits of characters related to the city. • Archive. Techo de la Sala de Gobierno.JPG|Roof of Upper chapter house Sala de Montpensier.JPG|Former gala dining room Salón Colón del Ayuntamiento de Sevilla.JPG|Columbus hall ==References==