Charles N. Agree
Biography
Agree moved to Detroit in 1909 at the age of 12. He opened his firm in 1917 after graduating from the Detroit Y.M.C.A. Technical School.[http://www.historicdetroit.org/architect/charles-n-agree/ Charles N. Agree]. Historic Detroit. Retrieved on November 9, 2013. His first major commission was in 1921 to build the Whittier Hotel near the bank of the Detroit River. He later went on to design many office buildings, theaters, and ballrooms. Agree was one of the Detroit architects of the 1920s and 1930s who utilized the services of architectural sculptor Corrado Parducci.
As architecture changed by the 1960s, so did Agree's commissions. He began designing many modern-style malls. In addition to the office in the Book Tower, Agree's firm later opened an office on McNichols Road in Detroit and then a suburban office in Bloomfield Hills.
Several Agree-designed buildings have been plundered by architectural scavengers. These include the Vanity Ballroom, where several Mayan-Deco panels were torn off, and the Grande Ballroom, which brought rock band MC5 into fame, which has sat empty since closing in 1972.
Agree-designed buildings
File:Whittier Hotel Panorama Detroit.jpg]]
File:Grande Ballroom Detroit 2009.jpg]]
File:Vanity Ballroom Detroit 2010.jpg]]
:All buildings are located in Detroit, unless otherwise indicated.
- Whittier Hotel, 1921–1927
- Pilgrim and Puritan Apartment Complex, 1924
- Belcrest Apartments (previously Belcrest Hotel), 1926
- Grande Ballroom, 1928
- Vanity Ballroom, 1929
- Harpos Concert Theatre, 1939
- Nadell Furs Building, 1944{{Cite news|last=Humanities|first=National Endowment for the|date=1944-06-17|title=Detroit evening times. (Detroit, Mich) 1921-1958, June 17, 1944, REDLINE, Image 12|pages=12|url=https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn88063294/1944-06-17/ed-1/seq-12/|access-date=2022-02-10|issn=2769-402X}}
- Southgate Shopping Center, Southgate, Michigan, 1957
- Oakland Mall, Troy, Michigan 1968
- Panama City Mall, Panama City, Florida
References
{{Reflist}}
= Bibliography =
- Charles N. Agree, Buffalo As An Architectural Museum, [http://buffaloah.com/a/archs/agree/agree.html link]
Further reading
- {{Cite book | author=Hill, Eric J. | author-link=Eric J. Hill | author2=John Gallagher | title=AIA Detroit: The American Institute of Architects Guide to Detroit Architecture | year=2002 | publisher=Wayne State University Press | isbn=0-8143-3120-3 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/aiadetroitameric0000hill }}
- {{Cite book | author=Meyer, Katherine Mattingly | author2=Martin C.P. McElroy with Introduction by W. Hawkins Ferry | author3=Hon A.I.A. | name-list-style=amp | title=Detroit Architecture A.I.A. Guide | edition=Revised | year=1980 | publisher=Wayne State University Press | isbn=0-8143-1651-4 | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/detroitarchitect0000unse }}
{{Detroit architects}}
{{Authority control}}
{{DEFAULTSORT:Agree, Charles N.}}