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The Jeffersonian Apartments—currently branded as “The Jefferson”—is a large apartment building at 9000 East Jefferson Avenue, on the near-east side of Detroit, Michigan. Built in 1965, primarily of glass and steel in the international architecture style, it is one of Detroit's tallest residential buildings -- standing 30 stories with ...
The Jefferson–Chalmers Historic Business District is a neighborhood located on East Jefferson Avenue between Eastlawn Street and Alter Road in Detroit, Michigan.The district is the only continuously intact commercial district remaining along East Jefferson Avenue, and was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2004.
The New York Times critic Lawrence Van Gelder claimed "In general release, Detroit 9000 illustrates the wisdom of the adage "better late than never", and praised the film's complex racial politics, [5] while The A.V. Club ' s Nathan Rabin opined that, while the film was flawed, it was also an "interesting, thoroughly watchable film, and ...
The East Grand Boulevard Historic District includes a few moderate-sized apartment buildings and numerous large homes. The apartment buildings in the district include the El Tovar Apartments, Saint Paul Manor Apartments, and Kingston Arms Apartments. Structures in this district were constructed primarily between 1900 and 1925. [3]
Brothers Robert (Jr.) and William Stead ran a wholesale grocery business at the present site of Christ Church until the year 1844. [4] Christ Church Detroit was founded by a group of Episcopalians in 1845, who decided that St. Paul's Church (now St. Paul's Cathedral) was too crowded. [5]
16628 East Jefferson French colonial: Wallace Frost: A 9,000-square-foot (840 m 2) lakefront estate. Buck-Wardwell House 1840 16109 East Jefferson, at Three Mile Colonial: William Buck The oldest extant brick house in Grosse Pointe, a large colonial home. Christ Church Chapel: 1930 61 Grosse Pointe Rd.
The Garden Court Apartments is an H-shaped building standing nine stories tall with a symmetrical façade facing Jefferson Avenue. [2] The lowest two stories are faced with limestone, while the remainder of the building is made from red brick. Two rounded bay window units rise the full nine stories. [2]
At the time, the River Road (now East Jefferson) ran behind the house; the original access to the house may have been from what is now the rear. [5] Houses of this type often had similar front and rear layouts, with entrances at both ends of a central hallway. [5] In approximately 1850, Trowbridge added a brick addition to the rear of the house ...