The Buhl brothers, Frederick and Christian, came to Detroit early in the Nineteenth
    Century. They made their money in the fur trade and then in the hat business.
    As Detroit became a leading industrial metropolis, they turned to manufacturing
    as well as retailing and property development. They founded the Detroit Locomotive
    Works and then the Buhl Iron Works that later became the Detroit
    Copper and Brass  firm. They added to their wealth by entering the
    hardware business and then erected an office building at the corner of Griswold
    and Congress
    that became an attractive location for prosperous law firms. Frederick Buhl
    served as mayor of Detroit in 1848, while his brother, Christian, served
    as mayor twelve years later after holding a variety of other political offices.
 
  
  The skyscraper building boom in Detroit reached its zenith in the late 1920s,
  reflecting the demand for office space generated by the vehicle industry. A
  third generation of Buhls decided to make more profitable use of their prime
  downtown land by replacing their small office building at Griswold and West
  Congress with the 26 story building that you see. They selected the Smith,
  Hinchman and Grylls firm and, fortunately for them, the skilled and imaginative
  Writ Rowland was selected as the architect. His most magnificent accomplishment
  is the nearby Guardian Building but he created a beautiful structure in the
  Buhl Building, one that has great appeal some eight decades after he first
  sketched it. 
  
  Modern air conditioning for large office buildings was not available until
  the end of the 1920s and, when Rowland designed this building; electric lighting
  was less effective than it is today. To solve these challenges, Daniel Burnham—the
  father of the modern skyscraper—placed large light wells in his building,
  giving every office external light and air. The light well in the nearby Dime
  Building faces Griswold while the light well in the adjoining Ford Building
  is reversed so it is visible from West Congress but not from Griswold. Nevertheless,
  the light well was only a partial solution and, perhaps, not such a good one
  for offices on the low floors. By the time Rowland designed the Buhl Building,
  he believed it would be more effective way to capture natural light and gentle
  Detroit breezes was the cruciform style. This design also had the advantage
  of providing eight external corner offices, offices that could be rented at
  higher rates. The skyscraper is largely Gothic in style but the numerous details
  at the lower level are Romanesque. If you look at the impressive columns and
  the barrel vaulting of the main entrance, you will find the images traditionally
  incorporated in classical Roman buildings: ram's heads, acanthus leaves, basket
  weaving, along with elaborate laurel and floral work. At the time he designed
  this building, I believe that Writ Rowland was working on the design for the
  Gothic Jefferson Avenue Presbyterian
  Church and, I have been told, for a Romanesque
  bank. I don’t know the name of the bank but the Gothic and Romanesque
  elements used in the Buhl Building may be linked to his other simultaneous
  commissions. Quite a few Detroit building from this era display a carved Indian
  on their exterior, perhaps to remind us of the cities past. The one on the
  Buhl Building was sculpted, I believe, by Carrado Parducci. The striking globe
  for the hung lamp at the entrance dates from 1925. 
  
  Architect: Writ Rowland employed by Smith, Hinchman and Grylls
  Architectural Style: Modernized Romanesque
  Date of Completion: 1925
  Use in 2006: Major Office Building
  City of Detroit Designated Historic District: Not listed
  Michigan Register of Historic Sites: Not listed
  National Register of Historic Sites: Not listed
  Photograph: Andrew Chandler; July, 2004
  Description refreshed February, 2006.