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[[Image:Somersetcollection-3.JPG|thumb|200px|right|[[Somerset Collection]] in the [[Metro Detroit]] suburb of Troy]]
[[File:Comericatower.jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|[[One Detroit Center]] by [[John Burgee]] and [[Philip Johnson|Philip C. Johnson]].]]
The architecture of metropolitan [[Detroit, Michigan]] continues to garner the attention of architects and preservationists alike. Detroit maintains an active community of professionals committed to the city's architectural legacy and its future development recognizing the status of Detroit's architecture as a treasure trove of [[National Historic Landmarks]].<ref>[http://www.cityscapedetroit.org/ Cityscape Detroit]</ref> In 2005, many of [[Detroit]]'s skyscrapers and buildings were placed on the [[National Trust for Historic Preservation]]'s list of America's most endangered landmarks.<ref>[http://wsupress.wayne.edu/turtle/sharoffac/sharoffb.html Publisher review of ''American City: Detroit Architecture'']</ref> The past and present come together in Detroit's waterfront skyline which shows a variety of architectural styles. The city's historic 1920's skyscrapers blend along side the [[Post-modern architecture|post modern]] neogothic spires of the [[Comerica Tower]] and gleaming towers of the [[Renaissance Center]] to form the city's marque. [[Metro Detroit]] suburbs are among the most affluent in the nation, with contemporary estates and [[gilded age]] mansions.


The '''architecture of metropolitan Detroit''' continues to attract the attention of architects and preservationists alike.<ref name="Aryamonti">{{cite journal|author=Aryamonti, Deborah Chatr|year=2006|url=http://ccat.sas.upenn.edu/bmcr/2006/2006-10-43.html|title=Review of Detroit and Rome: building on the past|journal=Bryn Mawr Classical Review |access-date=November 24, 2007|publisher=Bryn Mawr Classical Review 2006.10.43}}</ref><ref>Detroit News (November 6, 2005).[http://www.modeldmedia.com/inthenews/rome.aspx Detroit, ancient Rome share past.]''Model D Media''. Retrieved on August 12, 2008.</ref> With one of the world's recognizable skylines, [[Detroit]]'s waterfront panorama shows a variety of architectural styles. The [[Post-modern architecture|post-modern]] neogothic [[spire]]s of [[One Detroit Center]] refer to designs of the city's historic [[Art Deco]] skyscrapers.<ref name=DetArch>{{Cite book | author= Sharoff, Robert | title=American City: Detroit Architecture| publisher=Wayne State University Press| year=2005| isbn=0-8143-3270-6| author-link= Robert Sharoff}}</ref> Together with the [[Renaissance Center]], they form the city's distinctive skyline.
==History==
[[Image:Wayne County Bldg Detroit MI USA.JPG|left|thumb|200px|[[Wayne County Building]] from Monroe Street.]]
[[image:DIAhall2.jpg|thumb|left|200px|[[Detroit Institute of Arts]]]]
[[Image:Fisher Building, Detroit.jpg|left|thumb|200px|The [[Fisher Building]] along with [[Cadillac Place]] are [[National Historic Landmark]]s in the City's [[New Center]] area.]]


Detroit's architecture is recognized as being among the finest in the U.S. Detroit has one of the largest surviving collections of late-19th- and early-20th-century buildings in the U.S.<ref name=DetArch/> Because of the city's economic difficulties, the [[National Trust for Historic Preservation]] has listed many of [[Detroit]]'s skyscrapers and buildings as some of America's most endangered landmarks.<ref>[http://wsupress.wayne.edu/turtle/sharoffac/sharoffb.html Publisher review of ''American City: Detroit Architecture''] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716201247/http://wsupress.wayne.edu/turtle/sharoffac/sharoffb.html |date=2011-07-16 }}. Retrieved on November 24, 2007.</ref>
Detroit was once called the ''Paris of the West'' for its architecture. Founded in 1701, Detroit is the second oldest [[parish]] in the United States. Consequently, the region's many churches are among [[Metro Detroit]]'s architectural treasures. St. Anne's Church in Detroit is one of the most significant. Other architecturally significant churches include Old St. Mary's Church in Greektown and St. John's Episcopal Church, an [[American Civil War]] era church on Woodward Avenue across from the nation's first [[Fox Theatre (Detroit)|Fox Theater]]. The work of noted sculptor [[Corrado Parducci]] can be seen on many of Detroit's buildings and churches including the ornate facade of St. Aloysius Church. The Detroit Historical Society at the Detroit Historical Museum provides information on tours of the city's many historic churches.


The suburbs contain some significant [[contemporary architecture]] and several historic estates.<ref name=1980DetroitAIA>{{Cite book |author=Meyer, Katherine Mattingly |author2=Martin C.P. McElroy | title= Detroit Architecture A.I.A. Guide Revised Edition| year= 1980| publisher= Wayne State University Press| isbn= 0-8143-1651-4| url= https://archive.org/details/detroitarchitect0000unse}}</ref><ref name=AIADetroit>{{Cite book |author1=Hill, Eric J. |author2=John Gallagher | title= AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture|url=https://archive.org/details/aiadetroitameric0000hill |url-access=registration | year=2002 | publisher= Wayne State University Press |isbn=978-0-8143-3120-0 }}</ref>
After the fire of 1805, Fr. [[Gabriel Richard]] had said, ''"Speramus meliora; resurget cineribus,"'' meaning "We hope for better things; it will arise from the ashes" which became the city's offical motto. [[Grand Circus Park]], in the heart of the city's [[Detroit Theatre District|theater district]], exemplifies Judge [[Augustus B. Woodward]]'s design for Detroit which gave it monumental radial avenues in [[baroque]] style with traffic circles similar to [[Pierre Charles L'Enfant]]'s design for [[Washington, DC]].<ref>Vivian M. Baulch[http://info.detnews.com/history/story/index.cfm?id=205&category=locations Woodward Avenue, Detroit's Grand old "Main Street"] Rearview Mirror, ''The Detroit News''</ref> [[Compuware World Headquarters]] overlooks the reconstructed traffic cicle surrounding [[Campus Martius Park]] with the historic Soldiers' and Sailors' monument of the [[American Civil War]].


==Skyscrapers==
John and Arthur Scott designed the [[Wayne County Building]] ([[1897]]) in downtown Detroit which was the most extravagant building in Michigan at the turn of the century. Apparently, expense was not a factor in construction of its lavish design. It may be America's finest example of Roman [[Baroque]] blended with a [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beux-Arts architectural]] style. [[Albert Kahn]], often called the "architect of Detroit," originally worked for architect John Scott. A building of architectual importance, the old [[Detroit City Hall]] ([[1861]]) was demolished in 1961.
{{wide image|Detroit Night Skyline.JPG|800px|align-cap=center|''Skyline along the [[Detroit International Riverfront]]''}}
[[File:DimeBuildingDetroit.jpg|thumb|200px|Neoclassical [[Chrysler House]] (1912) by [[Daniel Burnham]] in the [[Detroit Financial District]]]]
In the 1880s, [[Gilded Age]] architects such as [[Wilson Eyre]]<ref>{{Cite web |title=Wilson Eyre, Jr. |url=https://archives.upenn.edu/exhibits/penn-people/biography/wilson-eyre-jr/ |access-date=2023-04-18 |website=University Archives and Records Center |language=en}}</ref> [[Gordon Lloyd]], [[Harry J. Rill architect|Harry J. Rill]], [[Henry T. Brush|Henry T Brush]], [[Julius Hess architect|Julius Hess]], [[John V Smith painter|John V Smith]], [[Elijah E. Myers|Elijah E Myers]], [[Alamon C Varney]], [[Mortimer L Smith]], [[Peter Dederich]], [[Joseph e MiIls]] and the firms [[Donaldson & Meier]], [[Malcomson & Higginbotham]] and [[George D. Mason|Mason & Rice]] who had designed churches and residences in the most exclusives neighborhoods ([[M-1 (Michigan highway)|Woodward Avenue]], [[Brush Park]], [[East Jefferson Avenue Residential TR|Jefferson Avenue]] and [[M-85 (Michigan highway)|W Fort Street]]), turned their attention to office and commercial buildings. They designed some of Detroit's ornately stone-carved 19th-century tall buildings, many of which are still standing. Eyre<ref>{{Cite web |title=Detroit Club {{!}} Detroit Historical Society |url=https://detroithistorical.org/learn/encyclopedia-of-detroit/detroit-club |access-date=2023-04-18 |website=detroithistorical.org}}</ref> was commissioned to design [https://detroithistorical.org/learn/encyclopedia-of-detroit/detroit-club The Detroit Club] at 712 Cass Ave (1891) Lloyd's [[Romanesque Revival architecture|Romanesque]] six-story iron-framed [[Wright-Kay Building|Wright-Kay]] (1891) at 1500 Woodward Ave and his R. H. Traver Building (1889) at 1211 Woodward are prime examples.<ref name=DetArch/> The Wright-Kay, or Schwankovsky Building, was among the first to have an electric elevator.<ref name=DetArch/> Rill designed the ornate [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] facade of [[Detroit Cornice and Slate Company Building|Detroit Cornice and Slate]] (1897) at 733 Antoine.<ref name=DetArch/> The six-story [[Romanesque revival architecture|Romanesque]] [[Globe Tobacco Building]] (1888) at 407 E. Fort, built by Alexander Chapoton, is another of the city's early surviving commercial buildings. Detroit's Victorian-styled [[Randolph Street Commercial Buildings Historic District|Randolph Street Historic District]] contains some of the city's oldest surviving commercial buildings. The commercial building at 1244 Randolph Street dates from the 1840s, a rare survivor from the [[History of the United States (1789–1849)|Antebellum]] period. Most of Detroit's expansion and development took place later.<ref name="state">[http://www.mcgi.state.mi.us/hso/sites/16068.htm Randolph Street Commercial Buildings Historic District] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110606151854/http://www.mcgi.state.mi.us/hso/sites/16068.htm |date=2011-06-06 }} from the state of Michigan, retrieved 01/02/11</ref>


At 12 stories, the steel-framed [[United Way Community Services Building]] (1895), at 1212 Griswold, originally known as the Chamber of Commerce Building, qualifies as Detroit's oldest existing skyscraper.<ref name=AIADetroit/><ref name=UnitedWay>{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20121014214631/http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=unitedwaycommunityservicesbuilding-detroit-mi-usa United Way Community Services Building]}}.''Emporis.com''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> The 10-story [[Hammond Building]] (1889), now demolished, is considered the city's first historic skyscraper.<ref name="hammond">{{cite web|url=http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=156803|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20041101014157/http://www.emporis.com/en/wm/bu/?id=156803|archive-date=November 1, 2004|title=Hammond Building|access-date=2007-11-05|url-status=usurped|publisher=Emporis.com}}</ref> [[The Qube (Detroit)|The Qube]] in the [[Detroit Financial District]] was developed on the Hammond Building site.<ref name="Chase Tower">{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20121004161244/http://www.emporis.com/application/?nav=building&lng=3&id=118534 The Qube]}}. ''Emporis''. Retrieved May 1, 2012.</ref>
Detroit area is home to light houses, yacht clubs, and unique monuments. Examples include the [[Grosse Pointe Yacht Club]] and the Chauncey Hurlbut Memorial Gate at Waterworks Park<ref>[http://detroit1701.org/Hurlbut.htm Chauncey Hurlbut Memorial Gate] Detroit 1701.org</ref>. Detroit is replete with such landmarks. Achitects such as [[Cass Gilbert]] who designed buildings in [[Washington, DC]] also designed the [[Detroit Public Library]], the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]] and the [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]]'s exquisite James Scott Fountain.<ref>[http://detroit1701.org/JamesScott.htm James Scott Fountain] Detroit 1701.org</ref> [[Frederick Olmstead]], landscape architect of New York City's Central Park, designed Detroit's 982 acre [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]] park.


The city has numerous architecturally significant late-19th- and early-20th-century buildings and skyscrapers.<ref name=DetArch/> [[Daniel Burnham]], [[Louis Kamper]], and the [[Smith Hinchman & Grylls]] firm are among the architects who designed some of the city's other important skyscrapers at the turn of the century which endure today. Burnham's three remaining Detroit skyscraper designs are the [[Neoclassical architecture|Neo-Classical]] styled [[Chrysler House]] (1912) — renovated in 2002, and the [[Neo-Renaissance]] [[David Whitney Building|Whitney]] (1915) and [[Ford Building (Detroit)|Ford]] (1909) buildings. Among their early projects, Smith Hinchman & Grylls designed the [[Gothic revival architecture|Neo-Gothic]] [[Fyfe Building|R.H. Fyfe Building]] (1919) at Woodward and Adams, now converted to a residential high-rise.<ref name=Ferry>Ferry, W. Hawkins, ''The Buildings of Detroit: A History'', Wayne State University Press, Detroit, Michigan, 1968</ref>
[[Image:MeadowBrookHall.jpg|thumbnail|200px|[[Meadow Brook Hall]] aerial photo]]
The mansions of metropolitan Detroit are among the nation's grandest estates. [[Meadow Brook Hall]], the 80,000 ft² mansion of Matilda Dodge Wilson, at 480 South Adams Rd. in the suburb of [[Rochester Hills, MI|Rochester Hills]], is the 4th largest in the United States. The suburbs of [[Bloomfield Hills, MI|Bloomfield Hills]] and [[Grosse Pointe, MI|Grosse Pointe]] are replete with mansions. [[Albert Kahn]] designed [[Cranbrook Educational Community|Cranbrook]] House in [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]] and the [[Edsel Ford|Edsel]] & Eleanor Ford House at 1100 Lakeshore Dr. in [[Grosse Pointe, Michigan|Grosse Pointe]]. Rose Terrace, the mansion of Anna Dodge, once stood at 2 Lakeshore Dr. in [[Grosse Pointe, MI|Grosse Pointe]]. Designed by [[Horace Trumbauer]] as a [[Louis XV]] styled [[château]], Rose Terrace was an enlarged version of the firm's Miramar in [[Newport, RI]]. A developer gave the highest bid for Rose Terrace and demolished in it in 1976 to create an upscale neighborhood which gave a renewed sense of urgency to preservationists. <ref> Patricia Zacharias. [http://info.detnews.com/history/story/index.cfm?id=97&category=locations Mrs. Dodge and the Regal Rose Terrace] Rearview Mirror, ''The Detroit News''</ref> The Dodge Collection from Rose Terrace may be viewed at the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]]. The [[Russell A. Alger]] House, at 32 Lakeshore Dr., serves as the [[Grosse Pointe]] War Memorial.<ref>[http://www.warmemorial.org/ Grosse Pointe War Memorial, the Russell A. Alger Mansion] </ref>


Detroit has preserved numerous historic buildings that are listed on the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. The city has many historic structures needing restoration. The most significant of these is the [[Michigan Central Station]] (1913) by [[Warren & Wetmore]] and [[Reed & Stem]]; it was bought by Ford in 2018 and is to be the center of a major multi-use development.
In 1923, [[Albert Kahn]] designed what is now [[Cadillac Place]] for [[General Motors]] which was the largest office building in the world when it opened after the [[Pentagon]]. In 1927, the seven [[Fisher Body|Fisher brothers]] who owned [[Fisher Body]] essentially gave architect [[Albert Kahn]] an blank check to design and build the most "beautiful build the most beautiful building in the world."<ref>Kay Houston and Linda Culpepper (2007).[http://info.detnews.com/history/story/index.cfm?id=32&category=locations The beautiful building in the world] Rearview Mirror, ''The Detroit News''</ref> This became Detroit's famous [[Fisher Building]] with its detailed work and opulent lobby which has been called the city's "largest art object."<ref>Rebecca Mazzei (11-30-2005).[http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=8550 ''Still Standing''] Metro Times
</ref> The [[Fisher Building]] and [[Cadillac Place]] are among the many [[National Historic Landmarks]] in [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]].


[[File:Fisher Building Detroit.jpg|thumb|200px|left|[[Fisher Building]] (pictured) and nearby [[Cadillac Place]] are designated [[List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan|National Historic Landmark]]s in the City's [[New Center]] area, both were designed by [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]].]]
[[Image:Guardianinterior.jpg|thumb|[[Guardian Building]]'s lavish interior]]
[[File:Guardianinterior.jpg|thumb|200px|right|The [[Guardian Building]], a [[list of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan|National Historic Landmark]] by [[Wirt Rowland]].]]
Detroit's skyscrapers show less influence by the [[Chicago school (architecture)|Chicago school]] of architecture and are more eastern in character. Detroit's architectural legacy is rich in [[Art Deco]] style. Examples of [[Art Deco]] in Detroit include [[Wirt C. Rowland]]'s [[Guardian Building]], the [[Albert Kahn]]'s [[Fisher Building]], and the [[David Stott Building]]. [[Comerica Tower]] with is neogothic [[spire]]s is a fine example of [[Post-modern architecture|post modern architecture]] by noted architects [[Philip Johnson]] and [[John Burgee]].
During the [[Roaring Twenties]], Detroit's historic skyline arose.<ref name=GuardianBuilding>Zacharias, Pat (March 9, 2001). [http://blogs.detroitnews.com/history/2001/03/09/guardian-building-has-long-been-the-crown-jewel-in-detroit-skyline/ Guardian Building has long been the crown jewel in the Detroit skyline]. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on April 12, 2014.</ref> [[Louis Kamper]] designed the ornate [[Renaissance Revival architecture|Neo-Renaissance]] styled [[Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel|Book-Cadillac Hotel]] (1924), which was the world's tallest hotel when it opened.


The city's architectural legacy is rich in [[Art Deco]] style, with buildings constructed during the boom years of the 1920s. [[Joseph Lowthian Hudson|Joseph L. Hudson]], the department store magnate, had commissioned architect [[Hugh Ferriss]] to produce a series of renderings depicting new buildings for the city skyline.<ref name=Tottis>{{Cite book | author=Tottis, James W. | title=The Guardian Building: Cathedral of Finance | publisher=Wayne State University Press | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-8143-3385-3 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/guardianbuilding0000tott }}</ref> [[J. L. Hudson Department Store and Addition|Hudson's Department Store]] window displayed the Ferriss drawings to commemorate its fiftieth anniversary, and to celebrate the opening in 1927 of a new building for the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]], a [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]], [[Italian Renaissance]]-styled structure.<ref name=Tottis/> Other architects created designs inspired by the [[Hugh Ferriss]] concepts, which included the [[Guardian Building]], the [[David Stott Building]], the J.L Hudson Building, and others.<ref name=Ferry/><ref name=Tottis/>
Detroit's architectural heritage includes many other famous architects. [[Frank Lloyd Wright]] particpated in the initial design for [[Henry Ford]]'s Fairlane Estate in Dearborn. [[Minoru Yamasaki]] had patterned his award winning design for the New York City's former [[World Trade Center]] towers after his design for Detroit's [[One Woodward Avenue]]. [[Eliel Saarinen]] was the architect for the [[Cranbrook Educational Community]] in the [[Metro Detroit]] suburb of [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]]. The work of architectural sculptor [[Corrado Parducci]] can be found on many [[Metro Detroit]] buildings such as the [[Meadowbrook Hall]] mansion, the [[Guardian Building]], the [[Buhl Building]], and the [[Penobscot Building]].


[[Albert Kahn Associates]] designed what is now [[Cadillac Place]] (1923) for [[General Motors]], featuring [[Neo-Classical architecture]]. Kahn, sometimes called the "architect of Detroit", originally worked for John Scott, who designed the [[Wayne County Building]] (1897). It opened as the second-largest office building in the world.<ref name=AIADetroit/>
==Modern highlights==
[[Image:Rencenfromriverwalk.jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|[[Renaissance Center]] from the Riverfront walk.]]
[[Image:Southfield Town Center.jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|[[Southfield Town Center]].]]
===A city within a city===
An indicator of economic strength, the office market in [[Metro Detroit]] is one of the nation's largest, with 147,082,003 ft² of space.<ref>[http://www.colliersmn.com/prod/ccgrd.nsf/publish/737C2B750A56E62D8525720C004ACE46/$File/Q3+06+Detroit+Office.pdf Collier's International Market Report - Detroit, Third Quarter, 2006]</ref> Two noteable examples of [[Metro Detroit]]'s office architecture amidst the competitive office market are the [[Renaissance Center]] and the [[Southfield Town Center]]. Both complexes are an interconnected group of skyscrapers being termed a 'city within a city' or a 'pseudo city'.


The seven [[Fisher Body|Fisher brothers]], who owned the automotive company [[Fisher Body]], essentially gave architect Kahn a blank check to design and build the "most beautiful building in the world."<ref name=FisherBuilding>Houston, Kay and Linda Culpepper (March 20, 2001).[https://archive.today/20130102223240/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=32 The most beautiful building in the world] Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007</ref> This was the [[Fisher Building]] (1927) which, with its detailed work, has been called the city's "largest art object." Its opulent three-story, barrel-vaulted lobby is constructed with forty different kinds of marble.<ref name=FisherBuilding/><ref name=StillStanding>Mazzei, Rebecca (November 30, 2005).[http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=8550 Still Standing]. ''Metro Times''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref><ref name=DetroitInteriors>AIA Detroit Urban Priorities Committee, (January 10, 2006).[http://www.modeldmedia.com/features/lookinside.aspx Top 10 Detroit Interiors].''Model D Media''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> Albert Kahn Associates chief architect for the Fisher Building was [[Joseph Nathaniel French]].<ref name=dfp>{{cite news |title=Joseph N. French, Fairlane Architect |quote=A graduate of the [[Massachusetts Institute of Technology]], he came to Detroit in 1913 to work as an architect on Henry Ford's home, Fairlane. He joined the architectural firm of Albert Kahn Associates in 1914 and retired from that company in 1967. In the meantime he had served as chief architect for the [[Fisher Building]], taught methods of industrial construction in Russia and during World War II, designed installations for the Army and Navy throughout the world. |publisher=[[Detroit Free Press]] |date=March 2, 1975 }}</ref> The Fisher Building and Cadillac Place are among the [[List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan|National Historic Landmarks]] in [[Detroit]] anchoring the city's historic [[New Center, Detroit|New Center]].
The construction of the [[Renaissance Center]] in downtown [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]] marked a new era for the city's architecture. [[Detroit]]'s panoramic skyline would become architecturally renowned. And later, in the 2000's, the city's waterfront would undergo a massive redevelopment. In the 1970's, Detroit Renaissance, chaired by [[Henry Ford II]], commissioned highly regarded architect [[John Portman]] to design an enormous skyscraper complex called the [[Renaissance Center]] in hopes of stemming the tide of [[white flight]] to the suburbs precipitated by court-ordered busing. [[John Portman]] had hoped to halt the exodus. Portman expanded on his earlier design for the [[Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel]] in [[Atlanta, Georgia]] for the [[Renaissance Center]] in [[Detroit, Michigan]] beginning a new popular architectural era for the skyscraper hotel. (See Portman's [[Bonaventure Hotel]] in Los Angelos).


Architect [[Wirt C. Rowland]] played an integral role in crafting the city's historic skyline with his designs for the [[Buhl Building|Buhl]], [[Penobscot Building|Penobscot]], and [[Guardian Building|Guardian]] buildings. Rowland's design for the [[Buhl Building]] (1925) included a [[Gothic Revival]] design, with a blend of [[Romanesque Revival architecture|Romanesque]] accents. Renowned [[Art Deco architecture|Art Deco]] skyscrapers include [[Wirt C. Rowland|Rowland's]] [[Penobscot Building|Penobscot]] (1928) and [[Guardian Building|Guardian]] (1929),<ref name=GuardianBuilding/> and [[John M. Donaldson]]'s [[David Stott Building]] (1929). Architectural [[tile]]s made from [[Pewabic Pottery]] by American [[ceramist]] [[Mary Chase Perry Stratton]] are a prominent feature in the Guardian Building's facade and decor.<ref name=GuardianBuilding/>
Stemming the exodus from the city proved difficult for architectural planners with a growing suburban office market and competition from the nearby [[Southfield Town Center]]. The [[Southfield Town Center]] became easy to recognize with its alluring marque of golden glass skyscapers. Among professionals it was seen as the place to be. The 'city of gold' had attracted tenents and would become competition for the [[Renaissance Center]] as [[Metro Detroit]]'s office market continued its suburban sprawl.


{{Clear}}
Years early, in 1924, Detroit's [[Book-Cadillac Hotel]] had opened as the world's tallest. (A re-developed Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel is set to open in 2008). In 1977, completion of the [[Renaissance Center]] restored the city's mantle; the [[Renaissance Center]]'s central tower opened with the world's tallest hotel skysraper, a flag ship 1298 room [[Westin]] hotel and conference center with the largest rooftop restaurant.


===Tallest buildings===
While asthetically beautiful and secure, critics of [[John Portman]]'s design for the [[Renaissance Center]] flawed its lack of waterfront access and its difficulty for patrons to navigate. Its concrete berms facing Jefferson Avenue were also unpopular with critics. In 1996, [[General Motors]] purchased the complex for its new headquarters. Suggestions to correct criticisms of the original design were incorporated into a $500 million makeover of the complex, including a $100 renovation of the hotel. A new front door Winter Garden provided waterfront access with spectacular views and expanded retail space while construction of a lighted glass walkway (known as the "green ring") provided for ease of navigation circling the interior [[mezzanine]]. The concrete berms were removed and replaced by a pedestrian friendly glass entry way facing Jefferson Avenue.
{{Main|List of tallest buildings in Detroit}}
[[File:DavidStottsitsamongDetroittowers.jpg|200px|thumb|The [[Detroit Financial District]] contains buildings by architect [[Wirt Rowland]] including the [[Penobscot Building|Penobscot]], [[Buhl Building|Buhl]], and [[Guardian Building|Guardian]].]]


{| cellpadding="4" cellspacing="0" style="margin: 0 1em 1em 0; font-size: 90%;"
In 1987, [[Westin]] had moved its flagship [[Detroit]] hotel to the [[Southfield Town Center]]. The [[Southfield Town Center]] grew to 2.2 million ft² of space, adding a 5th tower in 1989. Directly across from the complex is [[Lawrence Technological University]].
|- style="background:#ccc;"
!Rank||Building||Height||Stories||Built||Notes||
|-
|1 || [[Renaissance Center|Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center]] || {{convert|727|ft|m|0}} || 73 || 1977 || <ref name="marriot">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=3523|title=Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|- style="background:#efefef;"
|2 ||[[One Detroit Center]] || {{convert|619|ft|m|0}} || 43 || 1993 || <ref name="comerica">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=525|title=One Detroit Center|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|-
|3 || [[Penobscot Building]] || {{convert|565|ft|m|0}} || 47 || 1928 || <ref name="penobscot">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=935|title=Penobscot Building|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|- style="background:#efefef;"
|T-4 || [[Renaissance Center|Renaissance Center Tower]] 100 || {{convert|522|ft|m|0}} || 39 || 1977 || <ref name="ren100">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=845|title=Renaissance Center Tower 100|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|-
|T-4 || Renaissance Center Tower 200 || {{convert|522|ft|m|0}} || 39 || 1977 || <ref name="ren200">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=844|title=Renaissance Center Tower 200|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|- style="background:#efefef;"
|T-4 || Renaissance Center Tower 300 || {{convert|522|ft|m|0}} || 39 || 1977 || <ref name="ren300">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=843|title=Renaissance Center Tower 300|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|-
|T-4 || Renaissance Center Tower 400 || {{convert|522|ft|m|0}} || 39 || 1977 || <ref name="ren400">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=842|title=Renaissance Center Tower 400|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|- style="background:#efefef;"
|8 || [[Guardian Building]] || {{convert|496|ft|m|0}} || 40 || 1929 || <ref name="guardian">{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=1229|title=Guardian Building|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|-
|9 || [[Book Tower]] || {{convert|475|ft|m|0}} || 38 || 1926 || <ref>{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=1416|title=Book Tower|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|- style="background:#efefef;"
|10 || [[150 West Jefferson]] || {{convert|455|ft|m|0}} || 26 || 1989 ||<ref>{{cite web|url=http://skyscraperpage.com/cities/?buildingID=3085|title=150 West Jefferson|access-date=2008-08-05|publisher=SkyscraperPage.com}}</ref>
|}


===Contemporary highlights===
Today, the entire [[Renaissance Center]] complex is owned by [[General Motors]]. The central tower of the [[Renaissance Center]] is occupied by [[Marriott International]]'s largest hotel. Since 1986, the central tower of the Renaissance Center has remained the tallest hotel skyscaper in the [[Western Hemisphere]]. With a renovated [[Renaissance Center]] totaling 5.5 million ft².
The Detroit area also contains prominent skycrapers designed in the [[Modern architecture|Modern]], [[Postmodern architecture|Postmodern]], and [[Modern architecture|Contemporary Modern architectural]] styles.<ref name=DetArch/><ref name=AIADetroit/> With the notable exception of the [[1001 Woodward]] (1965) building, Detroit's skyscrapers show less influence by the [[Chicago school (architecture)|Chicago school]] of architecture and are more eastern in character.<ref name=DetArch/> [[Minoru Yamasaki]] designed Detroit's [[One Woodward Avenue]] (1962) in the Modern architectural style, following it with his similar, award-winning design for New York City's [[World Trade Center (1973-2001)|World Trade Center]] towers (1973-2001).<ref name=Yamasaki>Baulch, Vivian M. (August 14, 1998).[https://archive.today/20130102100346/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=206 "Minoru Yamasaki, world-class architect"]. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> Today, the city's contemporary skyscrapers stand beside restored historic ones. [[One Detroit Center]] (1993) and its neogothic [[spire]]s is considered a fine example of [[Post-modern architecture|post modern architecture]] by architects [[Philip Johnson]] and [[John Burgee]], referring to [[Wirt Rowland]]'s historic [[Penobscot Building]] (1928), both located in the heart of the [[Detroit Financial District|Financial District]]'s wireless Internet zone.<ref name=DetArch/> <!-- Old does not blend with new - old was built first - new refers to it -->[[File:Techsmith montage capture Southfield MI.jpg|200px|right]]
The city, together with the Detroit Riverfront Conservancy, untook another $500 million project along the Detroit International Riverfront to construct a 3 mile riverfront promenade park along the east river from [[Hart Plaza]] to the [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]] bridge. Detroit Wayne County Port Authority added a state of the art cruise ship dock to [[Hart Plaza]] 2005. A 2 mile extension along the west river will take the riverfront promenade park from [[Hart Plaza]] to the [[Ambassador Bridge]] for a total of 5 miles of parkway from bridge to bridge. The city's waterfront has gained international notoriety. The state of Michigan constructed the first ever urban state park, the [[Tri-Centennial State Park]] and Harbor. Downtown Detroit has new stadiums and newly configured roads and freeways.


The office market in [[Metro Detroit]] is one of the nation's largest. with {{convert|147.88|e6sqft|m2|sp=us}}.<ref name=Colliers>[https://web.archive.org/web/20061019022718/http://www.colliersmn.com/prod/cclod.nsf/City/CCA7552CDCD47A70852571AB006E5FFD?OpenDocument Metro Detroit Office Market report]. ''Colliers International''. Retrieved on August 16, 2008.</ref> The [[Renaissance Center]], with {{convert|5.552|e6sqft|m2}}, and the [[Southfield Town Center]], with {{convert|2.2|e6sqft|m2|-2}}, are large-scale examples of Contemporary Modern skyscraper complexes. Each mixed-use complex is an interconnected group of skyscrapers termed a "city within a city."
[[File:RenCen.JPG|thumb|left|200px|The [[Renaissance Center]] by [[John Portman]] on the [[Detroit International Riverfront|International Riverfront]], GM Wintergarden by [[Skidmore, Owings & Merrill]].]]
The construction of the [[Renaissance Center]] in Downtown [[Detroit]] marked a new era for the city's architecture. In the 1970s, Detroit Renaissance, chaired by [[Henry Ford II]], commissioned highly regarded architect [[John Portman]] to design an enormous skyscraper complex called the [[Renaissance Center]] in hopes of increasing the attraction of city living for middle and upper-class residents. Some left because of court-ordered busing to integrate schools that were ''de facto'' segregated based on residential patterns. Portman had hoped to halt the exodus.


Portman expanded on his earlier design for the [[Westin Peachtree Plaza Hotel|Peachtree Plaza Hotel]] in [[Atlanta]] when designing the [[Renaissance Center]] in [[Detroit]]. He contributed to the popularity of the skyscraper hotel.<ref name="DetArch"/> (See Portman's [[Bonaventure Hotel]] in [[Los Angeles]]). In the ensuing decades, the Renaissance Center expanded to join the city's restored historic art deco skyscrapers in forming the current skyline.
===Metro area===


In 1924, Detroit's [[Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel|Book-Cadillac]] opened as the world's tallest hotel (it is now a re-developed [[Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel]]). Completion of the first phase of the [[Renaissance Center]] in 1977 restored this distinction to the city. The Renaissance Center's central tower opened with a flagship hotel, the tallest in the world,<ref name=tallesthotel>{{usurped|1=[https://web.archive.org/web/20110806145316/http://www.emporis.com/en/bu/sk/st/tp/ty/ho/ Official World's 100 Tallest High Rise Buildings (Hotel Use)]}}. ''Emporis.com''. Retrieved on May 30, 2008.</ref> and a conference center with the world's largest rooftop restaurant. As of 2012 the hotel is [[Marriott International]]'s largest in the United States, with 1,298 rooms. Though it is no longer the world's tallest hotel, it remains the [[List of tallest hotels in the world|tallest all-hotel skyscraper]] in the [[Western Hemisphere]].<ref name=tallesthotel/> The [[Westin]] hotel and conference center at the [[Southfield Town Center]] is across from [[Lawrence Technological University]].
A third leg in the [[Metro Detroit]] area is [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]], headquarters to the [[Ford Motor Company]]. Dearborn's 14 story [[Hyatt Regency Dearborn| Hyatt Regency]] (1976) with its arched curved design is among the region's finest; it is one of the largest in the Hyatt chain with 772 rooms. Other [[Metro Detroit]] suburbs with major office buildings include [[Troy, Michigan|Troy]] with its [[Top of Troy]] and [[Somerset Collection]]. [[Auburn Hills, Michigan|Auburn Hills]] is the location of [[DaimlerChrysler]]'s American headquarters. Ann Arbor's architectural highlights include the [[University of Michigan Law School]] with its stained glass windows and [[Ivy League]] appearance. Detroit's historic skyscapers such as the [[Penobscot Building]] have state of the art technology in the heart of the city's wireless internet zone.

Stemming the flight of capital from the city proved difficult, however, as the suburban office market continued to grow, notably in Southfield and Troy. The [[Southfield Town Center]], constructed from 1975 to 1989, became easy to recognize with its marque of five golden glass skyscrapers. It attracted tenants in competition with the [[Renaissance Center]] as [[Metro Detroit]]'s office market continued its suburban expansion.

Portman designed the Renaissance Center with interior spaces, yet secure. It quickly became a symbol of the city of Detroit. In 1996, the [[Renaissance Center]]'s design changed when [[General Motors]] purchased the entire complex for its new headquarters. The $500-million makeover of the complex included a $100-million renovation of the hotel.<ref name=makeover>Mercer, Tenisha (October 19, 2005).[http://www.detnews.com/2005/business/0510/19/C06-353512.htm GM's RenCen renovation attracts new business back]. ''Detroit News''. Retrieved on July 24, 2007.</ref> A new front door Wintergarden (2003) provides waterfront views and expanded retail space. Prior to completion of its renovation in 2003, some had criticized its circular corridors as confusing. Construction of a lighted glass walkway now facilitates ease of navigation encircling the interior [[Mezzanine (architecture)|mezzanine]]. A pedestrian-friendly glass entry way has replaced the former concrete berms along Jefferson Avenue.

<!-- Deleted image removed: [[File:Somersetcollection-3.JPG|thumb|200px|left|[[Somerset Collection]] in the suburb of [[Troy, Michigan|Troy]] by JPRA Architects.]] -->
The city, together with the Riverfront Conservancy, undertook another major project planned at $559-million along the Detroit International Riverfront to construct a three-mile (5&nbsp;km) riverfront promenade park along the east river from [[Philip A. Hart Plaza|Hart Plaza]] and the [[Renaissance Center]] to the [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]] bridge.<ref>Detroit News Editorial (December 13, 2002). At Last, Sensible Dream for Detroit's Riverfront. ''Detroit News''.</ref> Detroit Wayne County Port Authority added the Dock of Detroit (2005), a state of the art cruise ship dock on Hart Plaza near the Renaissance Center. A two-mile (3&nbsp;km) extension along the west river will take the riverfront promenade park from Hart Plaza to the [[Ambassador Bridge]] (1929) for a total of five miles (8&nbsp;km) of parkway from bridge to bridge. [[Michigan]] constructed its first urban state park, the [[William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor]] (2003). Three contemporary high-rise casino resort hotels in Detroit include the [[MGM Grand Detroit]] (2007) by [[SmithGroup]], [[Motor City Casino]] (2007), and the 30-story [[Hollywood Casino at Greektown|Hollywood Casino]] (2009). A fourth contemporary high-rise casino resort hotel, [[Caesars Windsor]] (1998/2008), is visible from the International Riverfront.

[[File:HyattRegencyDearborn1.jpg|thumb|200px|Dearborn's [[Adoba Hotel Dearborn Detroit|Adoba Hotel]] by [[Charles Luckman]].]]
Besides the [[Southfield Town Center|Town Center]] skyscrapers, [[Southfield, Michigan|Southfield]]'s [[Modern architecture|modern]] towers include the 26-story [[American Center]] (1975) by the [[SmithGroup]] and One Towne Square (1992) by [[Rossetti architects|Rossetti]] with 21-stories. Other notable centers of commerce in the area are [[Dearborn, Michigan|Dearborn]], [[Troy, Michigan|Troy]], and [[Auburn Hills, Michigan|Auburn Hills]]. Dearborn contains the world headquarters of the [[Ford Motor Company]]. Dearborn's 14-story luxury [[Adoba Hotel Dearborn Detroit|Adoba Hotel]] (1976) with its contemporary arced design by [[Charles Luckman]] is among the region's conference centers, with 772 rooms. [[Rossetti architects|Rossetti]] designed Dearborn's modern Ritz-Carlton Hotel (1988) along with the complementary Fairlane Plaza North and South (1990) as well as the [[Parklane Towers]] (1973). Troy has a large number of office buildings, many of which are situated along the corridor of Big Beaver Road. The tallest of these is the [[Top of Troy]] (1975) building, a 27-story triangular tower. Troy also contains what is generally considered to be the most upscale shopping center in the region, the [[Somerset Collection]].

The suburb of Auburn Hills is home to the 15-story [[Chrysler Headquarters and Technology Center]] with its {{convert|5.3|e6sqft|m2}} on {{convert|504|acre|km2}}.<ref name=techcenter>Priddle, Alisa (May 12, 2009).[http://www.detnews.com/article/20090512/AUTO01/905120346/Chrysler-s-tech-center-called-a--good-asset-?imw=Y Chrysler's tech center called a 'good asset']. ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on June 28, 2009.</ref> [[CRSS Architects]] designed the Chrysler Technology Center (1993) in a cross-axial formation where its elongated [[atrium (architecture)|atrium]] topped concourses converge with an octagonal radiant skylight at its center. The [[SmithGroup]] designed the attached contemporary Chrysler Headquarters (1996) tower in golden glass crowned with the [[pentastar]] emblem. The nearby [[The Palace of Auburn Hills]] (1988) by Rosetti is a sports arena that has served as a prototype for many others of its kind.


===Future development===
===Future development===
{{See also|Economy of metropolitan Detroit}}
In downtown Detroit, there are $1.3 billion in new construction projects.<ref>[http://www.theworldiscoming.com/seethechange.html The world is coming, see the change] Ciy of Detroit Partnership</ref>
[[File:MGM Grand Hotel Detroit.jpg|thumb|200px|[[MGM Grand Detroit]] completed in 2007.]]
Speculative development for Detroit includes a new headquarters in Detroit for [[Quicken Loans]] in order to consolidate its suburban offices. Planning for a major residential and retail development adjacent to the [[Renaissance Center]] in the works. Many residential lofts and high rises are under construction in the [[Metro Detroit]] area.
Between 1996 and 2006, downtown Detroit attracted more than $15 billion in new investment from private and public sectors.<ref name="Marketprofile">The Urban Markets Initiative, Brookings Institution Metropolitan Policy Program The Social Compact, Inc. University of Michigan Graduate Real Estate Program (October 2006).[http://www.downtowndetroit.org/ddp/market_data.htm Downtown Detroit In Focus: A Profile of Market Opportunity] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110918050029/http://www.downtowndetroit.org/ddp/market_data.htm |date=September 18, 2011 }}. ''Downtown Detroit Partnership''. Retrieved on January 4, 2011.</ref> In 2011, [[Quicken Loans]] moved its company headquarters to downtown Detroit, consolidating suburban offices, a move considered to be of high importance to city planners to reestablish the historic downtown.<ref name=Quicken>Howes, Daniel (November 13, 2007).[http://www.detnews.com/apps/pbcs.dll/article?AID=/20071113/OPINION03/711130398 Quicken to move to Detroit]. ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on June 23, 2009.</ref> Quicken Loans purchased office buildings in downtown Detroit and has considered new sites for new construction at the former Statler on [[Grand Circus Park]] and the former Hudson's location.<ref name=Quicken/> Plans for a major residential and retail development adjacent to the [[Renaissance Center]] have been announced. In 2009, DTE unveiled a $50 million transformation of the landscape around its downtown headquarters into an urban oasis with parks, walkways, and a reflecting pool adjacent to the [[MGM Grand Detroit]].<ref name=DTE>[http://www.downtowndetroit.org/ddp/newsroom/detroit_news_july_4_2007.htm July 4, 2007 Detroit News] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070928034741/http://www.downtowndetroit.org/ddp/newsroom/detroit_news_july_4_2007.htm |date=September 28, 2007 }} ''Downtown Detroit Partnership''</ref> Many residential [[loft]]s and [[high rise]]s are under construction in the Detroit area.<ref name="Marketprofile"/> Renovation of historic buildings is a source of new [[Planning and development in Detroit|development]] for the city of Detroit. The Inn at Ferry Street in the [[East Ferry Avenue Historic District]] and the [[John Harvey House (Detroit, Michigan)|Inn at 97 Winder]] in the [[Brush Park Historic District]] are examples of a successful [[Midtown Detroit|Midtown]] restoration projects. Other historic restoration projects in Detroit include developments in the [[Midtown Detroit|Midtown]] area, the [[Fort Shelby Hotel|Doubletree Guest Suites Fort Shelby]], and the [[Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel]]. The [[Woodward Avenue Light Rail]], beginning 2013, will serve as a link between the [[Detroit People Mover]] downtown and [[SEMCOG Commuter Rail]] with access to DDOT and SMART buses.<ref name=SEMCOGrail>[http://www.semcog.org/AADD.aspx Ann Arbor - Detroit Regional Rail Project] ''SEMCOG''. Retrieved on February 4, 2010.</ref>


In January 2008, the City of Detroit unveiled a concept for a new [[Cadillac Centre]], a $150 million mixed-use residential entertainment-retail complex attached to the [[Cadillac Tower]]. Architect Anthony Caradonna designed the [[Cadillac Centre]] concept in the [[postmodern architecture|postmodern architectural]] genre known as [[deconstructivism]] similar to the [[Guggenheim Museum Bilbao]]. The 24-story steel and glass twin-towers complex to be located on [[Campus Martius Park|Campus Martius]] has been placed on indefinite hold.<ref name=CadillacCentre>PRNewswire (January 6, 2008).[http://www.prnewswire.com/cgi-bin/stories.pl?ACCT=109&STORY=/www/story/01-06-2008/0004731011&EDATE= Detroit Gets New Era in Downtown Living With Iconic $150 Million Cadillac Centre on Campus Martius Park]. Retrieved on January 13, 2008.</ref> The futuristic Cadillac Centre would be located in Detroit's historic [[Monroe Avenue Commercial Buildings|Monroe block]], once a collection of eight [[Antebellum architecture|antebellum]] commercial buildings cleared in 1990.<ref name=Monroe>Hyde, Charles (May–June 1991).[http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/detroit/pdf/monroe_blk.pdf Demolition by Neglect: The Failure to Save the Monroe Block] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080114193347/http://www.michiganhistorymagazine.com/detroit/pdf/monroe_blk.pdf |date=January 14, 2008 }}.''Michigan History Magazine''. Retrieved on January 20, 2008.</ref> The [[3100 W. Big Beaver Road|Pavilions of Troy]], a $380 million mixed-use complex, is concept planned for the suburban city of [[Troy, Michigan|Troy]].<ref name=troy>[https://www.cbremarketplace.com/4817/default.aspx CB Richard Ellis - The Pavilions of Troy]{{Dead link|date=May 2019 |bot=InternetArchiveBot |fix-attempted=yes }}{{cbignore|bot=medic}}</ref> Metro Detroit is second largest source of architectural and [[engineering]] job opportunities in the U.S.<ref name="Anderson">[http://www.andersoneconomicgroup.com/Publications/Detail/tabid/125/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/7994/Automation-Alleys-Technology-Industry-Report-2011-Edition.aspx Automation Alley Technology Industry Report (2011 Edition)] {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150705103106/http://www.andersoneconomicgroup.com/Publications/Detail/tabid/125/articleType/ArticleView/articleId/7994/Automation-Alleys-Technology-Industry-Report-2011-Edition.aspx |date=2015-07-05 }}.''Anderson Economic Group''. Retrieved July 31, 2011.</ref> The [[University of Michigan]], the [[University of Detroit Mercy]], and [[Lawrence Technological University]] offer architectural degree programs.
==Noteable buildings==
[[Image:Comericatower.jpg|right|thumbnail|200px|[[Comerica Tower]] in [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]]]]
===Partial list:===
*[[American Center]]
*[[Cadillac Place]]
*[[Comerica Tower]]
*[[David Stott Building]]
*[[Detroit Athletic Club]]
*[[Detroit Institute of Arts]]
*[[Detroit Public Library]]
*[[Fisher Building]]
*[[Fox Theatre (Detroit)]]
*[[Guardian Building]]
*[[Hyatt Regency Dearborn]]
*[[Metropolitan Building (Detroit)]]
*[[Michigan Central Station]]
*[[Penobscot Building]]
*[[Renaissance Center]]
*[[Southfield Town Center]]
*[[Somerset Collection]]
*[[Wayne County Building]]
*[[Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel]]


==Landmarks and monuments==
==Casinos==
[[File:GreektownCasinohotelandStMaryRCChurchDetroit.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Romanesque Revival architecture|Romanesque]] style [[St. Mary Roman Catholic Church (Detroit, Michigan)|St. Mary Roman Catholic Church]] (1885) by architect Peter Dederichs in [[Greektown Historic District|Greektown]].]]
*[[Greektown Casino]]
{{See also|List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan|National Register of Historic Places listings in Detroit, Michigan|National Register of Historic Places listings in Wayne County, Michigan|List of Michigan State Historic Sites in Wayne County, Michigan|Religious Structures of Woodward Avenue Thematic Resource|Theatre in Detroit|Grosse Pointe}}
*[[MGM Grand Detroit]]
[[File:Redeemer8.jpg|thumb|left|150px|[[Most Holy Redeemer Church (Detroit, Michigan)|Most Holy Redeemer Church]] (1922) in Detroit by [[Donaldson and Meier]]]]
*[[Motor City Casino]]
Founded in 1701, Detroit contains the second oldest [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit|Roman Catholic]] [[parish]] in the United States.<ref name=DetroitHistory>Woodford, Arthur M. (2001). This is Detroit: 1701–2001. ''Wayne State University Press.''</ref> Consequently, [[Metro Detroit]]'s many churches and cathedrals, though too numerous to list, are among its architectural gems and sites in the [[National Register of Historic Places]]. Churches dominated the city's post Civil War era skyline. The [[Gothic Revival architecture]] of [[Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church]] (1887) by Alert E. French and [[Leon Coquard]] includes [[flying buttresses]], displaying the French influence. [[Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church|Ste. Anne's]] displays the oldest stained glass in the city, located near the [[Ambassador Bridge]].<ref name=AIADetroit/> The Gothic styled [[St. Joseph Catholic Church, Detroit|St. Joseph Church]] (1873/1883) in the [[Eastern Market Historic District|Eastern Market]]-[[Lafayette Park, Detroit|Lafayette Park]] neighborhood by [[Francis G. Himpler]] is an authentic German Catholic Parish and an important site listed in the [[National Register of Historic Places]], noted for its architecture and stained glass.<ref name=AIADetroit/> In another German parish, Peter Dederichs designed the [[Romanesque Revival architecture|Pisan Romanesque]] styled [[St. Mary Roman Catholic Church (Detroit, Michigan)|Old St. Mary's Church]] (1885) in [[Greektown Historic District|Greektown]].<ref name=AIADetroit/> The [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]] cathedral styled [[Sweetest Heart Of Mary Roman Catholic Church|Sweetest Heart of Mary]] (1893) in the Forest Park neighborhood area by [[Spier and Rohns]] is the largest Roman Catholic Church in Detroit.<ref name=AIADetroit/><ref name = "det1701">[http://detroit1701.org/SweetestHeart.htm Sweetest Heart of Mary Catholic Church] from Detroit1701.org</ref>


The [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic Revival]] styled [[Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament]] (1915) and the [[Cathedral Church of St. Paul, Detroit|Cathedral Church of St. Paul]] (1911) by [[Ralph Adams Cram]] are both located along Woodward Avenue. Sculptor [[Corrado Parducci]]'s work adorns many of Detroit's churches including the [[Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament]] and the [[Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Detroit|St. Aloysius Church]] (1930) in the [[Washington Boulevard Historic District]].<ref name=Foot>Foot, Andrew (June 29, 2006).[http://www.internationalmetropolis.com/?m=200606 International Metropolis] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20091112213310/http://www.internationalmetropolis.com/?m=200606 |date=November 12, 2009 }}. Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrement. '' Diehl & Diehl Archives'', photo inside Corrado Parducci's studio. Retrieved on July 24, 2009.</ref> Among his Detroit projects, [[Gordon W. Lloyd]] designed the [[Christ Church Detroit|Christ Church]] (1863) at 960 E. Jefferson Avenue. Detroit's [[First Presbyterian Church (Detroit, Michigan)|First Presbyterian Church]] (1891) is a fine example of [[Richardsonian Romanesque]] style by [[George D. Mason]] and Zachariah Rice. The [[Fort Street Presbyterian Church (Detroit, Michigan)|Fort Street Presbyterian Church]] (1855), designed in a [[Gothic Revival architecture|Victorian Gothic]] style with a steeple that rises {{convert|265|ft|abbr=on}}, is among the [[List of tallest churches in the world|tallest churches]] in the United States.
==See also==
[[Image:Palmer woods detroit.jpg|thumb|right|200px|1920's tudor in [[Palmer Woods, Detroit|Palmer Woods]] in [[Detroit, Michigan|Detroit]]]]
*[[Anna Scripps Whitcomb Conservatory]]
*[[Belle Isle Aquarium]]
*[[Belle Isle (Michigan)]]
*[[Campus Martius Park]]
*[[Casino Windsor]]
*[[Chene Park]]
*[[Detroit, Michigan]]
*[[Detroit Theatre District]]
*[[Detroit Zoo]]
*[[Grand Circus Park]]
*[[Hart Plaza]]
*[[Metro Detroit]]
*[[Neighborhoods in Detroit, Michigan]]
*[[Robert Sharoff]]
*[[Tri-Centennial State Park]]


The large concentration of [[Polish people|Poles]] in the metropolitan [[Detroit]] resulted in a number of ornate churches in the [[Polish Cathedral style]] designed by noted architects. Henry Engelbert designed the Gothic styled [[St. Albertus Roman Catholic Church|St. Albertus]] (1885), Detroit's first Polish Catholic parish. Harry J. Rill designed St. Hedwig's (1915) and the Baroque styled [[St. Stanislaus Bishop and Martyr Roman Catholic Church|St. Stanislaus]] (1913). [[Donaldson and Meier]] designed St. Hyacinth's (1924). [[Ralph Adams Cram]] designed the ornate Gothic styled [[St. Florian Church, Hamtramck|St. Florian's Church]] (1928) at 2626 Poland Street in Hamtramck. Joseph G. Kastler and William B.N. Hunter designed the Victorian styled [[St. Josaphat's Roman Catholic Church|St. Josaphat's]] (1901) which has [[wikt:spires|spires]] that line-up with the [[Renaissance Center]] towers when approaching the city on [[Interstate 75 in Michigan|Interstate 75]]. The Historical Society at the [[Detroit Historical Museum]] provides information on tours of the area's many historic churches. The historic [[Beaubien House]] (c. 1851) at 553 East Jefferson houses the [[Michigan Architectural Foundation|Michigan Society of Architects]].
==Notes==
<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
<references />
</div>


===Campus Martius===
==References==
[[File:BagleyMemorialFountainDetroit.jpg|150px|thumb|left|[[Bagley Memorial Fountain]] by [[Henry Hobson Richardson]] on [[Cadillac Square]] facing [[Campus Martius Park|Campus Martius]].]]
*{{Cite book|author=Eckhert, Katheryn Bishop|title=Buildings of Michigan (Society of Architectural Historians)|year=1993|publisher=New York: Oxford University Press|id=ISBN 0-19-5061-49-7}}
The city and its surrounding area have numerous monuments by noted architects and sculptors along tree-lined boulevards and parks just some of which are noted.<ref name=Monuments/><ref name="DetMonuments"/> [[Campus Martius Park|Campus Martius]] is a park at the encircled confluence of [[List of buildings located along Woodward Avenue|Woodward]] and [[Michigan Avenue (Michigan)|Michigan Avenue]]s. It serves as one of the city's central gathering places for events. The park disappeared in the 1900s as the downtown reconfigured to accommodate increased vehicular traffic.<ref name=Condit>Condit, Julie (May 6, 2000).[https://archive.today/20130121115300/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=160 Campus Martius — city's heart may beat again]. ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on August 12, 2008.</ref> In 2004, the city restored the park with traffic circle. Granite waterfalls are at the western edge of the north and south sitting gardens. The park has two stages for live entertainment. Greenways and flowering botanical gardens fan out from Woodward Fountain, the centerpiece of Campus Martius, which can jet water over {{convert|100|ft|m|0}} into the air,<ref name=Campus>[http://www.campusmartiuspark.org/ Campus Martius Park]. ''Detroit's Gathering Place'' — Park Grounds. Retrieved on August 12, 2008.</ref> while the [[Bagley Memorial Fountain]] sits nearby on [[Cadillac Square Park|Cadillac Square]]. [[Grand Circus Park|Grand Circus]] is on Woodward Avenue, down the street.
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Ann Arbor: Visions of the Eagle|year=1996|publisher=Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|id=ISBN 096156234X}}

*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Building Michigan: A Tribute to Michigan's Construction Industry|year=2003|publisher=Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|id=ISBN 1891143247}}
[[Hart Plaza]], along the riverfront, was designed to replace Campus Martius as a focal point. Yet Hart Plaza is a primarily hard-surfaced area, many residents came to lament the lack of true park space in the city's downtown area. This led to calls to rebuild Campus Martius. [[Compuware World Headquarters]] overlooks the reconstructed traffic circle surrounding Campus Martius Park with the historic [[Michigan Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument]] of the [[American Civil War]] by [[Randolph Rogers]].<ref name=Monuments/> The old [[Detroit City Hall]] (1861) was demolished in 1961. It was built by Alexander Chapoton of one of the city's oldest French families. The Queen Anne style [[Alexander Chapoton House]] (c. 1870) stands at 511 Beaubien.<ref name=1980DetroitAIA/><ref name=AIADetroit/>
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Southeast Michigan: Horizons of Growth|year=2005|publisher=Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|id=ISBN 1891143255}}

*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Detroit: Visions of the Eagle|year=1994|publisher=Grass Lake, MI: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|id=ISBN 0-9615623-3-1}}
===Grand Circus===
*{{Cite book| author=Godzak, Roman|title= Catholic Churches in Detroit (Images of America)|year=2004|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|id=ISBN 0-7385-3235-5}}
[[File:RussellAlgersfoundGCircParkdetroit.jpg|150px|left|thumb|[[Russell Alger]] Fountain in [[Grand Circus Park Historic District|Grand Circus]] by [[Daniel Chester French|Daniel French]] and [[Henry Bacon]].]]
*{{Cite book | author=Hill, Eric J. and John Gallagher | title= AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture| year=2002 | publisher= Wayne State University Press | id=ISBN 0-8143-3120-3}}
[[File:Central Methodist at Detroit Grand Circus Park.jpg|thumb|150px|[[Gothic Revival architecture|Victorian Gothic]], [[Central United Methodist Church (Detroit)|Central United Methodist Church]] (1866) overlooks [[Grand Circus Park Historic District|Grand Circus]].]]
*{{Cite book | author=Meyer, Katherine Mattingly and Martin C.P. McElroy with Introduction by W. Hawkins Ferry, Hon A.I.A.| title=Detroit Architecture A.I.A. Guide Revised Edition | year= 1980| publisher= Wayne State University Press| id = ISBN 0-8143-1651-4}}
In 1805, Detroit experienced a devastating fire, which destroyed most of the city's [[French colonization of the Americas|French colonial]] architecture. Shortly afterward, Father [[Gabriel Richard]] said, ''Speramus meliora; resurget cineribus'', meaning, ''We hope for better things; it will arise from the ashes'', which became the city's official motto.<ref name="DetroitHistory"/> For [[Detroit]], Justice [[Augustus B. Woodward]] devised a plan similar to [[Pierre Charles L'Enfant]]'s design for [[Washington, D.C.]] [[Detroit]]'s monumental avenues and traffic circles fan out in a [[Baroque]] styled radial fashion from [[Grand Circus Park Historic District|Grand Circus Park]] in the heart of the [[Theatre in Detroit|city's theater district]].<ref name=Woodward>Baulch, Vivian M. (June 13, 1999). [http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=205 Woodward Avenue, Detroit's Grand old "Main Street"] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20090104004403/http://apps.detnews.com/apps/history/index.php?id=205 |date=2009-01-04 }} Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref>
*{{Cite book| author= [[John Portman|Portman, John]] and Jonathan Barnett|year=1976|title=The Architect as Developer| publisher=McGraw Hill|id=ISBN 0-0705-0536-5}}

*{{Cite book | author= [[Robert Sharoff|Sharoff, Robert]] | title=American City: Detroit Architecture| publisher=Wayne State University Press| year=2005| id=ISBN 0-8143-3270-6}}
Detroit's [[Theatre in Detroit|performance centers and theatres]] emanate from the [[Grand Circus Park Historic District]] and continue along [[Woodward Avenue]] toward the [[Fisher Building|Fisher Theatre]] in the city's [[New Center, Detroit|New Center]]. The ornate [[Fox Theatre (Detroit, Michigan)|Fox Theatre]] (1928), by [[C. Howard Crane]], near the Grand Circus is a [[List of National Historic Landmarks in Michigan|National Historic Landmark]] which was fully restored in 1988.<ref name=Foxtheatre>Hodges, Michael H. (September 8, 2003).[http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=215 Fox Theater's rebirth ushered in city's renewal] {{webarchive |url=https://archive.today/20121205184440/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=215 |date=December 5, 2012 }}. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> Crane also designed the [[Orchestra Hall (Detroit, Michigan)|Orchestra Hall]] along Woodward which is home to the [[Detroit Symphony Orchestra]]. In [[Gothic revival]] design, [[St. John's Episcopal Church (Detroit)|St. John's Episcopal Church]] (1861) stands across from the [[Fox Theatre (Detroit, Michigan)|Fox Theatre]] and beside [[Comerica Park]] along with [[List of buildings located along Woodward Avenue|Woodward Avenue]]'s vintage street lights. Restored in 1996, the [[Detroit Opera House]] (1922), by Crane, faces Grand Circus Park.<ref name=OperaHouse>[[David DiChiera|DiChiera, David]], Director.[http://www.motopera.org/doh/history.html The Story of the Detroit Opera House] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080423095742/http://www.motopera.org/doh/history.html |date=April 23, 2008 }}.''Michigan Opera Theatre''. Retrieved on August 12, 2008.</ref> The grounds include antique statuary and old-fashioned water fountains. Architect [[Henry Bacon]] designed the [[Russell Alger]] Memorial Fountain (1921) in Grand Circus Park. The [[Russell Alger]] Memorial Fountain contains a classic Roman figure symbolizing Michigan by renowned American sculptor [[Daniel Chester French|Daniel French]].<ref name=Monuments>Zacharias, Pat (September 5, 1999). [https://archive.today/20121208215908/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=165 Monuments of Detroit]. Michigan History, ''Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 21, 2007.</ref>
*{{Cite book | author=Savage, Rebecca Binno and Greg Kowalski | title= Art Deco in Detroit (Images of America) | publisher=Arcadia Publishing| year=2004 | id=ISBN 0-7385-3228-2}}

*{{Cite book|author=Tutag, Nola Huse with Lucy Hamilton|title=Discovering Stained Glass in Detroit|publisher=Wayne State University Press|year=1988|id=ISBN 0-8143-1875-4}}
===Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Classical===
[[File:DetroitInstituteoftheArts2010A.jpg|300px|thumb|''[[Detroit Institute of Arts]]'' by [[Paul Philippe Cret]], with 2007 renovation and expansion by [[Michael Graves]].]]

In the late 19th century, Detroit was called the ''Paris of the West'' for its architecture and open public spaces,<ref name=DetroitHistory/> in keeping with the [[City Beautiful movement]].<ref name=CityBeautiful>Bluestone, Daniel M., Columbia University, (September 1988).[https://www.jstor.org/pss/990300 Detroit's City Beautiful and the Problem of Commerce] ''Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians'', Vol. XLVII, No. 3, pp. 245–62. Retrieved on May 18, 2007.</ref> Architects John and Arthur Scott designed the [[Wayne County Building]] (1897) in downtown Detroit. Expense was not a factor in construction of its lavish design. Topped with bronze [[quadriga]]s by [[J. Massey Rhind]] and an [[Anthony Wayne]] [[pediment]] by [[Edward Wagner]], it may be America's finest surviving example of Roman [[Baroque architecture]] with a blend of [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]].<ref name=1980DetroitAIA/> [[Stanford White]], architect of Newport, Rhode Island's [[Rosecliff]] mansion, designed Detroit's [[Neoclassical architecture|Neoclassical]] [[Savoyard Centre]] (1900) at 151 Fort St. [[Belle Isle Park]] provides panoramic views of city skyline along the [[Detroit International Riverfront]].

[[File:Hecker House - Detroit Michigan.jpg|thumb|200px|left|[[Col. Frank J. Hecker House]] (1891), 5510 Woodward, designed by [[Louis Kamper]] after [[Château de Chenonceaux]].]]
The French-American architect [[Paul Philippe Cret]] designed the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]] which includes a 1,150-seat theatre in the Detroit's [[Cultural Center Historic District]]. Cret was educated at the [[École des Beaux-Arts]] in Lyon then in Paris, and came to the United States in 1903 to teach at the [[University of Pennsylvania]]. Cret was also the architect of the [[Folger Shakespeare Library]] in Washington, D.C. [[Michael Graves]] designed the 2007 renovation and expansion of the Detroit Institute of Arts with its exterior covered in white marble. [[Harley Ellis Devereaux|Harley, Ellington and Day]] designed the marble [[Neoclassical architecture|Neoclassical]] [[Horace Rackham]] Education Memorial Building (1941) also within the [[Cultural Center Historic District]].
[[File:St. Paul Grosse Pointe.jpg|thumb|150px|[[French Gothic architecture|French Gothic]] styled [[Saint Paul Catholic Church (Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan)|St. Paul Catholic Church]] (1899) in [[Grosse Pointe]] is among Metro Detroit's many historic churches.]]
The Detroit area is home to light houses,<ref name=Detroitlighthouses>[http://lighthouse.boatnerd.com/gallery/Detroit/default.htm Lighthouses of the Great Lakes] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071009134140/http://lighthouse.boatnerd.com/gallery/Detroit/default.htm |date=October 9, 2007 }}. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> yacht clubs, and many unique monuments.<ref name=Monuments/> Examples include the [[Grosse Pointe Yacht Club]] (1929) and the [[Beaux-Arts architecture|Beaux-Arts]] [[Hurlbut Memorial Gate]] (1894) at Waterworks Park.<ref>[http://detroit1701.org/Hurlbut.htm Chauncey Hurlbut Memorial Gate] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061018134444/http://detroit1701.org/Hurlbut.htm |date=October 18, 2006 }} Detroit 1701.org. Retrieved on November 24, 2007.</ref> The Detroit Historical Society has compiled an incomplete list with more than 122 public sculptures and monuments just near the downtown area,<ref name=DetMonuments>[http://www.detroithistorical.com/collections/vewebsite2/exhibit3/e30014a.htm Monuments and Sculptures in Detroit] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110709015310/http://www.detroithistorical.com/collections/vewebsite2/exhibit3/e30014a.htm |date=July 9, 2011 }}. ''Detroit Historical Society''. Retrieved on March 27, 2008.</ref> while Detroit1701 lists many additional downtown monuments.<ref name=Detroit1701monuments>[http://www.detroit1701.org/Public%20Art%20and%20Sculpture.html Public Art and Sculpture], ''Detroit1701.org''. Retrieved on March 28, 2008.</ref> Architects such as [[Cass Gilbert]] who designed the [[United States Supreme Court]] in [[Washington, D.C.]] also designed the marble [[Detroit Public Library]] (1921) in the [[Cultural Center Historic District]] and [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]]'s exquisite marble James Scott Memorial Fountain.<ref>[http://detroit1701.org/JamesScott.htm James Scott Fountain] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20061029025618/http://detroit1701.org/JamesScott.htm |date=October 29, 2006 }} Detroit 1701.org. Retrieved on November 24, 2007.</ref> [[Frederick Olmsted]], landscape architect of New York City's Central Park, designed Detroit's {{convert|982|acre|km2|adj=on}} [[Belle Isle (Michigan)|Belle Isle]] park. [[Marshall Fredericks]]' sculptures, which include the ''[[Spirit of Detroit]]'', may be seen throughout the metropolitan area.<ref name=MarshallFredericks>Baulch, Vivian M. (August 4, 1998).[http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=159 Marshall Fredericks — the Spirit of Detroit] {{webarchive |url=https://archive.today/20120711220627/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=159 |date=July 11, 2012 }}. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> Sculptor [[Corrado Parducci]]'s work adorns many notable [[Metro Detroit]] buildings such as the [[Meadowbrook Hall]] mansion, the [[Guardian Building]], the [[Buhl Building]] (1925), the [[Penobscot Building]], the [[Fisher Building]] and the [[David Stott Building]].

Metro Detroit's many architecturally significant landmarks extend beyond the city and include the [[French Gothic architecture|French Gothic]] [[Saint Paul Catholic Church (Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan)|St. Paul on the Lake Catholic Church]] (1899) by Harry J. Rill in Grosse Pointe Farms, [[Kirk in the Hills]] Presbyterian (1958) in Bloomfield Hills by [[Wirt C. Rowland]], and [[Cranbrook Educational Community|Christ Church Cranbrook]] (1928) by [[Bertram Goodhue]] in [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]].<ref name=AIADetroit/>

[[Eliel Saarinen]] was the architect for the [[Cranbrook Educational Community]] in the [[Metro Detroit]] suburb of [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]].<ref name=AIADetroit/> Eliel's son, the famed modernist [[Eero Saarinen]], designed a complex of buildings in the suburb of Warren, Michigan for General Motors known as the [[GM Technical Center]].<ref name=AIADetroit/> Sculptor [[Carl Milles]]' numerous works in Metro Detroit include those at [[Cranbrook Educational Community]] in [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan]] such as ''Mermaids & Tritons Fountain'' (1930), ''Sven Hedin on a Camel'' (1932), ''Jonah and the Whale Fountain'' (1932), ''Orpheus Fountain'' (1936), and the ''Spirit of Transportation'' (1952) at the Detroit Civic Center.<ref name=CarleMilles>Baulch, Vivian M. (September 6, 1999).[https://archive.today/20130102104244/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=39 Carl Milles, Cranbrook's favorite sculptor]. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref>

==Residential architecture==
{{See also|Neighborhoods in Detroit|Grosse Pointe}}
[[File:Charles T Fisher House Boston Edison Detroit.JPG|thumb|200px|Tudor revival style mansion of [[Charles T. Fisher]], president of [[Fisher Body]] corporation in Detroit's [[Boston-Edison Historic District]] designed by architect [[George Mason (architect)|George Mason]].<ref name="det">[http://www.ci.detroit.mi.us/historic/districts/boston_edison.pdf Boston-Edison Historic District] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20110716102929/http://www.ci.detroit.mi.us/historic/districts/boston_edison.pdf |date=July 16, 2011 }} from the City of Detroit Planning and Development Department.</ref>]]
[[File:Detroitkalesbldg.jpg|200px|left|thumb|The [[Park Avenue Historic District (Detroit)|Park Avenue Historic District]] contains various renovations. Originally designed by Albert Kahn, developers converted the [[Kales Building]] into a residential high-rise with retail in 2004.]]

Downtown and New Center areas contain high-rise buildings, while the majority of the surrounding city consists of low-rise structures and single-family homes. The city's neighborhoods constructed prior to World War II feature the architecture of the times with wood frame and brick houses, larger brick homes in middle-class neighborhoods, and ornate mansions throughout the city's many historic districts and nearby suburbs such as [[Grosse Pointe]]. The oldest city neighborhoods are along the Woodward and Jefferson corridors, while newer city neighborhoods are found in the west and northeast.

High-rise residential buildings are found in neighborhoods along the [[Detroit International Riverfront|International Riverfront]] and [[East Jefferson Avenue Residential TR|East Jefferson Avenue residential area]] extending toward [[Grosse Pointe]] and the [[Neighborhoods in Detroit#Palmer Park Apartment Building Historic District|Palmer Park]] neighborhood West of Woodward on the city's North end. [[Ludwig Mies van der Rohe]] designed a residential development for Detroit's East side [[Lafayette Park, Detroit|Lafayette Park]] (1958–1965), including three high-rise residential buildings and over 200 townhouses. A successful {{convert|78|acre|m2|adj=on}} urban renewal project, this development is the largest concentration of buildings designed by Mies van der Rohe in the world.<ref name=WallStreet>Vitullo-Martin, Julio (December 22, 2007).[https://www.wsj.com/articles/SB119827404882045751 The Biggest Mies Collection: His Lafayette Park residential development thrives in Detroit].''The Wall Street Journal''. Retrieved on April 21, 2008.</ref> Lafayette Park is near the architecturally significant [[St. Joseph Roman Catholic Church, Detroit|St. Joseph's Catholic Church]] and the [[Eastern Market Historic District]]. The East side contains many architecturally distinctive homes such as those in the [[Indian Village Historic District (Detroit, Michigan)|Indian Village]] and [[East Jefferson Avenue Residential TR|East Jefferson Avenue]].

Some of the oldest extant working-class neighborhoods include those in the Southwest such [[Corktown Historic District|Corktown]], established by Irish immigrants and those in the middle-class [[West Vernor-Junction Historic District|West Vernor-Junction]] area. The Southwest is seeing redevelopment and construction of new homes and condos due in part to the city's expanding Mexicantown area surrounding ''Clark Park'', which is near the architecturally significant [[Most Holy Redeemer Church (Detroit, Michigan)|Most Holy Redeemer Church]] and [[Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church]].

Detroit neighborhood historic districts contain notable residential architecture from the ''[[Gilded Age]]''.<ref name=DetroitHistoric>[http://www.cityscapedetroit.org/historic_districts.php Detroit Historic Districts] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120615123034/http://www.cityscapedetroit.org/historic_districts.php |date=2012-06-15 }}.'' Cityscape Detroit''. Retrieved on December 16, 2007.</ref> Many architecturally significant late-19th- and early-20th-century mansions have been restored, such as those in [[Midtown Detroit|Midtown]]'s [[Brush Park Historic District|Brush Park]] neighborhood. The [[West Canfield Historic District|West Canfield]], [[Woodbridge Historic District|Woodbridge]], and [[East Ferry Avenue Historic District|East Ferry Avenue]] neighborhoods are examples of [[Midtown Detroit|Midtown]]'s restored [[Renaissance Revival architecture|French Renaissance Revival]], [[Second Empire (architecture)|Second Empire]], [[Romanesque revival architecture|Romanesque]], and [[Queen Anne style architecture in the United States|Queen Anne architecture]]. Noted architect [[Gordon W. Lloyd]] designed the [[David Whitney House]] (1894) constructed with a jasper stone exterior.<ref name="npswhit">[http://www.nps.gov/history/NR/travel/detroit/d24.htm David Whitney House] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080616095252/http://www.nps.gov/history/NR/travel/detroit/d24.htm |date=June 16, 2008 }} from the national Park Service</ref> The Whitney House is now a fine restaurant at 4421 Woodward Avenue in Midtown. The East Canfield area nearby contains the [[Gothic Revival architecture|Gothic revival]] styled [[Sweetest Heart of Mary Roman Catholic Church|Sweetest Heart of Mary Catholic Church]].

[[Arden Park-East Boston]] (a National Historic district comprising Arden Park Boulevard and East Boston Boulevard, running for three blocks east of Woodward near the [[New Center, Detroit|New Center Area]]) is noted for mansions built by the industrial giants of the 1910s and 1920s.<ref name=ArdenPark>[http://detroit1701.org/ArdenPark_Hist.htm Arden Park-East Boston Historic District]. ''Detroit1701.org''. Retrieved on December 16, 2007.</ref> Residents included the Dodge Brothers, [[J. L. Hudson]], and Fred Fisher, the founder of Fisher Body.<ref name=Arden>[http://www.ci.detroit.mi.us/historic/districts/arden_park.pdf Arden Park-East Boston Historic District] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120208031403/http://www.ci.detroit.mi.us/historic/districts/arden_park.pdf |date=February 8, 2012 }}. ''City of Detroit Planning and Development Department''. Retrieved on December 16, 2007.</ref> Fisher's residence on Arden Park ([[George D. Mason]], 1918, with additions in 1923) is constructed of Indiana limestone in the Italian Villa style. It features elaborate stone carvings and intricate ironwork and was the subject of a 1926 "Fortune Magazine" discussion of "the harmony of materials and proportion in residential architecture." The nearby [[Boston-Edison Historic District|Boston-Edison]] neighborhood (comprising four residential blocks west of Woodward) features several Kahn residences, including the Benjamin Siegal residence (1915), the [[James Couzens]] house (1910), and one of Kahn's rare stucco residences, the Ernest Venn house (1908). Additional architecturally significant homes in the neighborhood include the [[Sebastian S. Kresge]] house, the [[Berry Gordy]] house, and one of the [[Henry Ford]] houses.<ref name="det"/> Many architecturally distinctive homes are also located near the [[University of Detroit Mercy]] on the city's North end such as those in [[Palmer Woods Historic District|Palmer Woods]] and [[Sherwood Forest Historic District|Sherwood Forest]] historic districts. The [[Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament]] is located near this corridor along [[List of buildings located along Woodward Avenue, Detroit|Woodward Avenue]].

Detroit's heritage includes works by [[Frank Lloyd Wright]] who had participated in the initial design for [[Henry Ford]]'s [[Fair Lane]] Estate,<ref name=AutoBaronEstates/> a [[National Historic Landmark]] in Dearborn. Frank Lloyd Wright also designed the [[Dorothy H. Turkel House]] at 2760 West Seven Mile Rd.,<ref>Michael Jackman (26 June 2006).[http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=9372 Wright or wrong: Detroit's Turkel house drips with history]. ''Metro Times''</ref> the [[Gregor S. and Elizabeth B. Affleck House]] at 1925 N. Woodward Ave., the [[Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Stein Smith House]] at 5045 Ponvalley Rd., and the [[Carlton D. Wall House]] at 12305 Beck Rd. in Plymouth Township.

[[File:Bishop Gallagher residence, Palmer Woods, Detroit.jpg|thumb|200px|McGinnis and Walsh designed this 39,000 sq. ft. [[Tudor Revival architecture|Tudor Revival]] mansion, known as the [[Bishop Gallagher House]] (1925), in [[Palmer Woods]] Historic District<ref name=AIADetroit/><ref name = McDonald>McDonald, Maureen (November 28, 2006).[http://www.modeldmedia.com/features/bishops72.aspx Visit with a Giant]. ''Model D Media''. Retrieved on December 23, 2008.</ref>]]
[[File:KeyesVaughan.jpg|200px|left|thumb|[[Hugh T. Keyes#Principal works|Woodland]] by [[Hugh T. Keyes]], longtime Bloomfield Hills estate of [[John Bugas]]]]
The mansions of metropolitan Detroit are among the nation's grandest estates. [[Meadow Brook Hall]] (1929), the 110 room {{convert|88000|sqft|m2|abbr=on}} mansion of Matilda Dodge Wilson at 480 South Adams Rd. in the suburb of [[Rochester Hills, Michigan|Rochester Hills]], is the fourth largest in the United States.<ref name=AutoBaronEstates>A&E with Richard Guy Wilson, Ph.D.,(2000). America's Castles: The Auto Baron Estates, ''A&E Television Network''.</ref> Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the mansion is open to the public. The suburbs of [[Grosse Pointe]] and [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]] are replete with grandiose mansions. [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]] designed the [[Edsel and Eleanor Ford House]] (1927) at 1100 Lakeshore Dr. in [[Grosse Pointe]] which is open to the public.<ref name=AutoBaronEstates/> Rose Terrace (1934–1976), the mansion of Anna Dodge, once stood at 12 Lakeshore Dr. in [[Grosse Pointe]]. Designed by [[Horace Trumbauer]] as a [[Louis XV]] styled [[château]], Rose Terrace was an enlarged version of the firm's Miramar in [[Newport, Rhode Island]].<ref name=RoseTerrace>Zacharias, Patricia (June 24, 2000).[https://archive.today/20130121102854/http://info.detnews.com/redesign/history/story/historytemplate.cfm?id=97 Mrs. Dodge and the Regal Rose Terrace]. Michigan History, ''The Detroit News''. Retrieved on November 23, 2007.</ref> A developer, the highest bidder for Rose Terrace, demolished it in 1976 to create an upscale neighborhood. This gave a renewed sense of urgency to preservationists.<ref name=RoseTerrace/> The Dodge Collection from Rose Terrace may be viewed at the [[Detroit Institute of Arts]]. The [[Italian Renaissance]] styled [[Grosse Pointe War Memorial|Russell A. Alger Jr. House]] (1910), at 32 Lakeshore Dr., by architect [[Charles A. Platt]] serves as the [[Grosse Pointe]] [[Grosse Pointe War Memorial|War Memorial]].<ref>[http://www.warmemorial.org/ Grosse Pointe War Memorial, the Russell A. Alger Mansion]. Retrieved on November 24, 2007.</ref> The five [[Grosse Pointe]] communities feature a variety of newer and early-twentieth-century mansions which flank the shores of [[Lake Saint Clair (North America)|Lake St. Clair]], one of the finest examples being [[Hugh T. Keyes#Woodley Green|Woodley Green]] (the Benson Ford House, 1934) by [[Hugh T. Keyes]] (considered "one of the most prolific and versatile architects of the period").<ref name=Ferry/> [[Bloomfield Hills, Michigan|Bloomfield Hills]] also contains vast estates from the early to mid 20th century, such as Albert Kahn-designed [[Cranbrook Educational Community#Cranbrook House and Gardens|Cranbrook House]] on Saarinen's Cranbrook campus (called by ''[[The New York Times]]'' "one of the greatest campuses ever created anywhere in the world"<ref>{{cite news|url= https://www.nytimes.com/1984/04/08/magazine/the-cranbrook-vision.html|author = Paul Goldberger|title = The Cranbrook Vision |newspaper= The New York Times|date= April 8, 1984}}</ref>). Next door on Vaughan Rd. is Keyes-designed [[Hugh T. Keyes#Principal works|Woodland]], the estate of [[John Bugas]].

There have also been some newer redeveloped upscale [[Subdivision (land)|subdivision]]s in the Grosse Pointe, Bloomfield Hills, and Turtle Lake areas.<ref name=1980DetroitAIA/><ref name=AIADetroit/><ref name=TurtleLake>[http://www.turtlelakeliving.com/ Turtle Lake in Bloomfield Hills] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070527101144/http://www.turtlelakeliving.com/ |date=May 27, 2007 }}. Retrieved on November 24, 2007.</ref>

== Photo gallery ==
{|class="wikitable"
|-
! style="background:light gray; color:black"|Skyscrapers
<gallery>
File:Southfield Town Center.jpg|[[Southfield Town Center]]<br />by Neuhaus & Taylor,<br />3D International,<br />and Sikes Jennings Kelly & Brewer
File:Topoftroy2007.JPG|The [[Top of Troy]] in Metro Detroit by [[Rossetti architects|Rossetti]]
File:AmericanCenter2.jpg|[[American Center]] in Southfield by the [[SmithGroup]]
File:One Towne Square Southfield.jpg|One Towne Square in Southfield by [[Rossetti architects|Rossetti]]
File:GM headquarters in Detroit.JPG|[[Renaissance Center]] by [[John Portman]]
File:ComericaTowerand1stnationaldetroit.jpg|[[One Detroit Center]] by [[John Burgee]] and [[Philip Johnson]]
File:Penobscot.jpg|[[Penobscot Building]] (left)<br /> by Wirt Rowland with the [[Chrysler House]]<br />by [[Daniel Burnham]]
File:Guardianbuilding.jpg|[[Guardian Building]]<br />by [[Wirt Rowland]]
File:IndustrialStevenapartmentDetroit.jpg|[[Book Tower]] (left) and [[Industrial-Stevens Apartments|Industrial-Stevens]], both by [[Louis Kamper]]
File:150wjeff.jpg|[[150 West Jefferson]] by [[Heller Manus Architects]]
File:Fisher Building, Detroit.jpg|[[Fisher Building]]<br />by [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]]
File:DavidStottBuilding.jpg|[[David Stott Building]]<br /> by [[John M. Donaldson]]
File:OneWoodwardAvenue.JPG|[[One Woodward Avenue]] by [[Minoru Yamasaki]]
File:BuhlBuildingDetroitfromWoodward.jpg|[[Buhl Building]] by Wirt Rowland
File:WestinBookCadillac.jpg|[[Westin Book Cadillac Hotel]] by Louis Kamper
File:Greektownnew2.jpg|[[Greektown Casino Hotel]] by [[Rossetti Architects|Rossetti]]
</gallery>
|}

{|class="wikitable"
|-
! style="background:light gray; color:black"|Landmarks
<gallery>
File:GrandBoulevardNewCenterDetroit.jpg|[[Cadillac Place]] (left) with the [[Fisher Building]],<br />both by [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]]
File:Exterior Arches of the Guardian.JPG|[[Guardian Building]]<br />by [[Wirt Rowland]]
File:Foxdetroitmarqueenightshot2.jpg|[[Fox Theatre (Detroit)|Fox Theatre]] by [[C. Howard Crane]]
File:Cranbrook.jpg|[[Cranbrook Educational Community]] in [[Bloomfield Hills, MI|Bloomfield Hills]]
File:TheHenryFordMuseumClockToweratNight.jpg|[[The Henry Ford]] in [[Dearborn, MI|Dearborn]]
File:HenryFordEstateSWSide.jpg|Henry Ford's [[Fair Lane]] estate in Dearborn
File:Ford Piquette Avenue Plant - Front Façade.jpg|[[Ford Piquette Avenue Plant]] in [[Milwaukee Junction]]
File:DIAhall2.jpg|[[Detroit Institute of Arts]]<br />by [[Paul Cret]]
File:DetroitLibrary2010.jpg|[[Detroit Public Library]]<br />by [[Cass Gilbert]]
File:Old Main WSU - Detroit Michigan.jpg|[[Old Main (Wayne State University)|Old Main]], a historic building at [[Wayne State University]]
File:DetroitWoodwardAvespringsummerday.jpg|[[Lower Woodward Avenue Historic District|Historic Merchants Row]] on Woodward is a block north of the [[Compuware World Headquarters]]
File:Lawyers Club.jpg|[[University of Michigan Law School]]: Lawyers Club (1924) by York and Sawyer — Quadrangle (1933) by [[Gunnar Birkerts]] — Library addition (1982) by Quinn Evans<ref>Strother, Michael [http://www.aiami.com/Chapters/Huron_Valley/chpt_hv_home.htm Guide to Ann Arbor Architecture] {{webarchive |url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070708165712/http://www.aiami.com/Chapters/Huron_Valley/chpt_hv_home.htm |date=July 8, 2007 }} ''AIA Michigan''. Retrieved on July 21, 2007.</ref>
File:CadillacPlaceNewCenterdetroit3.jpg|[[Cadillac Place]], a National Historic Landmark in Detroit's New Center by [[Albert Kahn (architect)|Albert Kahn]]
File:Detroit Masonic Temple - Detroit Michigan.jpg|[[Detroit Masonic Temple]], the world's largest [[Masonic Temple]], by [[George D. Mason]]
</gallery>
|}
{|class="wikitable"
|-
! style="background:light gray; color:black"|Monuments<ref name=Monuments/><ref name="DetMonuments"/>
<gallery>
File:Spirit of Detroit-2560x1600.jpg|The "[[Spirit of Detroit]]"<br />by [[Marshall Fredericks]]
File:Compuware HQ on Cadillac square.jpg|[[Michigan Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument]] (1872) by [[Randolph Rogers]] and Woodward Fountain on [[Campus Martius Park]]
File:One Woodward Building lobby sculpture Detroit.jpg|''Passo di Danza'' by [[Giacomo Manzù]] at [[One Woodward Avenue]]
File:James Scott statue and fountain - Detroit Michigan.jpg|The massive ''[[James Scott Memorial Fountain]]'' by [[Cass Gilbert]] on Detroit's [[Belle Isle Park|Belle Isle]]
File:Belle Isle carillon - Detroit Michigan.jpg|[[Belle Isle Park|Belle Isle]] Carillion.
File:Statue of William C. Maybury.jpg|[[William C. Maybury]] Monument by [[Adolph Alexander Weinman]] in Grand Circus Park
File:Hurlbut Memorial Gate Detroit MI.jpg|[[Hurlbut Memorial Gate|Chauncey Hurlbut Memorial Gate]] at Waterworks Park
File:FountainDetroitZoo1.jpg|[[Horace Rackham]] Memorial Fountain by [[Corrado Parducci]] at the [[Detroit Zoo]]
</gallery>
|}
{|class="wikitable"
|-
! style="background:light gray; color:black"|Architectural sculpture
<gallery>
File:JMRDetroit1.jpg|''Victory and Progress''<br />by [[J. Massey Rhind]]<br />[[Wayne County Building]]
File:EWagnerAWayne1.jpg|by [[Edward Wagner]]<br />Pediment<br />Wayne County Building
File:GuardianBuildingCP edit1.jpg|by [[Corrado Parducci]]<br />[[Guardian Building]]
File:DavidStottEntrance.jpg|by Corrado Parducci<br />[[David Stott Building]]
File:PenobscotIndian1.jpg|by Corrado Parducci<br />[[Penobscot Building]]
File:KitHfascade.jpg|by [[Corrado Parducci]] and [[Lee Lawrie]]<br />[[Kirk in the Hills]]<br />by [[Wirt C. Rowland]] and [[George D. Mason]]
File:Book Cadillac stone sculpture 2.jpg|[[Westin Book Cadillac Hotel]]<ref name=NavarreArms>Lloyd, Marshall Davies (August 20, 2006).[http://www.mlloyd.org/gen/navarre/text/arms.htm Navarre Arms].''mlloyd.org''. Retrieved on June 17, 2008</ref>
File:DFPBuilding2.jpg|By [[Ulysses Ricci]]<br />[[Detroit Free Press Building]]
</gallery>
|}

== Citations ==
{{Reflist}}

==References and further reading==
*A&E with Richard Guy Wilson, Ph.D.,(2000). America's Castles: The Auto Baron Estates, ''A&E Television Network''.
*A&E with Richard Guy Wilson, Ph.D.,(2000). America's Castles: Newspaper Moguls, Pittock Mansion, Cranbrook House & Gardens, The American Swedish Institute. ''A&E Television Network''.
*{{Cite book|author=Bridenstine, James|title=Edsel and Eleanor Ford House|year=1989|publisher=Wayne State University Press|isbn=0-8143-2161-5}}
*{{Cite book| author1=Collum, Marla O. |author2=Barbara E. Krueger |author3=Dorothy Kostuch |title=Detroit's Historic Places of Worship |publisher=Wayne State University Press |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-8143-3424-9}}
*{{Cite book |author=Delicato, Armando |title=Italians in Detroit (Images of America)|year=2005 |publisher=Arcadia Publishing |isbn=0-7385-3985-6}}
*{{Cite book|author=Eckhert, Katheryn Bishop|title=Buildings of Michigan (Society of Architectural Historians)|year=1993|publisher=New York: Oxford University Press|isbn=0-19-506149-7}}
*Ferry, W. Hawkins (1968). ''The Buildings of Detroit: A History''. Wayne State University Press.
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Ann Arbor: Visions of the Eagle|year=1996|publisher=Grass Lake, Michigan: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|isbn=0-9615623-4-X|url=https://archive.org/details/annarbor00dale}}
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Building Michigan: A Tribute to Michigan's Construction Industry|year=2003|publisher=Grass Lake, Michigan: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|isbn=1-891143-24-7}}
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Southeast Michigan: Horizons of Growth|year=2005|publisher=Grass Lake, Michigan: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|isbn=1-891143-25-5}}
*{{Cite book|author=Fisher, Dale|title=Detroit: Visions of the Eagle|url=https://archive.org/details/detroitvisionsof0000fish|url-access=registration|year=1994|publisher=Grass Lake, Michigan: Eyry of the Eagle Publishing|isbn=0-9615623-3-1}}
*{{Cite book|author=Fogelman, Randall|title=Detroit's New Center |year=2004|publisher=Arcadia|isbn=0-7385-3271-1}}
*{{Cite book |author1=Gallagher, John |author2=Balthazar Korab| title=Great Architecture of Michigan| year=2008 | publisher= Wayne State University Press | isbn=978-0-9816144-0-3}}
*{{Cite book| author=Godzak, Roman|title= Catholic Churches of Detroit (Images of America)|year=2004|publisher=Arcadia Publishing|isbn=0-7385-3235-5}}
*{{Cite book| author=Hardwick, M. Jeffrey| title=Mall Maker: Victor Gruen, Architect of the American Dream| year=2003| publisher=University of Pennsylvania Press| isbn=0-8122-3762-5| url=https://archive.org/details/mallmakervictorg00hard}}
*{{Cite book |author1=Hauser, Michael |author2=Marianne Weldon| title= Downtown Detroit's Movie Palaces (Images of America)| year=2006 | publisher= Arcadia Publishing | isbn=0-7385-4102-8}}
*{{Cite book | author1=[[Eric J. Hill]]|author2=John Gallagher | title=AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture | year=2002 | publisher=Wayne State University Press | isbn=0-8143-3120-3 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/aiadetroitameric0000hill }}
*{{Cite book | author=Kavanaugh, Kelli B.| title= Detroit's Michigan Central Station (Images of America)| year=2001 | publisher= Arcadia Publishing | isbn=0-7385-1881-6}}
*Kvaran, Einar Einarsson, ''Architectural Sculpture of America'', unpublished manuscript
*{{Cite book|author=Matuz, Roger|title=Albert Kahn, Architect of Detroit|publisher=Wayne State University Press|year=2007|isbn=978-0-8143-2956-6|url-access=registration|url=https://archive.org/details/albertkahnbuilde0000matu}}
*Nawrocki, Dennis Alan and Thomas J. Holleman (1980). ''Art in Detroit Public Places''. Wayne State University Press.
*{{Cite book| author= [[John Portman|Portman, John]] |author2=Jonathan Barnett|year=1976|title=The Architect as Developer| publisher=McGraw Hill|isbn=0-07-050536-5}}
*{{Cite book |author1=Rodriguez, Michael |author2=Thomas Featherstone| title=Detroit's Belle Isle Island Park Gem (Images of America)| publisher=Arcadia Publishing| year=2003| isbn=0-7385-2315-1}}
*{{Cite book | author= Sharoff, Robert | title=American City: Detroit Architecture| publisher=Wayne State University Press| year=2005| isbn=0-8143-3270-6| author-link= Robert Sharoff}}
*{{Cite book |author1=Savage, Rebecca Binno |author2=Greg Kowalski | title= Art Deco in Detroit (Images of America) | publisher=Arcadia Publishing| year=2004 | isbn=0-7385-3228-2}}
*{{Cite book | author=Sobocinski, Melanie Grunow | title= Detroit and Rome: building on the past | publisher=Regents of the University of Michigan| year=2005 | isbn=0-933691-09-2}}
*{{Cite book|author1=Socia, Madeleine |author2=Suzie Berschback |title=Grosse Pointe: 1890–1930 (Images of America)|year=2001|publisher=Arcadia|isbn=0-7385-0840-3}}
*{{Cite book | author=Tottis, James W. | title=The Guardian Building: Cathedral of Finance | publisher=Wayne State University Press | year=2008 | isbn=978-0-8143-3385-3 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/guardianbuilding0000tott }}
*{{Cite book|author1=Tutag, Nola Huse|author2=Hamilton, Lucy|title=Discovering Stained Glass in Detroit|publisher=Wayne State University Press|year=1988|isbn=0-8143-1875-4}}
*{{Cite book|author1=Walt, Irene |author2=Balthazar Korab|title=Art in Stations|publisher=Wayne State University Press| year=2004|isbn=0-9745392-0-1}}
*{{Cite book| author=Woodford, Arthur M.|title=This is Detroit 1701–2001| url=https://archive.org/details/thisisdetroit1700000wood| url-access=registration|publisher=Wayne State University Press| year=2001|isbn=0-8143-2914-4}}


==External links==
==External links==
{{Portal|Michigan}}
*[http://www.aerialpics.com/ Aerialpics.com]
{{Commons|Detroit, Michigan#Architecture|Architecture of metropolitan Detroit}}
*[http://www.aiami.com/chapter_detroit_home.htm AIA Detroit (Chapter of the American Institute of Architects)]
*[http://www.cityscapedetroit.org/ Cityscape Detroit]
*[http://www.aiami.com/ AIA Detroit]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20080422031902/http://www.buildingsofdetroit.com/index.php Buildings of Detroit (historic) and architects]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20131215233228/http://cityscapedetroit.org/ Cityscape Detroit]
*[http://detroit1701.org/ Detroit 1701]
*[http://detroit1701.org/ Detroit 1701]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20070213160403/http://detroitmidtown.com/05/ Detroit Midtown]
*[http://www.angelfire.com/de2/detroitpix/ Detroit pix]
*[http://www.detroitrenaissance.com/ Detroit Renaissance]
*[http://www.detroitriverfront.org/ Detroit Riverfront Conservancy]
*[http://www.detroitriverfront.org/ Detroit Riverfront Conservancy]
*[http://experiencedetroit.com/ Experience Detroit]
*[http://experiencedetroit.com/ Experience Detroit]
*[http://www.fordhouse.org/ Edsel & Eleanor Ford House]
*[http://www.fordhouse.org/ Edsel & Eleanor Ford House]
*[http://www.detroityes.com/index.html Fabulous ruins of Detroit]
*[http://www.gphistorical.org/ Grosse Pointe Historical Society]
*[http://www.henryfordestate.org/ Henry Ford's Fair Lane Estate]
*[[:Category:Images of Metro Detroit|Images of Metro Detroit]]
*[http://www.modeldmedia.com/ Model D Media]
*[http://www.newcenter.com/ New Center Council]
*[http://www.newcenter.com/ New Center Council]
*[https://web.archive.org/web/20100727204854/http://www.downtowndetroit.org/ddp/home.htm Downtown Detroit Partnership]
*[http://www.photography-plus.com/ Photography-plus.com]
*[http://oaklandregionalhistoricsites.org/ Oakland Regional Historic Sites]
*[http://wsupress.wayne.edu/turtle/sharoffac/sharoffb.html Publishers 2005 review of American City: Detroit Architecture]

*[http://www.theamericancity.com/ The American City]
{{Architecture of metropolitan Detroit}}
*[http://www.metrotimes.com/editorial/story.asp?id=8550 Metro Times 2005 review of American City: Detroit Architecture]
{{Detroit architects}}
*[http://www.theworldiscoming.com/seethechange.html The world is coming, see the change]
{{Theatre in Detroit}}
*[http://www.riverfrontcondominiums.com/ Riverfront Tower I]
{{Detroit skyscrapers}}
{{Metro Detroit Historic Homes}}
{{Religious landmarks in metropolitan Detroit}}
{{Industrial landmarks in metropolitan Detroit}}
{{Detroit}}
{{Detroit}}
{{Metro Detroit}}
[[Category:American architecture]]
{{Architecture of North America}}
[[Category:Architectural styles]]
{{Architecture in the United States}}
[[Category:Art Deco]]

[[Category:Skyscrapers in Detroit]]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Architecture Of Metropolitan Detroit}}
[[Category:National Historic Landmarks of the United States]]
[[Category:Postmodern architecture]]
[[Category:Culture of Detroit]]
[[Category:Registered Historic Places in Michigan]]
[[Category:Architecture in the United States by city|Detroit]]
[[Category:Tallest Buildings in Michigan|Guardian Building]]
[[Category:Buildings and structures in Metro Detroit| ]]
[[Category:Architecture in Michigan]]

Latest revision as of 14:58, 26 August 2024

One Detroit Center by John Burgee and Philip C. Johnson.

The architecture of metropolitan Detroit continues to attract the attention of architects and preservationists alike.[1][2] With one of the world's recognizable skylines, Detroit's waterfront panorama shows a variety of architectural styles. The post-modern neogothic spires of One Detroit Center refer to designs of the city's historic Art Deco skyscrapers.[3] Together with the Renaissance Center, they form the city's distinctive skyline.

Detroit's architecture is recognized as being among the finest in the U.S. Detroit has one of the largest surviving collections of late-19th- and early-20th-century buildings in the U.S.[3] Because of the city's economic difficulties, the National Trust for Historic Preservation has listed many of Detroit's skyscrapers and buildings as some of America's most endangered landmarks.[4]

The suburbs contain some significant contemporary architecture and several historic estates.[5][6]

Skyscrapers

[edit]
Neoclassical Chrysler House (1912) by Daniel Burnham in the Detroit Financial District

In the 1880s, Gilded Age architects such as Wilson Eyre[7] Gordon Lloyd, Harry J. Rill, Henry T Brush, Julius Hess, John V Smith, Elijah E Myers, Alamon C Varney, Mortimer L Smith, Peter Dederich, Joseph e MiIls and the firms Donaldson & Meier, Malcomson & Higginbotham and Mason & Rice who had designed churches and residences in the most exclusives neighborhoods (Woodward Avenue, Brush Park, Jefferson Avenue and W Fort Street), turned their attention to office and commercial buildings. They designed some of Detroit's ornately stone-carved 19th-century tall buildings, many of which are still standing. Eyre[8] was commissioned to design The Detroit Club at 712 Cass Ave (1891) Lloyd's Romanesque six-story iron-framed Wright-Kay (1891) at 1500 Woodward Ave and his R. H. Traver Building (1889) at 1211 Woodward are prime examples.[3] The Wright-Kay, or Schwankovsky Building, was among the first to have an electric elevator.[3] Rill designed the ornate Beaux-Arts facade of Detroit Cornice and Slate (1897) at 733 Antoine.[3] The six-story Romanesque Globe Tobacco Building (1888) at 407 E. Fort, built by Alexander Chapoton, is another of the city's early surviving commercial buildings. Detroit's Victorian-styled Randolph Street Historic District contains some of the city's oldest surviving commercial buildings. The commercial building at 1244 Randolph Street dates from the 1840s, a rare survivor from the Antebellum period. Most of Detroit's expansion and development took place later.[9]

At 12 stories, the steel-framed United Way Community Services Building (1895), at 1212 Griswold, originally known as the Chamber of Commerce Building, qualifies as Detroit's oldest existing skyscraper.[6][10] The 10-story Hammond Building (1889), now demolished, is considered the city's first historic skyscraper.[11] The Qube in the Detroit Financial District was developed on the Hammond Building site.[12]

The city has numerous architecturally significant late-19th- and early-20th-century buildings and skyscrapers.[3] Daniel Burnham, Louis Kamper, and the Smith Hinchman & Grylls firm are among the architects who designed some of the city's other important skyscrapers at the turn of the century which endure today. Burnham's three remaining Detroit skyscraper designs are the Neo-Classical styled Chrysler House (1912) — renovated in 2002, and the Neo-Renaissance Whitney (1915) and Ford (1909) buildings. Among their early projects, Smith Hinchman & Grylls designed the Neo-Gothic R.H. Fyfe Building (1919) at Woodward and Adams, now converted to a residential high-rise.[13]

Detroit has preserved numerous historic buildings that are listed on the National Register of Historic Places. The city has many historic structures needing restoration. The most significant of these is the Michigan Central Station (1913) by Warren & Wetmore and Reed & Stem; it was bought by Ford in 2018 and is to be the center of a major multi-use development.

Fisher Building (pictured) and nearby Cadillac Place are designated National Historic Landmarks in the City's New Center area, both were designed by Albert Kahn.
The Guardian Building, a National Historic Landmark by Wirt Rowland.

During the Roaring Twenties, Detroit's historic skyline arose.[14] Louis Kamper designed the ornate Neo-Renaissance styled Book-Cadillac Hotel (1924), which was the world's tallest hotel when it opened.

The city's architectural legacy is rich in Art Deco style, with buildings constructed during the boom years of the 1920s. Joseph L. Hudson, the department store magnate, had commissioned architect Hugh Ferriss to produce a series of renderings depicting new buildings for the city skyline.[15] Hudson's Department Store window displayed the Ferriss drawings to commemorate its fiftieth anniversary, and to celebrate the opening in 1927 of a new building for the Detroit Institute of Arts, a Beaux-Arts, Italian Renaissance-styled structure.[15] Other architects created designs inspired by the Hugh Ferriss concepts, which included the Guardian Building, the David Stott Building, the J.L Hudson Building, and others.[13][15]

Albert Kahn Associates designed what is now Cadillac Place (1923) for General Motors, featuring Neo-Classical architecture. Kahn, sometimes called the "architect of Detroit", originally worked for John Scott, who designed the Wayne County Building (1897). It opened as the second-largest office building in the world.[6]

The seven Fisher brothers, who owned the automotive company Fisher Body, essentially gave architect Kahn a blank check to design and build the "most beautiful building in the world."[16] This was the Fisher Building (1927) which, with its detailed work, has been called the city's "largest art object." Its opulent three-story, barrel-vaulted lobby is constructed with forty different kinds of marble.[16][17][18] Albert Kahn Associates chief architect for the Fisher Building was Joseph Nathaniel French.[19] The Fisher Building and Cadillac Place are among the National Historic Landmarks in Detroit anchoring the city's historic New Center.

Architect Wirt C. Rowland played an integral role in crafting the city's historic skyline with his designs for the Buhl, Penobscot, and Guardian buildings. Rowland's design for the Buhl Building (1925) included a Gothic Revival design, with a blend of Romanesque accents. Renowned Art Deco skyscrapers include Rowland's Penobscot (1928) and Guardian (1929),[14] and John M. Donaldson's David Stott Building (1929). Architectural tiles made from Pewabic Pottery by American ceramist Mary Chase Perry Stratton are a prominent feature in the Guardian Building's facade and decor.[14]

Tallest buildings

[edit]
The Detroit Financial District contains buildings by architect Wirt Rowland including the Penobscot, Buhl, and Guardian.
Rank Building Height Stories Built Notes
1 Detroit Marriott at the Renaissance Center 727 feet (222 m) 73 1977 [20]
2 One Detroit Center 619 feet (189 m) 43 1993 [21]
3 Penobscot Building 565 feet (172 m) 47 1928 [22]
T-4 Renaissance Center Tower 100 522 feet (159 m) 39 1977 [23]
T-4 Renaissance Center Tower 200 522 feet (159 m) 39 1977 [24]
T-4 Renaissance Center Tower 300 522 feet (159 m) 39 1977 [25]
T-4 Renaissance Center Tower 400 522 feet (159 m) 39 1977 [26]
8 Guardian Building 496 feet (151 m) 40 1929 [27]
9 Book Tower 475 feet (145 m) 38 1926 [28]
10 150 West Jefferson 455 feet (139 m) 26 1989 [29]

Contemporary highlights

[edit]

The Detroit area also contains prominent skycrapers designed in the Modern, Postmodern, and Contemporary Modern architectural styles.[3][6] With the notable exception of the 1001 Woodward (1965) building, Detroit's skyscrapers show less influence by the Chicago school of architecture and are more eastern in character.[3] Minoru Yamasaki designed Detroit's One Woodward Avenue (1962) in the Modern architectural style, following it with his similar, award-winning design for New York City's World Trade Center towers (1973-2001).[30] Today, the city's contemporary skyscrapers stand beside restored historic ones. One Detroit Center (1993) and its neogothic spires is considered a fine example of post modern architecture by architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee, referring to Wirt Rowland's historic Penobscot Building (1928), both located in the heart of the Financial District's wireless Internet zone.[3]

The office market in Metro Detroit is one of the nation's largest. with 147.88 million square feet (13,739,000 m2).[31] The Renaissance Center, with 5.552 million square feet (515,800 m2), and the Southfield Town Center, with 2.2 million square feet (204,400 m2), are large-scale examples of Contemporary Modern skyscraper complexes. Each mixed-use complex is an interconnected group of skyscrapers termed a "city within a city."

The Renaissance Center by John Portman on the International Riverfront, GM Wintergarden by Skidmore, Owings & Merrill.

The construction of the Renaissance Center in Downtown Detroit marked a new era for the city's architecture. In the 1970s, Detroit Renaissance, chaired by Henry Ford II, commissioned highly regarded architect John Portman to design an enormous skyscraper complex called the Renaissance Center in hopes of increasing the attraction of city living for middle and upper-class residents. Some left because of court-ordered busing to integrate schools that were de facto segregated based on residential patterns. Portman had hoped to halt the exodus.

Portman expanded on his earlier design for the Peachtree Plaza Hotel in Atlanta when designing the Renaissance Center in Detroit. He contributed to the popularity of the skyscraper hotel.[3] (See Portman's Bonaventure Hotel in Los Angeles). In the ensuing decades, the Renaissance Center expanded to join the city's restored historic art deco skyscrapers in forming the current skyline.

In 1924, Detroit's Book-Cadillac opened as the world's tallest hotel (it is now a re-developed Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel). Completion of the first phase of the Renaissance Center in 1977 restored this distinction to the city. The Renaissance Center's central tower opened with a flagship hotel, the tallest in the world,[32] and a conference center with the world's largest rooftop restaurant. As of 2012 the hotel is Marriott International's largest in the United States, with 1,298 rooms. Though it is no longer the world's tallest hotel, it remains the tallest all-hotel skyscraper in the Western Hemisphere.[32] The Westin hotel and conference center at the Southfield Town Center is across from Lawrence Technological University.

Stemming the flight of capital from the city proved difficult, however, as the suburban office market continued to grow, notably in Southfield and Troy. The Southfield Town Center, constructed from 1975 to 1989, became easy to recognize with its marque of five golden glass skyscrapers. It attracted tenants in competition with the Renaissance Center as Metro Detroit's office market continued its suburban expansion.

Portman designed the Renaissance Center with interior spaces, yet secure. It quickly became a symbol of the city of Detroit. In 1996, the Renaissance Center's design changed when General Motors purchased the entire complex for its new headquarters. The $500-million makeover of the complex included a $100-million renovation of the hotel.[33] A new front door Wintergarden (2003) provides waterfront views and expanded retail space. Prior to completion of its renovation in 2003, some had criticized its circular corridors as confusing. Construction of a lighted glass walkway now facilitates ease of navigation encircling the interior mezzanine. A pedestrian-friendly glass entry way has replaced the former concrete berms along Jefferson Avenue.

The city, together with the Riverfront Conservancy, undertook another major project planned at $559-million along the Detroit International Riverfront to construct a three-mile (5 km) riverfront promenade park along the east river from Hart Plaza and the Renaissance Center to the Belle Isle bridge.[34] Detroit Wayne County Port Authority added the Dock of Detroit (2005), a state of the art cruise ship dock on Hart Plaza near the Renaissance Center. A two-mile (3 km) extension along the west river will take the riverfront promenade park from Hart Plaza to the Ambassador Bridge (1929) for a total of five miles (8 km) of parkway from bridge to bridge. Michigan constructed its first urban state park, the William G. Milliken State Park and Harbor (2003). Three contemporary high-rise casino resort hotels in Detroit include the MGM Grand Detroit (2007) by SmithGroup, Motor City Casino (2007), and the 30-story Hollywood Casino (2009). A fourth contemporary high-rise casino resort hotel, Caesars Windsor (1998/2008), is visible from the International Riverfront.

Dearborn's Adoba Hotel by Charles Luckman.

Besides the Town Center skyscrapers, Southfield's modern towers include the 26-story American Center (1975) by the SmithGroup and One Towne Square (1992) by Rossetti with 21-stories. Other notable centers of commerce in the area are Dearborn, Troy, and Auburn Hills. Dearborn contains the world headquarters of the Ford Motor Company. Dearborn's 14-story luxury Adoba Hotel (1976) with its contemporary arced design by Charles Luckman is among the region's conference centers, with 772 rooms. Rossetti designed Dearborn's modern Ritz-Carlton Hotel (1988) along with the complementary Fairlane Plaza North and South (1990) as well as the Parklane Towers (1973). Troy has a large number of office buildings, many of which are situated along the corridor of Big Beaver Road. The tallest of these is the Top of Troy (1975) building, a 27-story triangular tower. Troy also contains what is generally considered to be the most upscale shopping center in the region, the Somerset Collection.

The suburb of Auburn Hills is home to the 15-story Chrysler Headquarters and Technology Center with its 5.3 million square feet (490,000 m2) on 504 acres (2.04 km2).[35] CRSS Architects designed the Chrysler Technology Center (1993) in a cross-axial formation where its elongated atrium topped concourses converge with an octagonal radiant skylight at its center. The SmithGroup designed the attached contemporary Chrysler Headquarters (1996) tower in golden glass crowned with the pentastar emblem. The nearby The Palace of Auburn Hills (1988) by Rosetti is a sports arena that has served as a prototype for many others of its kind.

Future development

[edit]
MGM Grand Detroit completed in 2007.

Between 1996 and 2006, downtown Detroit attracted more than $15 billion in new investment from private and public sectors.[36] In 2011, Quicken Loans moved its company headquarters to downtown Detroit, consolidating suburban offices, a move considered to be of high importance to city planners to reestablish the historic downtown.[37] Quicken Loans purchased office buildings in downtown Detroit and has considered new sites for new construction at the former Statler on Grand Circus Park and the former Hudson's location.[37] Plans for a major residential and retail development adjacent to the Renaissance Center have been announced. In 2009, DTE unveiled a $50 million transformation of the landscape around its downtown headquarters into an urban oasis with parks, walkways, and a reflecting pool adjacent to the MGM Grand Detroit.[38] Many residential lofts and high rises are under construction in the Detroit area.[36] Renovation of historic buildings is a source of new development for the city of Detroit. The Inn at Ferry Street in the East Ferry Avenue Historic District and the Inn at 97 Winder in the Brush Park Historic District are examples of a successful Midtown restoration projects. Other historic restoration projects in Detroit include developments in the Midtown area, the Doubletree Guest Suites Fort Shelby, and the Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel. The Woodward Avenue Light Rail, beginning 2013, will serve as a link between the Detroit People Mover downtown and SEMCOG Commuter Rail with access to DDOT and SMART buses.[39]

In January 2008, the City of Detroit unveiled a concept for a new Cadillac Centre, a $150 million mixed-use residential entertainment-retail complex attached to the Cadillac Tower. Architect Anthony Caradonna designed the Cadillac Centre concept in the postmodern architectural genre known as deconstructivism similar to the Guggenheim Museum Bilbao. The 24-story steel and glass twin-towers complex to be located on Campus Martius has been placed on indefinite hold.[40] The futuristic Cadillac Centre would be located in Detroit's historic Monroe block, once a collection of eight antebellum commercial buildings cleared in 1990.[41] The Pavilions of Troy, a $380 million mixed-use complex, is concept planned for the suburban city of Troy.[42] Metro Detroit is second largest source of architectural and engineering job opportunities in the U.S.[43] The University of Michigan, the University of Detroit Mercy, and Lawrence Technological University offer architectural degree programs.

Landmarks and monuments

[edit]
Romanesque style St. Mary Roman Catholic Church (1885) by architect Peter Dederichs in Greektown.
Most Holy Redeemer Church (1922) in Detroit by Donaldson and Meier

Founded in 1701, Detroit contains the second oldest Roman Catholic parish in the United States.[44] Consequently, Metro Detroit's many churches and cathedrals, though too numerous to list, are among its architectural gems and sites in the National Register of Historic Places. Churches dominated the city's post Civil War era skyline. The Gothic Revival architecture of Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church (1887) by Alert E. French and Leon Coquard includes flying buttresses, displaying the French influence. Ste. Anne's displays the oldest stained glass in the city, located near the Ambassador Bridge.[6] The Gothic styled St. Joseph Church (1873/1883) in the Eastern Market-Lafayette Park neighborhood by Francis G. Himpler is an authentic German Catholic Parish and an important site listed in the National Register of Historic Places, noted for its architecture and stained glass.[6] In another German parish, Peter Dederichs designed the Pisan Romanesque styled Old St. Mary's Church (1885) in Greektown.[6] The Gothic Revival cathedral styled Sweetest Heart of Mary (1893) in the Forest Park neighborhood area by Spier and Rohns is the largest Roman Catholic Church in Detroit.[6][45]

The Gothic Revival styled Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament (1915) and the Cathedral Church of St. Paul (1911) by Ralph Adams Cram are both located along Woodward Avenue. Sculptor Corrado Parducci's work adorns many of Detroit's churches including the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament and the St. Aloysius Church (1930) in the Washington Boulevard Historic District.[46] Among his Detroit projects, Gordon W. Lloyd designed the Christ Church (1863) at 960 E. Jefferson Avenue. Detroit's First Presbyterian Church (1891) is a fine example of Richardsonian Romanesque style by George D. Mason and Zachariah Rice. The Fort Street Presbyterian Church (1855), designed in a Victorian Gothic style with a steeple that rises 265 ft (81 m), is among the tallest churches in the United States.

The large concentration of Poles in the metropolitan Detroit resulted in a number of ornate churches in the Polish Cathedral style designed by noted architects. Henry Engelbert designed the Gothic styled St. Albertus (1885), Detroit's first Polish Catholic parish. Harry J. Rill designed St. Hedwig's (1915) and the Baroque styled St. Stanislaus (1913). Donaldson and Meier designed St. Hyacinth's (1924). Ralph Adams Cram designed the ornate Gothic styled St. Florian's Church (1928) at 2626 Poland Street in Hamtramck. Joseph G. Kastler and William B.N. Hunter designed the Victorian styled St. Josaphat's (1901) which has spires that line-up with the Renaissance Center towers when approaching the city on Interstate 75. The Historical Society at the Detroit Historical Museum provides information on tours of the area's many historic churches. The historic Beaubien House (c. 1851) at 553 East Jefferson houses the Michigan Society of Architects.

Campus Martius

[edit]
Bagley Memorial Fountain by Henry Hobson Richardson on Cadillac Square facing Campus Martius.

The city and its surrounding area have numerous monuments by noted architects and sculptors along tree-lined boulevards and parks just some of which are noted.[47][48] Campus Martius is a park at the encircled confluence of Woodward and Michigan Avenues. It serves as one of the city's central gathering places for events. The park disappeared in the 1900s as the downtown reconfigured to accommodate increased vehicular traffic.[49] In 2004, the city restored the park with traffic circle. Granite waterfalls are at the western edge of the north and south sitting gardens. The park has two stages for live entertainment. Greenways and flowering botanical gardens fan out from Woodward Fountain, the centerpiece of Campus Martius, which can jet water over 100 feet (30 m) into the air,[50] while the Bagley Memorial Fountain sits nearby on Cadillac Square. Grand Circus is on Woodward Avenue, down the street.

Hart Plaza, along the riverfront, was designed to replace Campus Martius as a focal point. Yet Hart Plaza is a primarily hard-surfaced area, many residents came to lament the lack of true park space in the city's downtown area. This led to calls to rebuild Campus Martius. Compuware World Headquarters overlooks the reconstructed traffic circle surrounding Campus Martius Park with the historic Michigan Soldiers' and Sailors' Monument of the American Civil War by Randolph Rogers.[47] The old Detroit City Hall (1861) was demolished in 1961. It was built by Alexander Chapoton of one of the city's oldest French families. The Queen Anne style Alexander Chapoton House (c. 1870) stands at 511 Beaubien.[5][6]

Grand Circus

[edit]
Russell Alger Fountain in Grand Circus by Daniel French and Henry Bacon.
Victorian Gothic, Central United Methodist Church (1866) overlooks Grand Circus.

In 1805, Detroit experienced a devastating fire, which destroyed most of the city's French colonial architecture. Shortly afterward, Father Gabriel Richard said, Speramus meliora; resurget cineribus, meaning, We hope for better things; it will arise from the ashes, which became the city's official motto.[44] For Detroit, Justice Augustus B. Woodward devised a plan similar to Pierre Charles L'Enfant's design for Washington, D.C. Detroit's monumental avenues and traffic circles fan out in a Baroque styled radial fashion from Grand Circus Park in the heart of the city's theater district.[51]

Detroit's performance centers and theatres emanate from the Grand Circus Park Historic District and continue along Woodward Avenue toward the Fisher Theatre in the city's New Center. The ornate Fox Theatre (1928), by C. Howard Crane, near the Grand Circus is a National Historic Landmark which was fully restored in 1988.[52] Crane also designed the Orchestra Hall along Woodward which is home to the Detroit Symphony Orchestra. In Gothic revival design, St. John's Episcopal Church (1861) stands across from the Fox Theatre and beside Comerica Park along with Woodward Avenue's vintage street lights. Restored in 1996, the Detroit Opera House (1922), by Crane, faces Grand Circus Park.[53] The grounds include antique statuary and old-fashioned water fountains. Architect Henry Bacon designed the Russell Alger Memorial Fountain (1921) in Grand Circus Park. The Russell Alger Memorial Fountain contains a classic Roman figure symbolizing Michigan by renowned American sculptor Daniel French.[47]

Neo-Renaissance and Neo-Classical

[edit]
Detroit Institute of Arts by Paul Philippe Cret, with 2007 renovation and expansion by Michael Graves.

In the late 19th century, Detroit was called the Paris of the West for its architecture and open public spaces,[44] in keeping with the City Beautiful movement.[54] Architects John and Arthur Scott designed the Wayne County Building (1897) in downtown Detroit. Expense was not a factor in construction of its lavish design. Topped with bronze quadrigas by J. Massey Rhind and an Anthony Wayne pediment by Edward Wagner, it may be America's finest surviving example of Roman Baroque architecture with a blend of Beaux-Arts.[5] Stanford White, architect of Newport, Rhode Island's Rosecliff mansion, designed Detroit's Neoclassical Savoyard Centre (1900) at 151 Fort St. Belle Isle Park provides panoramic views of city skyline along the Detroit International Riverfront.

Col. Frank J. Hecker House (1891), 5510 Woodward, designed by Louis Kamper after Château de Chenonceaux.

The French-American architect Paul Philippe Cret designed the Detroit Institute of Arts which includes a 1,150-seat theatre in the Detroit's Cultural Center Historic District. Cret was educated at the École des Beaux-Arts in Lyon then in Paris, and came to the United States in 1903 to teach at the University of Pennsylvania. Cret was also the architect of the Folger Shakespeare Library in Washington, D.C. Michael Graves designed the 2007 renovation and expansion of the Detroit Institute of Arts with its exterior covered in white marble. Harley, Ellington and Day designed the marble Neoclassical Horace Rackham Education Memorial Building (1941) also within the Cultural Center Historic District.

French Gothic styled St. Paul Catholic Church (1899) in Grosse Pointe is among Metro Detroit's many historic churches.

The Detroit area is home to light houses,[55] yacht clubs, and many unique monuments.[47] Examples include the Grosse Pointe Yacht Club (1929) and the Beaux-Arts Hurlbut Memorial Gate (1894) at Waterworks Park.[56] The Detroit Historical Society has compiled an incomplete list with more than 122 public sculptures and monuments just near the downtown area,[48] while Detroit1701 lists many additional downtown monuments.[57] Architects such as Cass Gilbert who designed the United States Supreme Court in Washington, D.C. also designed the marble Detroit Public Library (1921) in the Cultural Center Historic District and Belle Isle's exquisite marble James Scott Memorial Fountain.[58] Frederick Olmsted, landscape architect of New York City's Central Park, designed Detroit's 982-acre (3.97 km2) Belle Isle park. Marshall Fredericks' sculptures, which include the Spirit of Detroit, may be seen throughout the metropolitan area.[59] Sculptor Corrado Parducci's work adorns many notable Metro Detroit buildings such as the Meadowbrook Hall mansion, the Guardian Building, the Buhl Building (1925), the Penobscot Building, the Fisher Building and the David Stott Building.

Metro Detroit's many architecturally significant landmarks extend beyond the city and include the French Gothic St. Paul on the Lake Catholic Church (1899) by Harry J. Rill in Grosse Pointe Farms, Kirk in the Hills Presbyterian (1958) in Bloomfield Hills by Wirt C. Rowland, and Christ Church Cranbrook (1928) by Bertram Goodhue in Bloomfield Hills.[6]

Eliel Saarinen was the architect for the Cranbrook Educational Community in the Metro Detroit suburb of Bloomfield Hills.[6] Eliel's son, the famed modernist Eero Saarinen, designed a complex of buildings in the suburb of Warren, Michigan for General Motors known as the GM Technical Center.[6] Sculptor Carl Milles' numerous works in Metro Detroit include those at Cranbrook Educational Community in Bloomfield Hills, Michigan such as Mermaids & Tritons Fountain (1930), Sven Hedin on a Camel (1932), Jonah and the Whale Fountain (1932), Orpheus Fountain (1936), and the Spirit of Transportation (1952) at the Detroit Civic Center.[60]

Residential architecture

[edit]
Tudor revival style mansion of Charles T. Fisher, president of Fisher Body corporation in Detroit's Boston-Edison Historic District designed by architect George Mason.[61]
The Park Avenue Historic District contains various renovations. Originally designed by Albert Kahn, developers converted the Kales Building into a residential high-rise with retail in 2004.

Downtown and New Center areas contain high-rise buildings, while the majority of the surrounding city consists of low-rise structures and single-family homes. The city's neighborhoods constructed prior to World War II feature the architecture of the times with wood frame and brick houses, larger brick homes in middle-class neighborhoods, and ornate mansions throughout the city's many historic districts and nearby suburbs such as Grosse Pointe. The oldest city neighborhoods are along the Woodward and Jefferson corridors, while newer city neighborhoods are found in the west and northeast.

High-rise residential buildings are found in neighborhoods along the International Riverfront and East Jefferson Avenue residential area extending toward Grosse Pointe and the Palmer Park neighborhood West of Woodward on the city's North end. Ludwig Mies van der Rohe designed a residential development for Detroit's East side Lafayette Park (1958–1965), including three high-rise residential buildings and over 200 townhouses. A successful 78-acre (320,000 m2) urban renewal project, this development is the largest concentration of buildings designed by Mies van der Rohe in the world.[62] Lafayette Park is near the architecturally significant St. Joseph's Catholic Church and the Eastern Market Historic District. The East side contains many architecturally distinctive homes such as those in the Indian Village and East Jefferson Avenue.

Some of the oldest extant working-class neighborhoods include those in the Southwest such Corktown, established by Irish immigrants and those in the middle-class West Vernor-Junction area. The Southwest is seeing redevelopment and construction of new homes and condos due in part to the city's expanding Mexicantown area surrounding Clark Park, which is near the architecturally significant Most Holy Redeemer Church and Ste. Anne de Detroit Catholic Church.

Detroit neighborhood historic districts contain notable residential architecture from the Gilded Age.[63] Many architecturally significant late-19th- and early-20th-century mansions have been restored, such as those in Midtown's Brush Park neighborhood. The West Canfield, Woodbridge, and East Ferry Avenue neighborhoods are examples of Midtown's restored French Renaissance Revival, Second Empire, Romanesque, and Queen Anne architecture. Noted architect Gordon W. Lloyd designed the David Whitney House (1894) constructed with a jasper stone exterior.[64] The Whitney House is now a fine restaurant at 4421 Woodward Avenue in Midtown. The East Canfield area nearby contains the Gothic revival styled Sweetest Heart of Mary Catholic Church.

Arden Park-East Boston (a National Historic district comprising Arden Park Boulevard and East Boston Boulevard, running for three blocks east of Woodward near the New Center Area) is noted for mansions built by the industrial giants of the 1910s and 1920s.[65] Residents included the Dodge Brothers, J. L. Hudson, and Fred Fisher, the founder of Fisher Body.[66] Fisher's residence on Arden Park (George D. Mason, 1918, with additions in 1923) is constructed of Indiana limestone in the Italian Villa style. It features elaborate stone carvings and intricate ironwork and was the subject of a 1926 "Fortune Magazine" discussion of "the harmony of materials and proportion in residential architecture." The nearby Boston-Edison neighborhood (comprising four residential blocks west of Woodward) features several Kahn residences, including the Benjamin Siegal residence (1915), the James Couzens house (1910), and one of Kahn's rare stucco residences, the Ernest Venn house (1908). Additional architecturally significant homes in the neighborhood include the Sebastian S. Kresge house, the Berry Gordy house, and one of the Henry Ford houses.[61] Many architecturally distinctive homes are also located near the University of Detroit Mercy on the city's North end such as those in Palmer Woods and Sherwood Forest historic districts. The Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament is located near this corridor along Woodward Avenue.

Detroit's heritage includes works by Frank Lloyd Wright who had participated in the initial design for Henry Ford's Fair Lane Estate,[67] a National Historic Landmark in Dearborn. Frank Lloyd Wright also designed the Dorothy H. Turkel House at 2760 West Seven Mile Rd.,[68] the Gregor S. and Elizabeth B. Affleck House at 1925 N. Woodward Ave., the Melvyn Maxwell and Sara Stein Smith House at 5045 Ponvalley Rd., and the Carlton D. Wall House at 12305 Beck Rd. in Plymouth Township.

McGinnis and Walsh designed this 39,000 sq. ft. Tudor Revival mansion, known as the Bishop Gallagher House (1925), in Palmer Woods Historic District[6][69]
Woodland by Hugh T. Keyes, longtime Bloomfield Hills estate of John Bugas

The mansions of metropolitan Detroit are among the nation's grandest estates. Meadow Brook Hall (1929), the 110 room 88,000 sq ft (8,200 m2) mansion of Matilda Dodge Wilson at 480 South Adams Rd. in the suburb of Rochester Hills, is the fourth largest in the United States.[67] Listed in the National Register of Historic Places, the mansion is open to the public. The suburbs of Grosse Pointe and Bloomfield Hills are replete with grandiose mansions. Albert Kahn designed the Edsel and Eleanor Ford House (1927) at 1100 Lakeshore Dr. in Grosse Pointe which is open to the public.[67] Rose Terrace (1934–1976), the mansion of Anna Dodge, once stood at 12 Lakeshore Dr. in Grosse Pointe. Designed by Horace Trumbauer as a Louis XV styled château, Rose Terrace was an enlarged version of the firm's Miramar in Newport, Rhode Island.[70] A developer, the highest bidder for Rose Terrace, demolished it in 1976 to create an upscale neighborhood. This gave a renewed sense of urgency to preservationists.[70] The Dodge Collection from Rose Terrace may be viewed at the Detroit Institute of Arts. The Italian Renaissance styled Russell A. Alger Jr. House (1910), at 32 Lakeshore Dr., by architect Charles A. Platt serves as the Grosse Pointe War Memorial.[71] The five Grosse Pointe communities feature a variety of newer and early-twentieth-century mansions which flank the shores of Lake St. Clair, one of the finest examples being Woodley Green (the Benson Ford House, 1934) by Hugh T. Keyes (considered "one of the most prolific and versatile architects of the period").[13] Bloomfield Hills also contains vast estates from the early to mid 20th century, such as Albert Kahn-designed Cranbrook House on Saarinen's Cranbrook campus (called by The New York Times "one of the greatest campuses ever created anywhere in the world"[72]). Next door on Vaughan Rd. is Keyes-designed Woodland, the estate of John Bugas.

There have also been some newer redeveloped upscale subdivisions in the Grosse Pointe, Bloomfield Hills, and Turtle Lake areas.[5][6][73]

[edit]
Skyscrapers
Landmarks
Monuments[47][48]
Architectural sculpture

Citations

[edit]
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References and further reading

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[edit]