Detroit Athletic Club
Detroit Athletic Club | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | private club |
Architectural style | Neo-Renaissance style |
Location | 241 Madison Street Detroit, Michigan 48226 |
Coordinates | 42°20′15″N 83°02′50″W / 42.337468°N 83.047355°W |
Completed | 1915, 2012 |
Technical details | |
Floor count | 7 |
Design and construction | |
Architect(s) | Albert Kahn |
The Detroit Athletic Club (often referred to as the DAC) is a private social club and athletic club located in the heart of Detroit's theater, sports, and entertainment district. It is located across the street from Detroit's historic Music Hall. The clubhouse was designed by Albert Kahn and inspired by Rome's Palazzo Farnese. It maintains reciprocal agreements for their members at other private clubs worldwide. It contains full-service athletic facilities, pools, restaurants, ballrooms, and guest rooms. Members include business professionals of all types as well as professional athletes. Ty Cobb is among the athletes to have been a member of the DAC. The building is visible beyond center field from Comerica Park.[1]
History
The Detroit Athletic Club was founded in 1887 to encourage amateur athletic activities, and built a clubhouse with a tract in what is now Detroit's Cultural Center.
Reorienting
Henry Bourne Joy, son of the man who built the Michigan Central Railroad into one of the nation's most successful large railroads, served as president of the Packard Motor Car Company in the early decades of the last century. He felt that the rich new titans of the booming automobile industry spent too much time in the Woodward Avenue pubs.[citation needed] He thought they needed a club commensurate with this stature.[citation needed] Some 26 years after the club's founding, on January 4, 1913, Joy and 108 other leading Detroit citizens came together to reorient the Detroit Athletic Club. Joy and his colleagues selected Detroit's most accomplished architect, Albert Kahn.
Architecture
Kahn, in 1912, had visited Italy and was inspired by the buildings he saw there. Two of Detroit's most impressive current downtown edifices—the Detroit Athletic Club and the Police Department headquarters on Beaubien—reflect what Kahn saw in Italy. The Palazzo Borghese in Rome provided Kahn with a model for much of the Detroit Athletic Club, but the idea of using the large impressive windows for the impressive fourth floor dining room—called the Grill Room—came from the Palazzo Farnese.
Remodeling
In the 1990s, the membership devoted substantial funding to a major refurbishing of the attractive building.
A. Duncan Carse created paintings to decorate the Detroit Athletic Club. The paintings were covered at the club but they were on show again after a remodeling of the club in 1999.[2]
Athletics
Over the years, the Detroit Athletic Club has provided financial assistance and training opportunities for a number of amateur athletes preparing for the Olympic Games.
At the 1956 U.S. Olympic Team Trials, springboard divers Jeanne Stunyo (a native of Gary, Indiana) and Mackenzie High School graduate Barbara Gilders-Dudeck were sponsored by the DAC. Stunyo and Gilders-Dudeck qualified for the Summer Olympic Games in Melbourne, Australia. At the Games, Jeanne Stunyo won the springboard diving silver medal, and Barbara Gilders-Dudeck finished in fourth place—less than one point from a bronze medal.[3]
Contribution to Cocktail History
The Last Word, a gin-based, prohibition-era cocktail, was originally developed at the Detroit Athletic Club. The first publication in which the Last Word appeared was Ted Saucier's 1951 cocktail book Bottoms Up!. In it Saucier states that the cocktail was first served around 30 years earlier at the Detroit Athletic Club. A research in the archives of the Detroit Athletic Club by John Frizell revealed later that the drink was slightly older predating the prohibition era by a few years. It was already offered on the club's 1916 menu for a price of 35 cents (about $8.22 in 2019 currency) making it the club's most expensive cocktail at the time.[4] While the drink eventually fell out of favor, it enjoyed a renewed popularity after being rediscovered by the bartender Murray Stenson in 2004 during his tenure at the Zig Zag Café and becoming a cult hit in the Seattle and Portland areas and spread to cocktail bars in major cities worldwide, as well as having spawned several variations.
See also
References
- ^ Hill, Eric J.; John Gallagher (2002). AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-3120-3.
- ^ Voyles, Kenneth H.; Bluth, John A. (2001). The Detroit Athletic Club, 1887-2001. Chicago, IL: Arcadia Pub. p. 123. ISBN 0738519014.
- ^ Voyles, Kenneth H.; John Bluth (2001). The Detroit Athletic Club: 1887-2001. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-1901-4.
- ^ Sam Dangremond: How Three Classic Cocktails Got Their Names. Town & Country, 2015-07-20
Further reading
- Hill, Eric J.; John Gallagher (2002). AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-3120-3.
- Meyer, Katherine Mattingly and Martin C.P. McElroy with Introduction by W. Hawkins Ferry, Hon A.I.A. (1980). Detroit Architecture A.I.A. Guide Revised Edition. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-1651-4.
{cite book}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - Sobocinski, Melanie Grunow (2005). Detroit and Rome: building on the past. Regents of the University of Michigan. ISBN 0-933691-09-2.
- Voyles, Kenneth H.; John Bluth (2001). The Detroit Athletic Club: 1887-2001. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-1901-4.
- Voyles, Kenneth H.; John Bluth (2001). The Detroit Athletic Club: 1887-2001. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 0-7385-1901-4.
External links
Media related to Detroit Athletic Club at Wikimedia Commons