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Wallpaper* Design Awards: Detroit is City of the Year 2026

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Detroit appears to be like totally different as of late. Its grand however long-abandoned buildings – vestiges of a bygone period when the auto was king – have been reworked into galleries and inns. New glistening towers soar excessive above the historic skyline. Once blighted neighbourhoods have been redeveloped to maintain current residents whereas attracting new ones – 12,500 in 2024, in accordance with US census knowledge. There’s a way of optimism right here that’s arduous to seek out wherever else within the US.

Detroit is City of the Year within the Wallpaper* Design Awards 2026


The Ford Motor Company spent six years reworking a long-derelict former prepare station into Michigan Central, a 30-acre tech and cultural hub, with plans to open a 180-room NoMad lodge outpost on its high 5 flooring

(Image credit score: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

This transformation is emblematic of a brand new wave of revitalisation sweeping the Motor City, one which stems from the primary seeds of scrappy city renewal that started to emerge right here a decade or two in the past. Back then, natural farms and replanted city forests began to crop up on the vacant plots of former row homes. Creatives made good use of disused warehouses and financial institution buildings, whereas journalists eagerly chronicled the hardscrabble, bootstrap narrative – maybe no extra so than with the watchmaker Shinola, which marketed itself as a ‘made in America’ model. (A declare the Federal Trade Commission would later dispute.)

‘When I moved here ten years ago, Detroit’s creative scene was still very raw,’ says French-American culture journalist Margot Guicheteau, who recently released a travel book called Soul of Detroit. ‘It was like a jungle, but in the best way possible. Everyone was talking about their visions for the city. Now they are actually coming to fruition.’

Detroit’s current crop of movers and shakers (artists, architects, designers, gallerists and progressive developers) is taking a more considered approach to urban revitalisation, collectively formulating sustainable, future-proof strategies that other cities with similar conditions could potentially adopt. ‘What we’re doing here, other places will have to do soon as well,’ says Philip Kafka, founder of Prince Concepts, a local developer that’s invested in Detroit’s Core City neighbourhood.

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

The newly opened 2.1m sq ft Central Campus Building, designed by Snøhetta for the Ford Motor Company, is part of a larger overhaul of the car manufacturer’s Research & Engineering (R&E) Campus in Dearborn, Michigan

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

While downtown Detroit has experienced its share of shiny upgrades (notably with Hudson’s, a 1.5m sq ft development designed by SHoP), there’s been substantial growth in the city’s neighbourhoods, too. New York firms Office for Strategy + Design and SO-IL are currently working on Stanton Yards, a cultural complex along the Detroit River, set to open in 2027. And in November 2025, Detroit mayor Mike Duggan announced a plan to transform the Albert Kahn-designed Packard Plant, one of the city’s most notorious urban ruins, into a 28-acre mixed-use site that includes affordable live-work housing, a museum devoted to Detroit’s electronic music scene, and even an indoor skate park.

‘There’s a misconception that the grassroots, DIY approach left the city,’ says Anthony Curis, co-founder of Library Street Collective, the gallery and cultural platform that’s spearheading the Stanton Yards project. ‘It’s very much alive but has shifted, almost exclusively, to the neighbourhoods.’ The city’s status as a Unesco City of Design and events such as Detroit Month of Design are further securing the Motor City’s status as one of the most exciting places to be right now, and there are a number of projects that are putting it back on the map. Among these is the arts centre, The Shepherd.

Located in Little Village, cultural arts centre The Shepherd is housed in a century-old Romanesque-style church and now offers two exhibition spaces, a public library, a theatre and community workshop facilities

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

Central to the rapidly redeveloping Little Village neighbourhood and completed in 2024, this multifaceted cultural campus makes clever use of a stately Romanesque church, its ancillary buildings and extensive grounds. The complex is anchored by an expansive hall for temporary exhibitions, sensitively converted by Brooklyn-based architecture firm Peterson Rich Office, as well as a public library, curated by Asmaa Walton of Black Art Library, and a performing arts theatre.

The campus also includes a rectory-turned-bed and breakfast; a wine bar called Father Forgive Me; a bakery designed by local practice Undecorated; a skate park that Tony Hawk helped imagine; and a sculpture garden showcasing works by prominent Detroit artist Charles McGee. All of the landscaping was carried out by Office for Strategy + Design. The impressive project was developed by Curis and his wife and business partner JJ, who are also the force behind the nearby OMA-designed Lantern complex and the upcoming Stanton Yards.

Designed by architecture studio EC3 for local developer Prince Concepts and located in Core City, The Canopy is a series of duplex buildings, scattered amid native gardens on a 17,000 sq ft land parcel

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

Core City, an ever-evolving residential and commercial neighbourhood located north-east of the Corktown neighbourhood, is also blossoming. The project, spearheaded by Kafka, is a new kind of real estate development in which existing residents are kept in place while empty plots are in-filled with experimental dwellings; some are self-built by individual homeowners while others are constructed on spec. The Canopy is one such addition. Designed by LA architecture practice EC3, the multifamily complex was inspired by the styles of Mies van der Rohe and Albert Kahn, architects that had a significant impact on Detroit. The cube-shaped structures are clad in renewable materials and feature colourful details like exuberant rooftop murals.

Development company Bedrock has been integral to Detroit’s redevelopment, especially downtown. One of its marquee projects is the transformation of Book Tower – the Renaissance-style landmark skyscraper originally designed in the 1920s – into one of the city’s first mixed-used destinations. Completed in 2022, it comprises restaurants, retail stores, gyms, co-working spaces, condos and the Roost apartment/hotel. The building is a shining example of adaptive reuse architecture, especially at this scale. Bedrock invested $400m into the tower’s transformation, a signal that historic buildings are not just being celebrated but being put to good use; made relevant again.

Originally opened in 1926, the 38-storey Book Tower had fallen into disrepair over the decades, but has recently been repurposed as a vibrant mixed-use development

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

Le Suprême at Book Tower

(Image credit: Photography by Aaron Feliciano for Wallpaper*)

And of the Big Three car manufacturers, Ford has perhaps been the most invested in the city’s revitalisation. On top of its investments in Corktown and the 30-acre tech and cultural hub Michigan Central, the company is overhauling its headquarters, located in nearby Dearborn, Michigan. Architecture practice Snøhetta is currently designing Ford’s new 2.1m sq ft state-of-the-art Research & Engineering Campus – when it opens at the end of 2027, the paradigm-shifting complex, a fluid composition of interconnecting volumes, courtyards and sloping green roofs, will reflect the forward-looking brand’s stated mission of fostering collaboration, innovation and community.

This article appears in the February 2026 Design Awards Issue of Wallpaper*, available in print on newsstands, on the Wallpaper* app on Apple iOS, and to subscribers of Apple News +. Subscribe to Wallpaper* today.

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