Been in the Guardian building and it is *amazing*. Note: There are a few other buildings with details of similar quality also in downtown Detroit. Detroit’s art museum is likewise world-class. People forget that as the center of the auto industry for a very long time, Detroit had cash to spare to pay high-skilled labor to create such gorgeous buildings with these handcrafted details. Absolutely stunning.
Art Deco was the last period when architecture followed great art traditions. Please preserve these treasures; they won't appear again if they are defaced or demolished.
I wish we could return to building places people can be proud of and care about. Even the smaller two story buildings on the average main street in a small town often had more charm and artistic flair than the wasteland of strip malls and cheap aluminum and steel clad commercial buildings that litter the landscape of today.
@@Strideo1 Well-said, and a long-overdue insight. I cannot bring myself to believe that people actually are content to live amidst all of the architectural ugliness that we have cultivated for the past eighty years or so--they must just generally not believe that any alternative is possible. I've gone about my own State photographing many of those small-town main streets which you make mention of, as I find it terribly sad to think that many such beautiful buildings as you describe will crumble to dust or fall to the wrecker having been largely overlooked and unappreciated for the last decades of their existence. People used to pour their souls into their art. As we have eclipsed our own souls with blind materialism and hubris, our "art" has unfortunately reflected that shift.
I grew up in Detroit in the 1960's, when downtown Detroit was continuing its 'downward slide.' I had summer jobs at Hudson's and in other downtown buildings. But I never saw the inside of the Guardian Building until 50 years later when I returned on a tour of Detroit in 2016. We visited this building and I was floored at the beauty of the architecture of this and many other buildings downtown. As a kid growing up, I didn't appreciate that because of the auto industry, Detroit had once been a world-class city with fine art and architecture anywhere you looked.. What I knew in the 60s, was that the city felt unsafe and that people were leaving it. I'm glad Detroit has and is experiencing a renaissance in recent years.
I'm from Indonesia. I visited the building in 2018 because I stayed in a hotel nearby, without knowing about the history. Very impressive. I remember entering the lobby and saw the whole decorations I've never seen before. Thank you for sharing this information...
Actually, in the Netherlands art deco had a lot of Indonesian influences. There is the Tuschinski cinema and Scheepvaarthuis that are more American style exuberant, but there is also what is often called art deco in brick, of the "Amsterdamse school", used a lot for social housing. th-cam.com/video/PmM1RyQ2crE/w-d-xo.html
@@adicahya I think it's typical for the optimistic but rather condascending mindset of that era, the Dutch working class had to be elevated by beautiful and good housing, most of Amsterdam were slums in the late 1800's. And the Dutch thought of themselves of elevating the whole Indonesian people in a similar way, while holding a romanticized 'tempo doeloe' view of the Indonesians and admiring lots their culture, it was during the days of investing in Indonesia and building schools and stuff, rather than just the exploitation of 70 years before. It might have been one-sided, but their was a genuine love for Indonesia.
I loved this video as I was an architect for 29 years and have had a near lifelong fascination and love for the Guardian Building. It truly is one of Detroit's architectural treasures.
One thing I’ve always wanted to do was to take internal tours of Detroit’s art deco buildings. Like not just the big flashy decor, the forgotten nooks & crannies that still have original features, like original water fountains or toilets, tiling in closets. The really mundane stuff that tells the story of everyday life working in these incredible buildings in Detroit’s prime. So thanks for this great look inside!
It’s interesting how much purpose even the flashy designs have. Even if they’re not always functional, they’re still symbolic. Still glad that there are original features in these buildings
Most are pretty much fully accessible to the public because often there are shops and restaurants on multiple levels. Places you can't go are secured by tenant security cards, but a lot of spaces are open. Preservation Detroit also offers guided tours of the Financial District as well as a theater tour a couple times a year. Look it up and come for a visit. It's a great town.
Great video. To people who’ve only heard bad things about our city, Downtown Detroit is really a different place than it was 30 years ago. It’s really quite nice.
Im in training to be a City Tour Detroit guide (Store & tours are in the Lobby of the Guardian!)…your History video & this one are so appreciated and were very helpful in giving me the ability to talk authentically and intelligently about the buildings history, its role in Detroit and affect of the closing of the Union Trust Bank on National Banking rules / holidays as well as its colorful architecture and beautiful design. Thank you for taking the time to do the research and create these educational and interesting videos! 😊
What an enjoyable video. I began my architecture career working ins a small firm in the Buehl Building across the street from the Guardian. I enjoyed sneeking across the street to enjoy the lobby, bvut I hadn't seen the sixth and top floors until this video. One important thing that I think you missed in the interior tour were the elevator cabs ( I think they remain intact). I recall the lobby elevator doors and the cab interiors being exquisitely detailed in the style of the building. The elevators of the Chrysler building in Manhattan are justly revered, but I feel the Guardian elevators are at least as impressive. I hope you didn't miss them or that they didn't get cut from the video for time/length. Nice job. Jack R. Taipala, AIA
My father worked for Michigan Bank, later Michigan National Bank, for which the Guardian Building was the HQ and main branch for decades. He worked there for about 20 years before his department moved to a drab suburban location in the 70's. I worked a couple of summers for the Bank's Buildings and Properties department. We fixed and moved things at various branches and operations in Metro Detroit. When the Bank relocated its HQ to Oakland County, I was part of the team that removed the massive vault from the Guardian Building. We did it late at night on a Friday in 1982. I have no idea exactly how much it weighed, but it was several tons for certain. We rolled it out of the building using logs, believe it or not. Just as you see in old timey films, we moved a log forward once the vault had cleared it. The vault was winched out to the street, and craned on to a flatbed truck. It took until dawn. Absolutely one of the craziest work experiences I've ever had. I knew it was the Guardian Building just by your thumbnail. It's that unforgettable. One topic you didn't cover is a piece of Detroit lore, likely apocryphal: the unequal height of the two towers represents a traditional Great Lakes freighter, with a taller forward house and a shorter aft house.
So glad Detroit saved this and many other fabulous buildings. We went there twice and have yet to catch a tour. I know NOT to go on weekends as many wedding venues take place there. Maybe third time will be a charm. Also a wonderful tour is the Fisher Building!
I love glossy colored tiles, and it was a definitely prevelant art and design feature for buildings in Detroit, as this can be found throughout even Detroits most basic housing. Detroit is one of the most beautiful places in the world if you know where to look.
my dad worked in the Guardian in the early 2000's. he worked for the Smith group or S H and G. you talked about S H and G in your store about the Penobscot building. i spent a lot of Saturday in side the Guardian building, the wild colors of the stone dont show up in pictures. i remember i snuck in to the close off bridge that connects the Guardian building to the wayne country building.
Your attention to detail is phenomenal. Great video. This buildings interior reminds me, vaguely, of the Palacio Barolo in Buenos Aires, and it’s twin across the river, the Palacio Salvo, in Montevideo. The former is inspired by purgatory in that you cannot ascend directly from the basement to the viewing room on the last floor, without first transferring elevators in three distinct mezzanines. It also preserved the creek that it was built over, by building a channel of painted tiles to direct it through the basement floor. This kind of artistry in architecture is dead 😭
I love it , I have never seen inside, thank you, thank you , thank you. I love art deco , there has never been a more complete styled look again .......as you showed from the vents to the shape of every thing. Thanks again.
Today's world is busy with information overload , people automatically look Beyond these buildings without thinking . But once a person stands still any amount of time they begin to say" wow" !... Rookwood Pottery still in Cincinnati and the 1932 Art Deco District especially the Deco train station is awesome !!!!
Thank you so much for sharing this architectural wonder…… I grew up going to Radio City Music Hall in NYC, at least for a movie, and the spectacular Christmas show….. I fell in love with Art Deco & Art Moderne….. still my favorite styles and eras! Thanks for this eye popping tour!
Thank you for showcasing this gorgeous example of Art Deco. I really appreciate what you have done and am now subscribed to your channel to see more! Thanks again.
Actually wasn’t too difficult because they saw my previous work. A lot of people are eager to have people show off Detroit so they’re fairly welcoming. Thanks for the interest!
Being a retired elevator technician, I've spent a lot of time in this building as well as others in downtown. It's Aztec inspired art deco design is amazing and one of my favorites. There are a lot of hidden corridors in buildings like this and the Guardian is no exception. There are hidden corridors in the lobby area high above where you can look down on the lobby through the brickwork. Keeping old buildings like this up and running takes a lot of time and money and will sadly be the downfall of many of these great structures some day.
I've always dreamed of buying and renovating one of those gorgeous abandoned buildings in Detroit, living in the penthouse, and choosing businesses that the residents and I would use. I'd basically be living in my business
There’s definitely some work that could be done! I’m trying to find the right way to go about all of this both for past and future projects. Just happy to find people who find all of this interesting
Are you saying it's no longer a bank in the lobby? You mentioned "retail space". .. i was there in 2008 (i believe) and the banking employees then were very tolerate of me gawking at the first floor. lol As enamored of art deco as i was, i hadn't been aware of either this or Penobscot, so it was a great surprise and treat to see them in person. Thanks for giving me a peak at the upper floors too!
I really hope that someday, somehow, there is a revival of everything old. Artforms like Art Deco architecture should not be lost simply because they became 'outdated'.
In Wilkes-Barre PA, there on the Main Square is the PNC Bank Building. In the banking lobby, sculpted into the columns, are figures of men as if they are holding up the heavy weight . Among them are coal miners and woodsman. Coal and Lumber made Wilkes-Barre rich at one point in time.
Amazing how this American "Art Deco" is unique and very different from European. The native American motives that are organic in shapes and colors are really near a more modern European "Art Nouveau". Imo American "Streamline" style (Chrysler Building NYC) is more near european "Art Deco").
i fell like art deco and south weat native american art have a lot in common. so much so that if there was ever the idea to make a fantsy desert sky scrapper we have a style that could easily be pulled from
At completion this was known as"The Cathedral of Commerce",and so MANY red bricks were ordered and shipped-in for its construction,that there was now a color dubbed:"Guardian Red"!!
The early forms of Art Deco(Art "Moderne") were influenced by some ancient cultures- specifically Ancient Egypt(King Tut's tomb had recently been discovered in the 1920's) and Aztec/Mayan civilization. This building's interiors seem clearly influenced by the latter, with strong geometric angles & glazed tile work.
It's very much using South American Temple architectural themes, notice also the very many skull motifs. That is a very weird building, not sure if I like it. It is quite stunning though.
Society has neither the time nor money to fool around with beauty. Back then, every building was unique. It was like every architect was in an art contest. That era is long gone & long dead. Buildings today look like our cars. SAME profile. Building are all glass & mirrors. Gutless, soulless & built so that you don't even take the time to turn your head towards them.
Been in the Guardian building and it is *amazing*. Note: There are a few other buildings with details of similar quality also in downtown Detroit. Detroit’s art museum is likewise world-class. People forget that as the center of the auto industry for a very long time, Detroit had cash to spare to pay high-skilled labor to create such gorgeous buildings with these handcrafted details. Absolutely stunning.
Art Deco was the last period when architecture followed great art traditions. Please preserve these treasures; they won't appear again if they are defaced or demolished.
I wish we could return to building places people can be proud of and care about. Even the smaller two story buildings on the average main street in a small town often had more charm and artistic flair than the wasteland of strip malls and cheap aluminum and steel clad commercial buildings that litter the landscape of today.
@Strideo1 in the last five years several buildings in NY and Chicago have returned to Art Deco style.
It’s a bit more existential actually.
@@Strideo1 Well-said, and a long-overdue insight. I cannot bring myself to believe that people actually are content to live amidst all of the architectural ugliness that we have cultivated for the past eighty years or so--they must just generally not believe that any alternative is possible. I've gone about my own State photographing many of those small-town main streets which you make mention of, as I find it terribly sad to think that many such beautiful buildings as you describe will crumble to dust or fall to the wrecker having been largely overlooked and unappreciated for the last decades of their existence.
People used to pour their souls into their art. As we have eclipsed our own souls with blind materialism and hubris, our "art" has unfortunately reflected that shift.
@@sinnerseekingsalvation779 Thanks so much for the reply! It's good to hear from others that feel the same way.
I grew up in Detroit in the 1960's, when downtown Detroit was continuing its 'downward slide.' I had summer jobs at Hudson's and in other downtown buildings. But I never saw the inside of the Guardian Building until 50 years later when I returned on a tour of Detroit in 2016. We visited this building and I was floored at the beauty of the architecture of this and many other buildings downtown. As a kid growing up, I didn't appreciate that because of the auto industry, Detroit had once been a world-class city with fine art and architecture anywhere you looked.. What I knew in the 60s, was that the city felt unsafe and that people were leaving it. I'm glad Detroit has and is experiencing a renaissance in recent years.
The Aztec influence is quite noticable in the interior design.
It was really surprising to me. It's unlike the many art deco buildings I've been in in NYC.
I'm from Indonesia. I visited the building in 2018 because I stayed in a hotel nearby, without knowing about the history.
Very impressive. I remember entering the lobby and saw the whole decorations I've never seen before.
Thank you for sharing this information...
Actually, in the Netherlands art deco had a lot of Indonesian influences. There is the Tuschinski cinema and Scheepvaarthuis that are more American style exuberant, but there is also what is often called art deco in brick, of the "Amsterdamse school", used a lot for social housing.
th-cam.com/video/PmM1RyQ2crE/w-d-xo.html
@@DenUitvreter wow.. Never heard about this influence before.
@@adicahya I think it's typical for the optimistic but rather condascending mindset of that era, the Dutch working class had to be elevated by beautiful and good housing, most of Amsterdam were slums in the late 1800's. And the Dutch thought of themselves of elevating the whole Indonesian people in a similar way, while holding a romanticized 'tempo doeloe' view of the Indonesians and admiring lots their culture, it was during the days of investing in Indonesia and building schools and stuff, rather than just the exploitation of 70 years before. It might have been one-sided, but their was a genuine love for Indonesia.
Fabulous! For ten years I lived in a gorgeous Art Deco apartment building. I never took it for granted. I felt so lucky to live there.
I loved this video as I was an architect for 29 years and have had a near lifelong fascination and love for the Guardian Building. It truly is one of Detroit's architectural treasures.
Hi Daniel what do you think of modern architecture like modernism and brutalism?
Craftsman really took pride in their work. And this artistry was appreciated by the public at large.
One thing I’ve always wanted to do was to take internal tours of Detroit’s art deco buildings.
Like not just the big flashy decor, the forgotten nooks & crannies that still have original features, like original water fountains or toilets, tiling in closets. The really mundane stuff that tells the story of everyday life working in these incredible buildings in Detroit’s prime.
So thanks for this great look inside!
It’s interesting how much purpose even the flashy designs have. Even if they’re not always functional, they’re still symbolic. Still glad that there are original features in these buildings
Most are pretty much fully accessible to the public because often there are shops and restaurants on multiple levels. Places you can't go are secured by tenant security cards, but a lot of spaces are open. Preservation Detroit also offers guided tours of the Financial District as well as a theater tour a couple times a year. Look it up and come for a visit. It's a great town.
Great video. To people who’ve only heard bad things about our city, Downtown Detroit is really a different place than it was 30 years ago. It’s really quite nice.
We visited Detroit a few years ago and loved it! Looking forward to visiting again soon.
I worked and banked in that building in the mid 1970s. The lobby is really impressive in person. Go out of your way to see it.
This video deserves way more attention.
A world class gem. I hope you cover other parts of this magnificent building. The interiors could not be decorated to the same standards these days
Well done! Outsiders just don’t understand, even though much has been lost, how truly special our town is.
I absolutely love Detroit’s art deco architecture!! Thank you so much for your videos!
It’d be nice if one day you could get exclusive looks at buildings after they finish them up. I love the tours of Detroit!
That would be pretty cool! I’m definitely hoping to cover some of the newer projects going on right now as well
Im in training to be a City Tour Detroit guide (Store & tours are in the Lobby of the Guardian!)…your History video & this one are so appreciated and were very helpful in giving me the ability to talk authentically and intelligently about the buildings history, its role in Detroit and affect of the closing of the Union Trust Bank on National Banking rules / holidays as well as its colorful architecture and beautiful design. Thank you for taking the time to do the research and create these educational and interesting videos! 😊
What an enjoyable video. I began my architecture career working ins a small firm in the Buehl Building across the street from the Guardian. I enjoyed sneeking across the street to enjoy the lobby, bvut I hadn't seen the sixth and top floors until this video.
One important thing that I think you missed in the interior tour were the elevator cabs ( I think they remain intact). I recall the lobby elevator doors and the cab interiors being exquisitely detailed in the style of the building. The elevators of the Chrysler building in Manhattan are justly revered, but I feel the Guardian elevators are at least as impressive. I hope you didn't miss them or that they didn't get cut from the video for time/length.
Nice job.
Jack R. Taipala, AIA
My father worked for Michigan Bank, later Michigan National Bank, for which the Guardian Building was the HQ and main branch for decades. He worked there for about 20 years before his department moved to a drab suburban location in the 70's. I worked a couple of summers for the Bank's Buildings and Properties department. We fixed and moved things at various branches and operations in Metro Detroit. When the Bank relocated its HQ to Oakland County, I was part of the team that removed the massive vault from the Guardian Building. We did it late at night on a Friday in 1982. I have no idea exactly how much it weighed, but it was several tons for certain. We rolled it out of the building using logs, believe it or not. Just as you see in old timey films, we moved a log forward once the vault had cleared it. The vault was winched out to the street, and craned on to a flatbed truck. It took until dawn. Absolutely one of the craziest work experiences I've ever had. I knew it was the Guardian Building just by your thumbnail. It's that unforgettable. One topic you didn't cover is a piece of Detroit lore, likely apocryphal: the unequal height of the two towers represents a traditional Great Lakes freighter, with a taller forward house and a shorter aft house.
Ive been inside and it’s stunning. Love it outside and inside. A site to see
A lot of Maya influence, especially the corbel arches and color palette. Very cool!
Backseat Detroit Tours is great for a in-person experience of Downtown.
Spectacular! It's worth a trip to Detroit. Thanks so much for posting this.
So glad Detroit saved this and many other fabulous buildings. We went there twice and have yet to catch a tour. I know NOT to go on weekends as many wedding venues take place there. Maybe third time will be a charm. Also a wonderful tour is the Fisher Building!
This is so great! Keep up the excellent work! Really great to see our beautiful architecture explored like this!
How stunning, and the historical stories make it all the better!
So beautiful. Thanks 😊
Gorgeous building. The colors, the motifs, the craftsmanship. Wow.
I love glossy colored tiles, and it was a definitely prevelant art and design feature for buildings in Detroit, as this can be found throughout even Detroits most basic housing. Detroit is one of the most beautiful places in the world if you know where to look.
This was fricken awesome!!
my dad worked in the Guardian in the early 2000's. he worked for the Smith group or S H and G. you talked about S H and G in your store about the Penobscot building. i spent a lot of Saturday in side the Guardian building, the wild colors of the stone dont show up in pictures. i remember i snuck in to the close off bridge that connects the Guardian building to the wayne country building.
A Deco delight. Check out the Kimo Theater in Albuquerque New Mexico!
Beautiful building the Gaurdian building vary classic in design.
Your attention to detail is phenomenal. Great video. This buildings interior reminds me, vaguely, of the Palacio Barolo in Buenos Aires, and it’s twin across the river, the Palacio Salvo, in Montevideo. The former is inspired by purgatory in that you cannot ascend directly from the basement to the viewing room on the last floor, without first transferring elevators in three distinct mezzanines. It also preserved the creek that it was built over, by building a channel of painted tiles to direct it through the basement floor. This kind of artistry in architecture is dead 😭
I love it , I have never seen inside, thank you, thank you , thank you. I love art deco , there has never been a more complete styled look again .......as you showed from the vents to the shape of every thing. Thanks again.
Very enjoyable. Thank you. The COLOR! Just wow!
Art Deco needs to make a comeback.
Today's world is busy with information overload , people automatically look Beyond these buildings without thinking . But once a person stands still any amount of time they begin to say" wow" !... Rookwood Pottery still in Cincinnati and the 1932 Art Deco District especially the Deco train station is awesome !!!!
Thank you so much for sharing this architectural wonder…… I grew up going to Radio City Music Hall in NYC, at least for a movie, and the spectacular Christmas show….. I fell in love with Art Deco & Art Moderne….. still my favorite styles and eras!
Thanks for this eye popping tour!
Beautiful interiors.
Wonderful building and let’s hope it is preserved forever. Nothing is built to this level of detail anymore. Bare concrete seems to dominate now.
Well done. That is an amazing looking building. Ty for sharing
And I actually felt the background music was appropriate and enjoyable not annoying
Thank you for showcasing this gorgeous example of Art Deco. I really appreciate what you have done and am now subscribed to your channel to see more! Thanks again.
Thanks for this. I've seen plenty of exteriors but this interior just blew me away.
Great video, love to see more tours of Detroit landmarks! Was it difficult to get access like that?
Actually wasn’t too difficult because they saw my previous work. A lot of people are eager to have people show off Detroit so they’re fairly welcoming. Thanks for the interest!
I love art deco!!
Being a retired elevator technician, I've spent a lot of time in this building as well as others in downtown. It's Aztec inspired art deco design is amazing and one of my favorites. There are a lot of hidden corridors in buildings like this and the Guardian is no exception. There are hidden corridors in the lobby area high above where you can look down on the lobby through the brickwork. Keeping old buildings like this up and running takes a lot of time and money and will sadly be the downfall of many of these great structures some day.
I've always dreamed of buying and renovating one of those gorgeous abandoned buildings in Detroit, living in the penthouse, and choosing businesses that the residents and I would use. I'd basically be living in my business
Thanks for this. I agree with the others that this deserves more views, perhaps tweaking thumbnail/title/description to massage the algorithm?
There’s definitely some work that could be done! I’m trying to find the right way to go about all of this both for past and future projects. Just happy to find people who find all of this interesting
Are you saying it's no longer a bank in the lobby? You mentioned "retail space". .. i was there in 2008 (i believe) and the banking employees then were very tolerate of me gawking at the first floor. lol
As enamored of art deco as i was, i hadn't been aware of either this or Penobscot, so it was a great surprise and treat to see them in person.
Thanks for giving me a peak at the upper floors too!
Absolutely gorgeous
Fantastic, in both senses. Thank you.
Really enjoyed the history. Love art deco. Thank you
I really hope that someday, somehow, there is a revival of everything old. Artforms like Art Deco architecture should not be lost simply because they became 'outdated'.
Your videos are amazing! :)
Its amazing!!! And should be restored. Hopefully on preservation list?
Now THIS is what we need!
In Wilkes-Barre PA, there on the Main Square is the PNC Bank Building. In the banking lobby, sculpted into the columns, are figures of men as if they are holding up the heavy weight . Among them are coal miners and woodsman. Coal and Lumber made Wilkes-Barre rich at one point in time.
Beautiful and amazing!
Thank you for making this video 💛
Lovely video
Great video. Have you done the Book Tower now that its complete and open? Its beautiful.
Amazing how this American "Art Deco" is unique and very different from European.
The native American motives that are organic in shapes and colors are really near a more modern European "Art Nouveau".
Imo American "Streamline" style (Chrysler Building NYC) is more near european "Art Deco").
Thanks, I really enjoyed this video, but just to say, I could do without the music in the background. Spectacular building!
Fascinating ~ thanks for the tour and history !
Great stuff. Thank you.
This is an incredible building!!
i fell like art deco and south weat native american art have a lot in common. so much so that if there was ever the idea to make a fantsy desert sky scrapper we have a style that could easily be pulled from
WOW! How amazing.❤
Wow this is very beautiful
I wish I could live in there, with only those who are aligned with the same goals and frequency.
At completion this was known as"The Cathedral of Commerce",and so MANY red bricks were ordered and shipped-in for its construction,that there was now a color dubbed:"Guardian Red"!!
Wow, I love the Mayan/aztec influence
Aztec design. It gives me a "Shining" vibe. Creepy.
Have you done the Museum Center in Cincinnati? (Union Terminal) It's spectacular. The original "Hall of Justice" from the Justice League.
The paintings are very similar to the paintings in Buffalo city hall, lot of similarities between them.
Thank you kind Sir
Thank you Tartarians for building this, because we can't build this today, let alone 100 years ago!
No place like it in the world. Jaw dropping.
The early forms of Art Deco(Art "Moderne") were influenced by some ancient cultures- specifically Ancient Egypt(King Tut's tomb had recently been discovered in the 1920's) and Aztec/Mayan civilization. This building's interiors seem clearly influenced by the latter, with strong geometric angles & glazed tile work.
It's very much using South American Temple architectural themes, notice also the very many skull motifs. That is a very weird building, not sure if I like it. It is quite stunning though.
Awesome
Thanks
Should be classified as one of the wonders of the world
Look into tulsa Oklahoma. A ton of art deco buildings not during their pool rush.
This looks like the Marine Building in Vancouver.
is it safe to visit this area of detroit?
Chicago hosts an annual "Open House Chicago" where building owners open these treasures for the public.
I am not used and discover...we learn at any age.
Live art deci era
I thought I knew what art deco looked like. I guess not, this looks southwestern to me
Wow
The background music is a distraction. Either remove it or turn the volume way down. Otherwise, an excellent video.
Society has neither the time nor money to fool around with beauty. Back then, every building was unique. It was like every architect was in an art contest. That era is long gone & long dead. Buildings today look like our cars. SAME profile. Building are all glass & mirrors. Gutless, soulless & built so that you don't even take the time to turn your head towards them.
Are the elecators original? It would be cool to see the vintage art deco elevators.
It's very Aztec-Expressionist
Wow!
The top of the building is in the shape of the Jewish Star of David!!!
Awesome 🎉🎉🎉
wrong star, star of David has 6 points ✡ the building top in in 8 points, an Octagram
I hate the fact that many beautiful buildings got demolished.
A building like a DMT trip
It'd be nice if those ugly blue tiles were removed and that window was restored. I mean what the hell were they thinking