Francis Carney built and may have designed Ouray's one-story brick and stone town hall with a basement jail. The following year he
Following a 1950 fire, the city hall was rebuilt as a hideous stucco lump with an unwieldy metal tower adorned by a siren, antenna, bells, and a grim-looking Christmas star outlined in light bulbs. In 1989 citizens raised $110,000 to restore the city hall to respectability. The Walsh Library, with its golden oak furnishings and fine mining and natural history book collection, has been moved downstairs. The front facade, with a granite base and brick above, has been revived with the help of precast stone trim to match the original granite and sandstone. To minimize maintenance, anodized gold aluminum was used to sheathe the hexagonal dome and Fypon, a molded plastic, for the pilasters, pediment, brackets, and urn finials on the gold-colored dome. The synthetic tower could not support the brass bell that Walsh gave the town; it had to be mounted on a new pedestal in front of the building.