Guardian Building

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Guardian Building
The Guardian Building
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The Guardian Building
The building's lavish interior
Enlarge
The building's lavish interior
Information
Location Detroit, USA
Status Complete
Constructed 1928-1929
Use office
Height
Antenna/Spire 192.6 m
Roof 151 m (496 ft)
Top floor 149 m (489 ft)
Technical Details
Floor count 40
Elevator count 22
Companies
Architect Wirt C. Rowland SmithGroup


The Guardian Building, a National Historic Landmark, is a skyscraper in downtown Detroit, Michigan. Built in 1928 and finished in 1929, the building (originally called the Union Trust Building) is a bold example of Art Deco architecture, including some art moderne designs. Covering an entire city block, the main frame of the skyscraper rises 36 stories, capped by two asymmetric spires, one extending for four additional stories. The height of the building is 489 feet (149 m). The exterior blends brickwork with tile, limestone, and terra cotta. Nicknamed the "Cathedral of Finance," the building's interior is lavishly decorated with mosaic and Pewabic and Rookwood tile. Native American themes are common inside and outside the building. The building is on the National Register of Historic Places and has undergone recent award-winning renovations. Wirt C. Rowland, of the Smith Hinchman & Grylls firm, was the building's architect while Corrado Parducci created the two sculptures flanking the Griswold Street entrance. During World War II, the Guardian Building served as headquarters for war time production; Detroit was called the "Arsenal of Democracy."

The building was purchased by Sterling Group in 2004. Under the Group's watch, the Guardian's office occupancy rate has nearly doubled, its promenade has been opened to the public for the first time in decades, and the building now has a doorman. Since this time the building has received exterior lighting accents at night and a new entrance canopy.

At the top of the Guardian Building's spire, is a huge American Flag, similar to the four smaller flags sitting atop nearby 150 West Jefferson.

[edit] See also

  • Robert Sharoff (2005). American City: Detroit Architecture 1845-2005 Wayne State University Press.

[edit] External links


Detroit skyscrapers
Downtown Towers with 25 or more Floors

Renaissance Center | Comerica Tower | Penobscot Building | Cadillac Tower | Guardian Building | Book Tower | David Stott Building | David Broderick Tower | Millender Center Apartments | Westin Book-Cadillac Hotel | Buhl Building | Riverfront Tower I | Riverfront Tower II |Riverfront Tower III | One Woodward Avenue | Trolley Plaza Apartments | 211 West Fort Street | Patrick V. McNamara Federal Building | 150 Jefferson Avenue (Formerly the Madden Building) | First National Building | 1001 Woodward | Detroit Edison Plaza

Downtown Towers under 25 Floors

Dime Building | Water Board Building | Blue Cross/Blue Shield Service Center | State of Michigan Plaza | Coleman A. Young Municipal Building | Wayne County Building | Penobscot Building Annex | Fox Theatre (Detroit) | SBC Building | SBC Building Addition | One Kennedy Square | Metropolitan Building (Detroit) | Detroit Free Press Building | Fort Washington Plaza | Chase Tower | Michigan Central Station | MotorCity Casino | MGM Grand Detroit | Greektown Casino

New Center and other areas

Fisher Building | Cadillac Place | Jeffersonian Apartments | 1300 Lafayette East Cooperative | Southfield Town Center | American Center | Hyatt Regency Dearborn | Top of Troy

List of buildings in Detroit
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