Frank Murphy Hall of Justice
Detroit's Frank Murphy Hall of Justice houses the Criminal Division of the Third Judicial Circuit of Michigan, also known as Wayne County Circuit Court, the Wayne County Prosecutor's Office and formerly housed Detroit Recorder's Court.[1] Located in the Greektown district, the twelve-story Brutalist architecture building, designed by Eberle M. Smith, was completed in 1970 and is named for jurist and politician Frank Murphy, who was a Recorder's Court judge, Mayor of Detroit, Governor of Michigan, United States Attorney General and Associate Justice of the United States Supreme Court.[2] As of 2019[update], the building remained in use, but was slated for demolition as part of area redevelopment when the circuit court moves to a new Wayne County criminal justice campus.[3]
References
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- Broadway Avenue Historic District
- Capitol Park Historic District
- Detroit Financial District
- Detroit International Riverfront
- Grand Circus Park Historic District
- Greektown
- Lower Woodward Avenue Historic District
- Mexicantown
- Monroe Avenue Commercial Buildings
- Park Avenue Historic District
- Randolph Street Commercial Buildings Historic District
- Washington Boulevard Historic District
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and complexes
- 150 West Jefferson
- Ally Detroit Center
- Book Tower
- Broderick Tower
- Buhl Building
- Cadillac Place
- Cadillac Square Building (demolished)
- Cadillac Tower
- Chrysler House
- David Whitney Building
- Detroit Life Building
- Executive Plaza Building
- Federal Reserve Building
- First National Building
- Fisher Building
- Ford Building
- Fort Pontchartrain Hotel
- Francis Palms Building
- Guardian Building
- Hudson's Detroit (under construction)
- Industrial Building
- Lafayette Building (demolished)
- Michigan Central Station
- Millender Center
- One Campus Martius
- One Griswold Street
- One Kennedy Square
- One Woodward Avenue
- Penobscot Building
- Renaissance Center
- Riverfront Condominiums Detroit
- David Stott Building
- Westin Book Cadillac Hotel
- Meridian Health Plan Headquarters (proposed)
- Detroit Statler Hotel (demolished)
- Water Board Building
- Wurlitzer Building, a former Wurlitzer office building
- Belle Isle
- Campus Martius Park
- Water Works Park (closed)
- Comerica Park
- Detroit Athletic Club
- Detroit Building
- Detroit City Hall (demolished)
- Detroit Opera House
- Detroit Public Safety Headquarters
- Detroit Club (defunct, but building still there)
- Elwood Bar
- Farwell Building
- The Fillmore Detroit
- Ford Auditorium (demolished)
- Ford Field
- Fort Shelby Hotel
- Fort Street Presbyterian Church
- Fox Theatre
- Frank Murphy Hall of Justice
- Gem Theatre
- Griswold Building Senior Apartments
- Hollywood Casino
- Huntington Place
- Joe Louis Arena (demolished)
- Kennedy Fountain, a/k/a Kennedy Square (demolished)
- MGM Grand Detroit
- Park Avenue House
- Town Apartments
- Veterans' Memorial Building (demolished)
- Wayne County Building
- William Livingstone Memorial Light, only marble lighthouse in the United States, located on Belle Isle
- Women's City Club
- Coleman A. Young Municipal Center
- University Club
- Yondotega Club
stations
- Broadway
- Bricktown
- Cadillac Center
- Financial District
- Fort/Cass
- Grand Circus Park
- Greektown
- Huntington Place
- Michigan Avenue
- Millender Center
- Renaissance Center
- Times Square
- West Riverfront
The Michigan State University College of Law was in Downtown Detroit prior to 1997 and was known as the "Detroit College of Law."
42°20′14.5″N 83°2′33.5″W / 42.337361°N 83.042639°W / 42.337361; -83.042639