
   Completed in 1895, this is the oldest surviving skyscraper in  Detroit.  Until the late 1880s, there  were no tall buildings.  A number of  engineering developments were required before architects could design  skyscrapers. One was the idea of using  cast iron and/or steel as a skeleton for a high rise structure, a skeleton to  which an exterior could be attached such as a covering of limestone.  Another was the development of a safe and  reliable elevator that could easily and rapidly take passengers to upper  stories.  The skyscraper also awaited the  invention of a central heating system that could supply warmth efficiently and  safely to many stories.  Finally, the  development of skyscrapers awaited changes in business organizations so that it  became necessary to have office space at one location for large numbers of  clerks and administrators.  There is  debate about who should receive the most credit for inventing the skyscraper since  many architects and engineers contributed innovations that made them possible.  There is more agreement that the world’s  first skyscraper was the ten-story Home Insurance Building at the corner of  LaSalle and Monroe in Chicago, completed in 1885 and designed by the American  architect, William Jenney who had been a professor of architecture at the University of Michigan but never, so fas as I know, designed a building in Detroit.  If you asked  many people who invented the skyscraper, I suspect that the frequent answer  would be Chicago architect Daniel Burnham who designed the Dime, the Ford and the David Whitney buildings that are within  a short walk of this Chamber of Commerce Building.  Burnham studied with William Jenny and is  famous for the numerous skyscrapers he designed, for his participation in the  Chicago World Fair Expostion of 1892 and for his strong involvement in the  City Beautiful movement.  That movement  sought to make many large cities more livable and led to the development of  Detroit’s Cultural Center.  Daniel  Burnham designed Detroit’s third skyscraper, the Majesty Building completed in  1896 and torn down in 1962.  That 14-story building was located at 1011 Woodward.   The first skyscraper in Detroit was the ten-story Hammond Building  located at 31 West Fort and designed by Chicago architect, Harry W. J.  Edbrooke.  It was torn down in 1956.
  
  William Rohns, born in Göttingen and trained in architecture  at an institute in Hanover, migrated to Detroit in 1883 and originally worked  with Gordon Lloyd.  The next year, he  formed a firm with Frederick Spier.   Spier was working for the famous New York architect, Vyrus Lazelle  Eidlitz who was employed by the New York Central Railroad and their affiliate  lines to design large depots.  Eidlitz  apparently dispatched Spier to Detroit to help design the large Victorian  Michigan Central Station that stood at West Jefferson and Third from the 1880s until after  World War II, although passenger trains ceased visiting the station when the  Michigan Central Depot at Roosevelt Park opened in 1912.
  
  Rohns and Spier apparently wanted to design an Italian  Renaissance Beaux Arts structure here but it is now challenging to appreciate  their original intentions because of numerous renovations.  The original design involved a rusticated  base with numerous pillars, flaring cornices and an arcade. The building has been substantially altered  over the years. The arched windows have  been greatly changed and made rectangular. The light well, at one point, was enclosed and the cornice was removed  in the 1950s.  In fact, the cornices of  most Detroit downtown buildings were removed in that decade.  I believe that a large piece of cornice fell  to the street in the late 1940s, killing a pedestrian.  City council then enacted a statue demanding  that cornices be reconstructed or removed.   Most property owners saved monies by removing   them.   Rohns and Spier designed an elegant interior for the Chamber of Commerce  Building using Italian marble for the lobby and extensive mahogany paneling for  the offices.  
  
  I do not know if the original name of this structure was the  Chamber of Commerce Building or the Detroit Savings Bank Building.  Elon Farnsworth was born in Vermont in the  Eighteenth Century but came to Detroit in 1822 where he studied law with Solomon Sibley whose homes stands to  this day on East Jefferson.  Farnsworth  was elected to the territorial legislature in 1834.  The state’s first constitution called for a  chancellor.  Farnsworth was the first and  only chancellor this state has had.   Farnsworth served as Michigan’s Attorney General from 1843 to 1845 and  was a member of the first voter-elected Board of Regents of the University of  Michigan in 1852.  In 1840, Farnsworth  helped to establish the Detroit Savings Fund Institute.  Just 22 years later, this fiscal outfit  became the Detroit Savings Bank whose name still graces the arch over the State  Street entrance to the Chamber of Commerce building.  The Detroit Savings Bank survived the  Depression, but became the Detroit Bank in 1936.   That firm merged with two or three local banks in 1953 to become the  Detroit Bank and Trust Company.
  
  Federal and state laws prohibiting interstate banks ended in  the early 1980s.  Detroit Bank and Trust  changed its name to Comerica Bank in 1982 and acquired or affiliated with banks  and credit card companies in Florida, Illinois, Texas and California.  After the firm grew, they commissioned  architects Philip Johnson and John Burgee, in 1990, to design the impressive Comerica Tower at Woodward and  Larned.  In 2007, Comerica Bank announced  that after having its headquarters in Detroit for 158 years, they were moving  their governing center from the city to Dallas.
  
The Chamber of Commerce building provided office space from  1987 to 2009 to the Detroit United Way.   That organization moved away, and in 2012, I believe that Downtown  Development Authority owns this structure and is preparing to renovate it.
Architects:  Frederick Spier and William Rohns
  Architectural style:  Italian Renaissance  and, perhaps, Beaux-Arts Classicism
  Date of completion: 1895
  Use in 2012:  Owned by Downtown  Development Authority and  awaiting  renovation and reuse
  City of Detroit Designated Historic District: Not listed
  State of Michigan Registry of Historic Sites:    This building is included within the Capitol Park Historic District; P35,753,  Listed March 18, 1999.
  National Register of Historic Places:   This building is also, I believe, within the Capitol Park National Historic District.  This is #99000338 and also listed March 18,  1999.
  Photograph: Ren Farley; September 30, 2010
  Description updated: January, 2012
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