Albert Kahn Inc.:
Architecture, Labor, and Industry, 1905–1961

RSVP Tue, Sep 16, 2025 at 6:00 PM

MIT Press, 2025.

This is an in-person program at the Museum's lower Manhattan gallery.

In her new book Albert Kahn Inc.: Architecture, Labor, and Industry, 1905–1961, Claire Zimmerman charts a history of second-wave industrialization associated with the growth and development of the United States auto industry and its global footprint. Her case study of the architecture firm most closely associated with the major auto companies in Detroit explores how industrial capitalism fueled campuses of the auto industry and helped catalyze the militarization of industry. While the book theorizes how capitalism drives the development of built environments (industrial or other), it also focuses specifically on three stages of architectural production: the design, construction, and occupation of buildings. The product of a decade of research, AKI combines analysis of architecture after industrialization with 140 illustrations drawn chiefly from Detroit-area archives, in a new study of modern architecture.

To register for this FREE program, click on the link above to RSVP. You will be redirected to Ticketstripe to reserve your seat. In-person attendance is limited to 50 people, but you can still watch the program live on our YouTube channel when it begins at 6pm.

You do NOT need to register for the YouTube livestream.

Claire Zimmerman

Claire Zimmerman is Professor of Architecture at the University of Toronto, where she directs the PhD program in Architecture, Landscape, and Design. She is the author of Photographic Architecture in the Twentieth Century (Minnesota, 2014) and Ludwig Mies van der Rohe (Taschen, 2006) and coeditor of Architecture against Democracy: Histories of the Nationalist International (Minnesota 2024) and Detroit-Moscow-Detroit: An Architecture for Industrialization (MIT Press, 2023), among other books and articles.

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