The post office was built of granite and stone in the
PWA Moderne Art Deco style at the cost of $4.5 million or about $64 million in 2006 USD. Léon Eugène Arnal, the chief designer for the architects Magney & Tusler, designed the building. Between 1885 and 1946, Magney & Tusler designed the post office, and designed or co-designed the
Foshay Tower downtown, the
Calhoun Beach Club on
Bde Maka Ska, the Lehmann Center on
Lake Street, the
Young-Quinlan Department Store on the
Nicollet Mall and the former home of Teener's Theatrical costume and props store on
Hennepin Avenue among other buildings in Minneapolis. The firm was later known as Setter, Leach & Lindstrom, acquired by
Leo A. Daly in 2003. The main building is long. Its interior is unchanged and postal customers still utilize its original
bronze teller cages and fixtures, marble
terrazzo floor and sandstone walls. Perhaps the longest light fixture in the world, a 350-foot (107 m), 16-ton (16256.8 kg) bronze chandelier runs the length of the
lobby, originally designed to regulate temperature. Peepholes were installed in the corridors so that inspectors could protect the mail and observe employees. The main building contained a three-room suite paneled in
walnut for the postmaster,
recreation rooms and a hospital unit for employees as well as a
rifle range in the basement. at night, seen from under the
Hennepin Avenue Bridge ==References==