Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
SmithGroup is an international architectural, engineering and planning firm based in Detroit, Michigan. Established in 1853 by architect Sheldon Smith, SmithGroup is the longest continually operating architecture and engineering firm in the United States that is not a wholly owned subsidiary. [1]
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 ...
One Woodward Avenue (formerly known as the Michigan Consolidated Gas Company Building and American Natural Resources Building) is a 28-story office skyscraper in downtown Detroit, Michigan. Located in the city's Financial District , it overlooks Hart Plaza and the International Riverfront .
1981, McMichael Middle School, Detroit, Michigan [4] 1981–1989, and 2010–2015, Cobo Center (expansion and later renovation; now Huntington Place), 1 Washington Boulevard, Detroit, Michigan [9] [10] 1987, Stroh Brewery Company's River Place Inn (now Riverwalk Hotel Detroit), 1000 River Place Drive, Detroit, Michigan [11]
Minoru Yamasaki designed Detroit’s first modernist building in the late 1940s — the Federal Reserve Annex at 160 W. Fort St., now home to the Detroit Free Press.
DTE Energy Co. Navitas House: HAA was selected as the Architecture Firm of Record for the redesign of the Navitas House, which is an old Salvation Army building in Detroit that now holds 140 DTE Energy information technology employees. [2] [3]
The Free Press spoke with several area architecture, development and real estate experts as to what possibilities they see for the icon that still dominates Detroit's skyline and is recognized ...
Donaldson and Meier was an architectural firm based in Detroit, Michigan. Founded in 1880 by John M. Donaldson (1854–1941) and Henry J. Meier (1858–1917), the firm produced a large and varied number of commissions in Detroit and southeastern Michigan.