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One of the last abandoned high-rises in Detroit’s downtown core moves one step closer to renovation

Reconstruction & Renovation

One of the last abandoned high-rises in Detroit’s downtown core moves one step closer to renovation

Kraemer Design has been selected as the architect of record and historic consultant on the Detroit Free Press building renovations.


By David Malone, Associate Editor | April 27, 2017

Courtesy Albert Duce, Wikimedia Commons

The Detroit Free Press building is ready to undergo a massive renovation to change what was once a newspaper building into a mixed-use building with retail, office, and residential space. On April 25, Detroit-based Kraemer Design Group announced it was selected as the architect of record and historic consultant for the project.

The building, located at 321 W. Lafayette, is one of the last high-rises in Detroit’s downtown core that remains abandoned. The restoration will include structural updates, complete masonry restoration, new energy-efficient windows, and a new interior design that will better equip the building to handle its new mixed-use role.

Many of the 271,858-sf, 14-story building’s historic elements and details will be preserved. The rest of the structure will be modernized to eliminate any hint that the building was vacant for 19 years. “We understand the challenges and preservation techniques needed to maintain historic elements while adding modern amenities,” KDG Principal Brian Rebain says in a release.

Kraemer Design Group is no stranger to historic preservation in the Detroit area. The firm has also worked on the East Main Redevelopment in Milan, Mich., which earned a Governor’s Award for Historic Preservation.

The renovated Detroit Free Press building is scheduled to open in 2020.

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