Rossetti Architects

ROSSETTI
Industry Architecture
Founded 1969
Founder Gino Rossetti
Headquarters

160 W. Fort St.

Detroit, Michigan, United States
Services
  • Sports, events, conference and exhibition centre architecture
  • Interior design
  • Environmental Branding
  • Wayfinding
  • Overlay
  • Masterplanning
  • Landscape Architecture
  • Sustainable design consulting
  • Facilities operations analysis
Owner Matt Rossetti
Website http://www.rossetti.com

ROSSETTI is an architectural design and planning firm headquartered in Detroit, Michigan[1] The firm engages in the design of professional sports stadiums, arenas, entertainment venues, institutions and commercial buildings. Within the past decade, ROSSETTI has also focused on designing sports anchored developments and master planning, where stadiums are designed and planned to carefully integrate into an urban environment.

History

ROSSETTI is a privately owned architectural firm that was founded in Detroit, in 1969, by Gino Rossetti. In 1999, the firm's ownership was passed onto his son, Matt Rossetti.

Palace Of Auburn Hills Michigan

The firm's early projects centered on health care facilities, corporate headquarters, interiors, retail and master planning. The firm began approaching the sports and entertainment industry after ROSSETTI was contracted in 1984 to design The Palace of Auburn Hills. The project, which broke ground in 1986, and opened in 1988, marked the firms first major success in sports entertainment.

Today, ROSSETTI works with clients worldwide on a wide variety of projects, with a focus on sports and entertainment. ROSSETTI's focus globally is in Asia and Europe.

Projects

Daytona International Speedway - Daytona Rising

The Palace of Auburn Hills

Return on Design

Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan

Research and Development

College Basketball

College Football


College Hockey

College Soccer

International Stadiums

Minor League Hockey

MLS Soccer Stadiums

Motor Sports

NBA

NBA Training Facilities


NFL

NHL

Tennis

Community Projects


References and further reading

References

  1. "Contact." ROSSETTI. Retrieved on November 16, 2009.
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