The Fisher Building, designated a national historic landmark in 1989, is an eye-catching 30-storey scyscraper located on West Grand Boulevard at the heart of the New Center in Detroit, Michigan.

The edifice was designed and built in Art Deco style by architect Albert Kahn, completed in 1928, on account of the Fisher family and was clad in various types of marble, granite and limestone while its hipped roof was originally laid with gold leaf tiles.

Traffic inside the building is served by a a good 21 elevators as it reaches 130m (428ft) high, a slightly higher 135m (444ft) with its antenna on top, while it accommodated three fine art galleries highlighted by the Gertrude Kasle Gallery in the 1960s through to the 1980s.

The original plan aimed for a complex of three towers with two 30-storey buildings standing either side of a central 60-storey tower but the Great Depression dictated a dramatic scale-down to a single tower in the end.

Finally, the Detroit landmark houses Fisher Theatre, among the cities oldest theatre venues, that was originally fashioned in the Mayan Revival style and could entertain roughly 3500 people but a substantial overhaul saw capacity tail off to about 2090 seats nowadays.