There is also Albert Kahn (banker) for the French banker.

Albert Kahn (1869-1942) was the foremost American industrial architect of his day. Kahn came to Detroit in 1880 at the age of 11 from Germany. As a teenager he got a job at the architectural firm of Mason and Rice. Kahn won a year’s scholarship to study abroad in Europe, where he toured with another young architect student, Henry Bacon, who would later design the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C

Albert Kahn Associates was founded in 1895. He developed a new style of construction where reinforced concrete replaced wood in factory walls, roofs, and supports. This gave better fire protection and allowed large volumes of unobstructed interior. Packard Motor Car Company's factory built in 1907 was the first development of this principle.

The success of the Packard plant interested Henry Ford in Kahn's designs. Kahn designed Ford Motor Company’s Highland Park plant, begun in 1909 where Ford consolidated production of the Ford Model T and perfected the assembly line. Kahn later designed, in 1917, the massive half-mile-long Ford Rouge plant. The Rouge grew into the largest manufacturing complex in the U.S., with a force that peaked at 120,000 workers. According to the compnay website, "By 1938, Kahn’s firm was responsible for 20 percent of all architect-designed factories in the U.S."

Kahn was responsible for many of the buildings and houses in Walkerville, Ontario built under direction of Walker family including Willistead Manor. Kahn's interest in historically styled buildings is also seen in his houses in Indian Village, Detroit, Cranbrook House, the Edsel Ford House and the Dearborn Inn, the world's first airport hotel.

Kahn’s firm's Moscow office built 521 factories between 1930 and 1932.

Kahn also designed the landmark 28-story Art Deco Fisher Building in Detroit, long the central element of the Detroit skyline. In 1928, the Fisher building was honored by the Architecture League of New York as the year’s most beautiful commercial structure.

Kahn's firm designed a large number of the army airfield and naval bases for the United States government during World War I. By World War II, Kahn’s 600-person office was involved in making Detroit the Arsenal of Democracy including designing the Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant, and the Willow Run Bomber Plant in Ypsilanti, Michigan where Ford Motor Company mass produced B-24 Liberator bombers, Kahn's last building. Albert Kahn worked on more than 1,000 commissions from Henry Ford and hundreds for other automakers.

He is not related to American architect, Louis Kahn.

Kahn-designed buildings

  • Hiram Walker offices, 1892, in Windsor, Ontario
  • Temple Beth El, 1903, Kahn's home synagogue, now the Bonstelle Theater of Wayne State University
  • Conservatory, 1904, and Casino, 1907 on Belle Isle, Detroit
  • George N. Pierce Plant, 1906, in Buffalo, New York
  • Willistead Manor, 1906, home of the son of Hiram Walker
  • Battle Creek Post Office, 1907, concrete construction method used again later that year in Kahn's Packard plant
  • Packard Plant, 1907, Kahn's tenth factory for Packard but first concrete one
  • Cranbrook House, 1907, at Cranbrook Educational Community
  • Mahoning National Bank, 1909, Youngstown, Ohio
  • Detroit News building, 1917
  • General Motors Building, 1919, largest office building in the world at that time, GM world headquarters, now State of Michigan offices
  • Detroit Police Headquarters, 1923
  • Temple Beth El, 1923, second building
  • Walker Power Plant, 1923, in Windsor
  • Detroit Free Press building, 1925
  • Edsel & Eleanor Ford House, 1927, Henry Ford's son's home, built as an English manor house
  • Dearborn Inn, 1931, world's first airport hotel, built and decorated in the Georgian style
  • Dodge Truck Plant, 1938, Warren, Michigan
  • Detroit Arsenal Tank Plant, 1941, produced 1/4 of American WWII tanks, continued tank production until 1997
  • Willow Run Bomber Plant, 1941, used by Ford for bombers during the war, then by Kaiser for cars, then by GM for transmissions
  • Angell Hall, Burton Tower, University Hospital, Clements Library, and Hill Auditorium, University of Michigan, various years

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