![](/sites/default/files/pictures/full/no-image-360.png)
Overstreet’s International Style design, published in Architectural Record (October 1951), emphasizes horizontality with alternating bands of smooth brick and concrete walls and steel-framed windows, modest entrances, and a flat roof. A concrete stringcourse that runs below the windows of the two-story section ties into the roof of the one-story section, unifying both. The building was one of scores built around the state under the 1946 Hill-Burton Act, which established a federal-state partnership to launch public health programs in every county in the nation.