Water Wheel Centre (Ford Northville Valve Plant) (Northville, Michigan)
USA /
Michigan /
Northville /
Northville, Michigan /
East Main Street, 235
World
/ USA
/ Michigan
/ Northville
World / United States / Ohio
office building, fitness centre / center, NRHP - National Register of Historic Places, architect, design studio, Ford factory
The Ford Valve Plant, located on 4 acres on Northville's Main Street at the northeast corner of Griswold Street just east of Northville historic downtown commercial area. The site is irregular in shape, roughly 400 deep and 280 feet wide. The site is flat and is bordered by the Rouge River to the north and east.
This Ford Valve Plant exemplifies the desire of Henry Ford to soften the social impact of his manufacturing innovations through the establishment of village industries. The village industries were to decentralize manufacturing and re-integrate it into rural communities. In 1919 Henry Ford purchased the site with its mill and established the first of his village industries. In 1936 he replaced the mill and built the first modern factory for his village industries. Although the village industry experiment was halted in 1947, this plant continued in operation until 1978, longer than any of the other village industry sites. The 1936 building was designed by Albert Kahn, an architect known for his innovative factories and responsible for many of Ford's factories. The building reflected current industrial technology and architectural styles. At the same time it incorporated a water wheel, reflecting Henry Ford's desire to incorporate the factory into his vision of a productive rural community.
08/01/1995 National Register listed
Current tenants of this remodeled building include HKS Architects, inForm Studio, Planet Fitness, and more.
www.hksinc.com/offices/detroit
www.in-formstudio.com/
www.planetfitness.com/
This Ford Valve Plant exemplifies the desire of Henry Ford to soften the social impact of his manufacturing innovations through the establishment of village industries. The village industries were to decentralize manufacturing and re-integrate it into rural communities. In 1919 Henry Ford purchased the site with its mill and established the first of his village industries. In 1936 he replaced the mill and built the first modern factory for his village industries. Although the village industry experiment was halted in 1947, this plant continued in operation until 1978, longer than any of the other village industry sites. The 1936 building was designed by Albert Kahn, an architect known for his innovative factories and responsible for many of Ford's factories. The building reflected current industrial technology and architectural styles. At the same time it incorporated a water wheel, reflecting Henry Ford's desire to incorporate the factory into his vision of a productive rural community.
08/01/1995 National Register listed
Current tenants of this remodeled building include HKS Architects, inForm Studio, Planet Fitness, and more.
www.hksinc.com/offices/detroit
www.in-formstudio.com/
www.planetfitness.com/
Wikipedia article: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ford_Valve_Plant
Nearby cities:
Coordinates: 42°25'55"N 83°28'40"W
- Rosedale Park Historic District 20 km
- The Henry Ford Historic Park (AKA Greenfield Village) 24 km
- Cranbrook Educational Community 24 km
- Ford River Rouge Complex 28 km
- Old West Side Historic District 29 km
- Boston-Edison Historic District 30 km
- Indian Village Historic District 40 km
- Fallen Timbers State Memorial 100 km
- Chautauqua Institution 330 km
- Niagara Falls State Park 367 km
- Northville Industrial Park 0.5 km
- Chase Farms 1.8 km
- Northville Township, Michigan 2.1 km
- Meadowbrook Country Club 2.5 km
- Novi Township, MI 2.6 km
- Former Northville Psychiatric Hospital 2.7 km
- Novi Tech Center 2.8 km
- Mystic Forest 2.9 km
- Turtle Creek Community 2.9 km
- Village Oaks 3.7 km
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