Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District

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Location1981, 2003 and 2025 West McNichols Road,
Highland Park, Michigan
Coordinates42°25′2″N 83°7′15″W / 42.41722°N 83.12083°W / 42.41722; -83.12083
ArchitecturalstyleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Classical Revival
Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District
Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District is located in Michigan
Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District
Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District is located in the United States
Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District
Interactive map
Location1981, 2003 and 2025 West McNichols Road,
Highland Park, Michigan
Coordinates42°25′2″N 83°7′15″W / 42.41722°N 83.12083°W / 42.41722; -83.12083
ArchitectRichard H. Marr
Architectural styleLate 19th And 20th Century Revivals, Classical Revival
NRHP reference No.91001983[1]
Added to NRHPJanuary 22, 1992

The Palmer Park Boulevard Apartments District is a collection of three apartment buildings located in Highland Park, Michigan. The district was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1992.[1]

In the early 1920s, the architect Richard H. Marr entered into a partnership with businessman R.B. Oberteuffer (under the name The Fairway Company) to design and build an upscale apartment building at the corner of what was then known as Palmer Park Boulevard and Twelfth Street (now McNichols and Rosa Parks). The development was in response to the growth of the area due to the nearness of both Palmer Park and the Detroit Golf Club. Marr and Oberteuffer built the Fairway in 1923. Soon after, the Young Construction Company hired Marr to design four more apartment buildings along Palmer Park Boulevard: The Southcourse, built in 1924, and the Douglas, Northcourse, and Georgian Apartments, all constructed in 1925. When finished, the five apartment buildings formed a symmetric grouping, with the end buildings essentially alike in design.[2]

The first occupants of the apartments tended to be professionals, small business owners, and executives of larger firms. Because of the location, these buildings became some of the most exclusive addresses in Highland Park.[2] However, the two easternmost buildings, the Fairway and the Douglas, suffered severe fire damage and were demolished in the 1990s.[3]

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