Hart Senate Office Building

The Hart Senate Office Building, the third U.S. Senate office building, was built in the 1970s. First occupied in November 1982, the Hart Building is the largest of the Senate office buildings. It is named for Philip A. Hart, who served 18 years as a senator from Michigan.

Read more about Hart Senate Office Building:  Design and Construction, Structure, Atrium, Anthrax Attack, Senators With Hart Offices (112th Congress), Committee Offices Located Inside Hart Senate Office Building

Famous quotes containing the words office building, hart, senate, office and/or building:

    There’s something about the dead silence of an office building at night. Not quite real. The traffic down below is something that didn’t have anything to do with me.
    John Paxton (1911–1985)

    Miss Wales: But just let one objectionable one get in here ...
    Phil Green: Now just a minute. What do you mean by “objectionable?”
    Miss Wales: Loud and too much rouge.
    —Moss Hart (1904–1961)

    Like Cato, give his little Senate laws,
    And sit attentive to his own applause.
    Alexander Pope (1688–1744)

    We have two kinds of “conference.” One is that to which the office boy refers when he tells the applicant for a job that Mr. Blevitch is “in conference.” This means that Mr. Blevitch is in good health and reading the paper, but otherwise unoccupied. The other type of “conference” is bona fide in so far as it implies that three or four men are talking together in one room, and don’t want to be disturbed.
    Robert Benchley (1889–1945)

    Little Bill Daggett: I don’t deserve this. To die like this. I was building a house.
    Will Munny: Deserve’s got nothing to do with it.
    David Webb Peoples, screenwriter. Little Bill Daggett (Gene Hackman)