Henry Ford would be proud! For the
first time in decades his original plant on Piquette Avenue in Detroit
looks just like it did when he opened its doors over 100 years ago. The
Ford Piquette Avenue Plant was the assembly site for the first 12,000 Model
Ts.
The front facade of the plant has undergone a painstaking and complete
summer-long restoration to bring it back to its original look when it
opened in 1904. Restoration work was handled by Quinn Evans Architects of
Ann Arbor, a firm that specializes in historic preservation. The front
facade will be unveiled in a ceremony today as one of the stops in the
motorcade celebrating the 100th Anniversary of the Model T. The motorcade
was organized by Ford Motor Company and MotorCities National Heritage Area.
"We were thrilled to take on this assignment," said Lis Knibbe, AIA, at
Quinn Evans. "The Piquette plant is a national and even an international
landmark in industrial history. It was the birthplace of the Model T and
the incubator for the moving assembly line. It had enormous impact not only
on the auto industry but on every industry that followed and on the whole
of society."
The restored front facade had been the most deteriorated and altered
part of the structure over the years and required extensive masonry and
window repair and replacement work. Building contractor Grunwell-Cashero of
Detroit individually repaired most of the bricks and completely replaced
others that had been destroyed by paint and weather. The biggest challenge
of the restoration, the arched office entry, had been replaced by a garage
door. Fortunately there were good archival photographs of the original
entry that provided a model for its reconstruction. Today, the entry will
greet visitors to the building just as it originally greeted Henry Ford and
his workers.
"Restoring this plant inside and out has been a labor of love for me
and for our entire team of volunteers," said Jerald A. Mitchell, Founder
and CEO of the Ford Piquette Avenue Plant. "The restored façade is a huge
and exciting step that brings the place back to life. It shows that we
truly respect what Mr. Ford did here and ensures that the memories will
live on."
The facade restoration was made possible by a $250,000 grant from the
Michigan Department of Transportation under their Transportation
Enhancement Program. The restored Piquette plant houses a Model T museum
and other Ford memorabilia.
Ford Model T
- Video:
MotorCities National Heritage Area
The programs and activities of the MotorCities National Heritage Area
are designed to increase tourism throughout the State of Michigan; develop
and deploy educational and informational programs that tell the story of
the automobile industry and labor in our region; and encourage
revitalization through conservation. MotorCities was designated by Congress
in 1998 and is currently one of 40 National Heritage Areas in the United
States.
SOURCE MotorCities National Heritage Area