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Detroit, Michigan, United States Architects Four, Inc., SmithGroup/F&S, JJR, Inc. |
SmithGroupJJR is an architectural firm headquartered in Guardian Building in Detroit, Michigan. As of 2016, it ranks among the top 10 Architecture firms according tohttp://www.architectmagazine.com/architect-50/2016/ and as the United States' seventh largest architecture and engineering firm (Building Design & Construction, July 2015). The firm is composed of client industry-focused practices serving Campus, Community, Waterfront, Health, Learning, Science & Technology, and Workplace markets. The firm has offices in ten cities: Detroit, Ann Arbor, Chicago, Dallas, Los Angeles, Madison, Phoenix, San Francisco, Shanghai, and Washington, D.C. The firm employs 800.
Established in Detroit in 1853 by architect Sheldon Smith, SmithGroupJJR, along with Luckett and Farley, is the longest continually operating architecture and engineering firm in the United States that is not a wholly owned subsidiary.
In 2000, the firm changed its name from Smith, Hinchman & Grylls to SmithGroup. In 2011, the firm incorporated its sister firm, JJR, into its current name.
The firm expanded outside North America by opening an office in Shanghai, China, in December 2013.
Notable architects from SmithGroupJJR include Minoru Yamasaki and Wirt C. Rowland.
Central United Methodist Church (1866)
Detroit Opera House (1868)
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant (1904)
Dodge Main Factory (1910)
Central Power Plant, University of Michigan (1914)
Fyfe Building (1916–1919) — Amedeo Leone
Hilberry Theatre (1917), originally the First Church of Christ Scientist — Field, Hinchman and Smith
Yost Ice Arena (formerly, Yost Field House) (1923), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor — T. J. Hinchman
J. L. Hudson Department Store and Addition (1923–1946)
Bankers Trust Building (1925) — Wirt C. Rowland
The Players Clubhouse (1925) — William E. Kapp
Buhl Building (1925) — Wirt C. Rowland
Mistersky Power Plant (1925) — Amedeo Leone
Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian Church (1926), Indian Village, Detroit — Wirt C. Rowland
Meadow Brook Hall (1926) — William E. Kapp, Rochester, Michigan
Parke-Davis Administration Building (1926) — Amedeo Leone
Michigan Bell (now AT&T) Detroit-Columbia Central Office Building (1927)
Kelvinator Administration Building (1927), 14250 Plymouth Road, Detroit, Michigan, also known as Plymouth Road Office Complex (PROC) — Amedeo Leone
League of Catholic Women Building (1927)
Country Club of Detroit (1927), Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan — Amedeo Leone
School and convent buildings at Saint Paul Catholic Church (1927), Grosse Pointe Farms, Michigan
Music Hall Center for the Performing Arts (1928) — William E. Kapp
Intramural Sports Building (1928), University of Michigan, Ann Arbor — Theodore J. Hinchman
Penobscot Building (1928) — Wirt C. Rowland
Guardian Building (1929) — Wirt C. Rowland
Denby High School (1930) — Wirt C. Rowland
Pershing High School (1930) — Wirt C. Rowland
Detroit Public Library (1932)
Rackham School of Graduate Studies at the University of Michigan (1938), Ann Arbor, Michigan
Pease Auditorium, Eastern Michigan University, Ypsilanti, Michigan (1941)
GM Tech Center [Architect of Record] (1955), Warren, Michigan
1001 Woodward (the former First Federal Building, 1965), Detroit, Michigan
Whiting Auditorium (1967), Flint, Michigan
National Institutes of Health Research Laboratories (1968), Bethesda, Maryland
Kmart Corporation International Headquarters (1969), Troy, Michigan
Harper Hospital in the Detroit Medical Center (1970)
Hart Plaza, including the Dodge Fountain designed by Isamu Noguchi (1978)
Joe Louis Arena, home of the NHL Detroit Red Wings (1979)
IBM Corporation Manufacturing and Engineering Complex (1979), Tucson, Arizona
Defense Intelligence Agency Headquarters (1984), Washington, DC
Eli Lilly and Company Biomedical Research Center (1984), Indianapolis, Indiana
Chrysler World Headquarters (1996), Auburn Hills, Michigan
Comerica Park, home of the MLB Detroit Tigers (2000)
Phelps Dodge Corporate Headquarters (2001), Phoenix, Arizona
Chesapeake Bay Foundation Headquarters, the first building in the United States to earn a LEED Platinum certification (2001), Annapolis, Maryland
Edward H. McNamara Terminal Detroit Metropolitan Airport (2002), Romulus, Michigan
University of California, San Francisco Mission Bay Genentech Hall (2002), San Francisco, California
Ford Field (2002), home of the NFL Detroit Lions
Consumers Energy, Corporate Headquarters (2003), Jackson, Michigan
Discovery Communications World Headquarters (2003), Silver Spring, Maryland
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago Detroit Branch (2004), Detroit, Michigan
Visteon Village, Corporate Headquarters (2005), Van Buren Township, Michigan
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Molecular Foundry (2006), Berkeley, California
National Academies Building, Washington DC
Brock Environmental Center(2014), Virginia Beach, VA
University of Illinois, Electrical and Computer Engineering Building (2014), Urbana, Illinois
Museum of the Bible (2017)
SmithGroupJJR Wikipedia (Text) CC BY-SA