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The Wayne County Building is a monumental government structure located at 600 Randolph Street in Downtown Detroit, Michigan. It formerly contained the Wayne County administrative offices – now located in the Guardian Building at 500 Griswold Street – and its courthouse .
The McGregor Memorial Conference Center is a meeting and event facility on the campus of Wayne State University in Midtown Detroit, Michigan, designed by noted Japanese American architect Minoru Yamasaki (1912–1986) and completed in 1958.
The Wayne County Department of Public Services was formed in 1906 as the Wayne County Road Commission. It was the government agency in Wayne County, Michigan responsible for building and maintaining the county's roads and highways. [10] Its first commissioners were Edward N. Hines, Cassius R. Benton, and automobile manufacturer Henry Ford ...
Bruce Daggy was honored with the Art Vivian Distinguished Community Leader Award, an award previously won by his father.
Wayne County Courthouse† 600 Randolph Street Detroit: September 17, 1974: Wayne State University Informational Designation 4735-4841 Cass Avenue Detroit: January 19, 1957: Joseph F. Weber House: 206 Eliot Detroit: December 17, 1987: Andrew Jackson Welsh House: 512 West Dunlap Northville: February 23, 1981: West Canfield Historic District†
Ohio County Board of Education Wheeling: 1920s or 1930s Peerless Coal Company Store: Vivian: 1921 Prince Station: Prince: 1942 Richwood Chamber of Commerce Downtown Richwood Historic District: Richwood: 1925 Riverview Terrace Charleston: 1937 Roxy Theater Clendenin Historic District: Clendenin: 1930s Second Ward Negro Elementary School ...
Rose Terrace was a private home located at 12 Lake Shore Drive in Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan. Built in 1934 by Anna Dodge , widow of automobile pioneer Horace E. Dodge , it was designated a Michigan State Historic Site in 1971 [ 2 ] and listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1971. [ 1 ]
The Christian Science congregation used the building until 1961, when they sold it to Wayne State University. Wayne State remodeled the interior to create a theatre to seat 532 people, serving as a repertory theater. [9] The building was re-christened in honor of Clarence B. Hilberry, the fourth president of WSU, and reopened in January 1964.