A Dozen Game-Changing Buildings in Metro Detroit

What does metro Detroit architecture need more of? That’s the question we posed to four prominent metro-area architects, and their answers skewed not towards brand-new buildings, but towards brand-new ways to renovate and expand existing structures.

The architects were asked to name three recent constructions that have energized the metro area and set architectural examples worth following. While some new constructions came up, our respondents shared an affinity for the efficient refurbishment of older designs - and for the structural riches of the Cranbrook complex.

Here are the architectural standouts they chose:

Alan Cobb, director of design and senior vice president, Albert Kahn Architects
 
21557 Telegraph Rd., Southfield
Architect: Albert Kahn Associates, Inc.
Expanded/built: 2006
 
"[Lear] looked at moving out to Auburn Hills or Novi, but after really considering what they had, they decided to acquire more land. They removed about 12 acres of asphalt and developed a campus green that they clustered new buildings around, really creating a very sustainable site. That's a good example of adaptive reuse and it was a very good thing for Southfield."
 
3215 W. Big Beaver Rd., Troy
Built: 2006
 
"They saved this beautiful stone farmhouse that dates back to the early 1800s, and they connected to it with a new, extremely sustainable building and built their headquarters around the farmhouse. That building, I think, is one that architects and the public in Detroit can look to as an example of saving a historic structure and doing it in a way that's very kind to the environment and to its neighbors."
 
350 N. Main St., Royal Oak
Architect: Neumann/Smith
Built: 2006
 
"The whole idea of bringing residential development to the center cities of Royal Oak, of downtown Birmingham, of Ferndale, all of these nice little downtowns, is something that has been a great move in the Detroit metropolitan area. The infusion of residential properties has really allowed the downtowns to flourish and come back."

Kelly Deines, design principal, Rossetti 
 
27799 Woodward Ave., Berkley
Architect: Michael Poris
Renovated: 2012
 
"I think it took a lot of balls and a lot of vision to look at a dumpy garage and basically embody the automotive aspect of this famous avenue. It seems like there'd be more roadside attractions on Woodward. It feels like one of the most Detroit things that's ever been done."
 
39221 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills
Architect: Steven Holl
Built: 1998
 
"I think of science as people experimenting with different elements—not much different from what we do as designers and architects. And the science center is kind of a package of scientific-architectural parallels. I think Steven Holl did an incredible job creating a house of architectural experimentation as a backdrop to a learning experience."
 
326 E. Fifth St., Royal Oak
Architect: Frank Arvan
Built: 2002
 
"It's not apologetic about how it contrasts. With the unorthodox use of materials in a residential area, he's found a way to almost camouflage, or take your eye off, what the material is, because it's used in a way that's still recognizably residential. But once you get up close you realize it's a concrete façade on a very traditional front porch."

Stu Pettitt, principal, Straub Pettitt Yaste Architects
 
General Motors Technical Center 
30001 Van Dyke Ave., Warren
Various architects
Renovated/expanded: 2003
 
"What I looked at are facilities and complexes that try to create a sense of community. [The technical center] is kind of a mature development, but it's a campus. And in that campus, they're developing a sense of place. Even though the original buildings were from the 1950s, there's been many additional buildings built since then."
 
Cranbrook Schools
39221 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills
Various architects
 
"It's a series of buildings of many different ages that has a plan and creates a real sense of place. The new buildings have complemented and evolved that sense of place in a positive way without the mimicking that you see in some developments."
 
21000 W. Ten Mile Rd., Southfield
Various architects
Additions built 2001, 2002, and 2006
 
"It's primarily a commuter campus, but they now have housing for students, and they're trying to make it more of an urban development. That's the way we all have to live in the future, since we don't have an unlimited amount of space to spread ourselves out and we can't afford to transport ourselves between places as easily as we used to."

Gina Van Tine, marketing and managing principal, inFORM Studio
 
39221 Woodward Ave., Bloomfield Hills 
Built: 1999
 
"The meticulousness of their design is very evident there. I just think that project is amazingly well-done. If people are coming into town, or young people are asking us for our opinion on architecture that they should go to look at, far and away, Cranbrook is head and shoulders above everywhere else."
 
Renaissance Center and Detroit Riverwalk
4500 Renaissance Center #2500, Detroit
Various architects and designers
RenCen renovated 2003/Riverwalk opened 2007
 
"I think one of the most impactful things that has happened in the very recent past has been the way that GM has taken over the RenCen and really tried to engage the waterfront. That speaks to a larger design strategy for the area. You can't emphasize that enough: the importance of changing that over from industrial, and turning our back on it, to actually embracing it and making use of it for the community at large."
 
525 S. State St., Ann Arbor
Architect: Brad Cloepfil
Built: 2009
 
"It's a very sensitive, well-thought-out juncture where it comes together [with the prevexisting section of the museum]. And as far as sitting on the site in its context, it's a little bit understated, but so powerful in and of itself. I think everybody can really learn from that, whenever they're faced with the challenge of adding on to a landmark building or some significant building in the area."
 
Patrick Dunn is an Ann Arbor-based freelance writer and contributor to Metromode and Concentrate.

ALL PHOTOS BY DAVID LEWINSKI PHOTOGRAPHY
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