The Construction Association of Michigan recently announced that the Ford House Visitor Center and Administration Building on the historic lakeside estate of the Edsel and Eleanor Ford House in Grosse Pointe Shores, Michigan, has been chosen as the 2022 CAM Magazine Project of the Year.
The all-electric Administration Building is designed to achieve Net Zero Energy Certification, and both buildings are designed to LEED Gold.
Congratulations to Construction Manager Frank Rewold & Sons; Architect, Engineer, and Sustainability Consultant SmithGroup; and Ford House.
CAM’s President Kevin Koehler made the announcement at the association’s 137th Annual Meeting Feb. 15 at the Suburban Collection Showplace in Novi, Michigan.
Ford House’s new Visitor Center and Administration Building are a contemporary translation of the Cotswold architectural style adopted by Edsel and Eleanor Ford for their own family home located down the lane from the new campus. With a lakefront restaurant, conference space, and exhibits telling the Ford family story, the new buildings offer visitors a memorable experience in a beautiful lakefront setting.
In honor of the original home, Ford House and the project team created two stone-clad buildings, both evocative of the Cotswold style but contemporary in its precision detailing. Rather than rusticated masonry, “our exterior limestone walls have a much more precise and machined appearance,” said SmithGroup Principal and Project Designer Ben Grobe.
Built almost a century apart, the historic and contemporary share the same stellar design quality.
“Aesthetically, the buildings are beautiful,” said Ford House President and CEO Mark Heppner. “There was a commitment to quality that is important to the Ford family. They wanted to ensure that the same commitment to aesthetics and detail that Edsel and Eleanor had when they first built the house in 1928 was transferred to this project.”
Together, Ford House, FRS, and SmithGroup created a place for the community to connect with the story of the Ford family. Visitors and organizations have been flocking to this new Visitor Center and Administration Building in increasing numbers since its grand opening in late spring 2021. Despite the COVID-19 pandemic, visitation to Ford House soared from an annual average of 40,000 to more than 100,000 people in its first year alone, according to Heppner. Ford House memberships have increased from 1,400 to 5,000 in a single year.
The credit belongs to Ford House, FRS, and SmithGroup, and the team of trade contractors who poured an incredible amount of thought and effort into the making of these beautifully detailed buildings. Having toured several impressive visitor centers in the project’s early planning stages, Heppner can say with certainty, “there are beautiful visitor centers for historic house estates in the country, but I think our commitment to sustainability and stewardship, our success in being sympathetic to the original Ford house but still differentiating the contemporary buildings, and just the quality, intimacy, and sense of welcome leads me to say that there is nothing quite like this in the nation.”
Tommy Karr, the Director of Communication and Engagement at Ford House, said the project team was truly honored to be chosen and a part of the project. “We are incredibly honored. It was a long time coming getting these buildings in place, and the work the teams have done to ensure that they are sustainable and environmentally supportive has really made a huge difference in our work and the possibilities we have.”
The full feature article on the Ford House Visitor Center and Administration Building that appeared in the October 2022 Special Issue of CAM Magazine can be viewed at https://buildwithcam.com/cam-magazine.