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Book Tower

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Type
  
Commercial offices

Roof
  
144.78 m (475.0 ft)

Height
  
145 m

Opened
  
1926

Architect
  
Completed
  
1926

Floor count
  
382 below ground

Floors
  
38

Construction started
  
1916

Book Tower Book Tower Photos Historic Detroit

Location
  
1265 Washington BoulevardDetroit, Michigan

Floor area
  
118,571 m (1,276,290 sq ft)

Architectural styles
  
Renaissance Revival architecture, Neoclassical architecture

Similar
  
David Stott Building, Penobscot Building, David Broderick Tower, Westin Book Cadillac, Guardian Building

Book tower detroit


The Book Tower is a 145 m (476 ft), 38-story skyscraper located at 1265 Washington Boulevard in Downtown Detroit, Michigan, within the Washington Boulevard Historic District. Construction began on the Italian Renaissance-style building in 1916 as an addition to the original Book Building, and finished a decade later. Designed in the Academic Classicism style, in addition to the 38 rentable floors, it has two basement levels and two mechanical floors beneath the green copper roof, a roofing style shared by the nearby Westin Book Cadillac Hotel. Retail and gallery floors used to reside on the first and second floors, with businesses previously occupying the rest. The building is currently unoccupied.

Contents

Book Tower Book Tower by Haseform in our shop

Detroit book tower


History

Book Tower Walking the Architecture of Downtown Detroit The Basics Book Tower

Named after the famous Book Brothers of Detroit, it was briefly the tallest building in the city until the completion of the Penobscot Building in 1928. A taller Book Tower of 81 stories was to be built at the opposite end of the Book Building, but the Great Depression cancelled those plans. The building contains a cartouche by the Detroit architectural sculptor Corrado Parducci.

Book Tower Book Tower Photos Historic Detroit

From its opening through the mid-1970s the Book Tower remained a prestigious address on Washington Boulevard. Like many structures in the city, its fortunes declined until 1988 when the owners defaulted on the mortgage. In 1989, Travelers Insurance, the principal mortgage-holder, took possession and sold the building to developer John Lambrecht who previously purchased and renovated the Cadillac Tower a few blocks east. Lambrecht had similar plans for the Book Building and Tower; however, his untimely death later that year brought things to a halt.

Book Tower Detroit towers returning to past glory The Globe and Mail

Lambrecht's widow attempted to manage the property and made some improvements, but she was unable to maintain momentum. On July 25, 2006, she sold the Book Tower to the Pagan Organization, a New York-based investment group. Pagan's early plans call for a renovation and conversion of both the Book Tower and Book building into a mix of retail, residential, and office units. The Pagan Organization created the Northeast Commercial Services Corp. to manage the building. Northeast Commercial Services Corp. filed for Chapter 11 protection Wednesday, May 24, 2007, after defaulting on its mortgage loan. The last tenant, Bookie's Tavern, closed its doors January 5, 2009, and moved to a new location downtown.

Book Tower Book Tower restoration just part of developers39 ambitious plans for

In November 2009, Key Investment Group of Clinton Township, Michigan announced intentions to buy and renovate the building as a mixed-use development with high rise residential units, office space, and retail. Weeks earlier, the investors revealed that they were looking to purchase the building from AKNO Enterprises of Vancouver for a green renovation. In January 2010, Rosemarie Dobek, CFO of Key Investment Group, reported that the group is pursuing plans for a US$320 million green renovation to include the Book Tower and four other Detroit buildings.

Book Tower httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

In August 2013, Book Tower owner ANKO Enterprises of Vancouver, British Columbia, filed a tax abatement for a future renovation of the building; however, specific plans have not yet been disclosed.

Book Tower Book Tower and Book Building Historic Detroit

On August 28, 2015, Bedrock Real Estate, owned by Dan Gilbert, announced it would purchase the three-building Book complex, including the Book Tower. The purchase price was reported to be about $30 million.


Book Tower Detroiturbexcom The Book Tower

Book Tower BookTowerjpg

References

Book Tower Wikipedia