Address: 40 S Gay St, Baltimore, MD 21202, USA
Phone: +14109622666
Sunday: Closed
Monday: 8AM–5PM
Tuesday: 8AM–5PM
Wednesday: 8AM–5PM
Thursday: 8AM–5PM
Friday: 8AM–5PM
Saturday: Closed
Spooks
I really don’t know anything about this place, as I was merely just driving by. The building is gorgeous in architecture. I would’ve loved to have the chance to go inside!
Fz All
Hard to believe someone would leave one star rating for this place. The employees at CBP office are extremely helpful and go an extra mile to help the customers. One needs to understand, they are working with limited capacity and what they have so don't expect Starbucks service. We have to drive 2 hrs approx. each way to submit the paperwork and things get done as expected especially when a long entry form is submitted like we do all the time.
Karen Williams
If you ever get the opportunity to visit this building, you simply MUST take it. From The National Register website: The United States Custom House in Baltimore is an exceptionally distinguished example of Beaux-Arts architecture. Noteworthy for its handsome design, suave proportions, superb workmanship, and famous ceiling painting, the Baltimore Custom House was built from 1903 through late 1907 from plans by Hornblower and Marshall, a Washington, D.C. firm. The Custom House is not only a particularly refined and subtly restrained design, it is also a fine exemplar of the integral blending of art and architecture that flourished briefly in America around the turn of the 20th century. The ceiling of the Call Room, located in the pavilion, was painted by Francis Davis Millet (1846-1912), and is generally acknowledged to be the masterpiece of that important American artist. Millet’s decorative program for the Call Room represents not only an aesthetic success of major significance in the history of American mural painting, but also a carefully researched and accurately depicted visual history of the Evolution of Navigation. Ironically, Millet, who passionately loved ships, perished in the Titanic disaster in 1912. The Custom House is unaltered, except for the enclosure of the majestic staircases and lobby well, and magnificently illustrates the finest workmanship and building materials of its era. It stands on the site of Latrobe’s earlier Custom House and withstood the ravages of the Great Baltimore Fire of 1904. It has served as Baltimore’s Custom House from December 2, 1907 until 1953. Since that time Selective Service personnel have occupied the building.
Lâm Bảo
I don't know.
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I do not know. There is a customs office there but I don't know their function.
No.
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