The Paris City Hall building, located on the banks of the Seine, north of Notre Dame in the centre of Paris, was rebuilt after the original building was burned down in May 1871 and completed by Baruch and De Pert in 1882. This building was once a major political venue in France, the center of major historical events during the Middle Ages, the Bourgeois Revolution and the Paris Commune in 1871. It is a famous Renaissance-style building in France. Located on the north bank of the Seine in Paris city. Designed by famous Italian architect Baugador, construction began in 1533, named Bocador, and built in 1628. Before 1803, the square of the Paris City Hall was called "Beach Square"; in 1871, it was burned during the uprising of the Paris Commune; and it was not until 1882 that the new Paris City Hall was restored. The restored shape basically maintained the Renaissance style, and the interior decoration had 19th century artistic characteristics. The City Hall building has many benchtop structures with flat-topped pyramid-shaped roofs and 136 statues on the walls of the building, all of France's celebrities.