Coleman A. Young Municipal Center | |
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The Coleman A. Young Municipal Center, looking southeast from West Larned Street.
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General information | |
Status | Complete |
Type | City Hall |
Location | 2 Woodward Avenue Detroit, Michigan |
Construction started | 1951 |
Completed | 1954 |
Management | Detroit-Wayne Joint Building Authority |
Height | |
Roof | 318 ft (97 m) |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 20 |
Design and construction | |
Architect | Harley, Ellington & Day |
The Coleman A. Young Municipal Center is a government office building and courthouse located at 2 Woodward Avenue in Downtown Detroit, Michigan. Originally called the City-County Building, it was renamed for the former Detroit Mayor Coleman A. Young, shortly after his death in 1997. It serves as the City of Detroit government headquarters.
The Coleman A. Young Municipal Center houses offices, courtrooms, and meeting rooms. The class-A office building stands near the Renaissance Center, Hart Plaza, One Detroit Center, Courtyard by Marriott - Downtown Detroit, and the Millender Center.
The modernist International-style building was designed by the architectural firm of Harley, Ellington and Day. Construction began on the skyscraper in 1951 and was completed in 1954. It is 20 floors tall, and including the basement has 21 total floors.
Three sides of the building's exterior are faced with white Vermont marble with black marble spandrel panels beneath the windows of the Courts Tower to emphasize the building's vertical lines. The verticality of the tower section, with its white marble-clad piers and dark spandrels, offers a distinct contrast with the 14-story Administration Tower office section, in which horizontal lines are emphasized. The brick of the Randolph Street facade was not covered with marble to allow for a more economical future expansion.
The 14-story portion of this complex is called the Administration Tower and is 197 ft (60 m) tall, from the ground to the mechanical penthouse roof parapet. The Administration Tower holds offices for the City of Detroit and Wayne County, as well as doctor clinics, laboratories, a municipal library, and the City Council auditorium chambers on the 13th floor.