America's forgotten architect, Albert Kahn, remembered

Albert Kahn gave Detroit a face back in the '20s in the same way the auto industry gave it a name. With hundreds of buildings, factories, and homes designed by the architect here in Detroit, he rarely gets the credit he deserves and is, oftentimes, referred to as "the other Kahn," because of post-war modernist Louis Kahn (no relation). Regardless of name weight, Albert Kahn is responsible for most of Detroit's skyline.

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Albert Kahn is America’s forgotten architect — even though in his lifetime, he (and his firm) produced more buildings than any other architect, and his design and production method changed the face of the country. Eighty years before the bailout of the auto industry, just before the Great Depression, Kahn built the most opulent of Detroit’s new corporate skyscrapers — the Art Deco-style Fisher Building. Facing the GM headquarters, Kahn’s grandest expression of civic architecture defined the unique American union of commercial and civic identity.

Detroit Auto Show 2009 this month pinned its hopes for a 21st century transformation of the American motor industry on selling the complex technologies of electric engines. The person who transformed the space and appearance of Detroit in the 20th century, though he favored technology did not depend on complexity.

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