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Julius Kahn (inventor)

Julius Kahn (March 8, 1874 – November 4, 1942) was an American engineer, industrialist, and manufacturer. He was the inventor of the Kahn system, a reinforced concrete engineering technique for building construction.[1] The Kahn system, which he patented in 1903, was used worldwide for housing, factories, offices and industrial buildings. He formed his own company, Trussed Concrete Steel Company, as a manufacturing source for his inventions. He also founded United Steel Company and was chairman of Truscon Laboratories.

Julius Kahn
Born(1874-03-08)March 8, 1874
Münstereifel, Germany
DiedNovember 4, 1942(1942-11-04) (aged 68)
Cleveland, Ohio, U.S.
NationalityAmerican
EducationUniversity of Michigan
Occupationengineer
Known forKahn system
SpouseMargaret Kohut
ChildrenGisela, Katherine, Julius Jr.
RelativesAlbert Kahn, brother
Signature
University of Michigan (Ann Arbor) Engineering Building (1905)

Early life and education edit

Kahn was born in Münstereifel, Germany, March 8, 1874. He immigrated to the United States with his family in 1880, entering at the port of Baltimore, Maryland, where they briefly lived.[2] They continued to Detroit, Michigan, where he was raised, along with five brothers and two sisters.[3]

Their father Joseph (1860–1924) was a rabbi and ran a restaurant[4] where Julius worked; he also sold newspapers.[2] Mother Rosalie was skilled in music and art.[5] Kahn's elementary education was in Detroit Public Schools. He completed the normal four-year high school curriculum in three years.[6]

Kahn, assisted financially by his older brother, architect Albert, attended the University of Michigan.[6][7] He received a Bachelor of Science and a degree in Civil Engineering in 1896.[2]

Career edit

Reinforced concrete and Truscon edit

After graduating from the University of Michigan, Kahn began his career as an engineering draftsman for the Union Bridge Company of New York.[2][8] He worked as an engineer for both the United States Navy and the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers from 1896 to 1903.[9] Kahn also was employed by C. W. Hunt Company of New York. In 1900, Kahn moved to Japan for two years, laboring in engineering, construction, and maintenance of iron and sulfur mines.[6][10][11]

Kahn returned to Detroit in 1903, joining Albert Kahn Associates, an architectural firm founded by his brother Albert in 1895.[6][12][13] Kahn's first assignment was collaborating with key architect Ernest Wilby in Ann Arbor on the University of Michigan's[13] new College of Engineering building.[14][15] Kahn's focus was testing specific materials for sufficient strength in supporting the new building.[13]

Kahn and Wilby wanted to use reinforced concrete for the building's floors, in place of traditional wood supports. Kahn had previous experience in reinforced concrete with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers.[16] During the construction of U.S. War College building in Washington, D.C., he initiated methods improving the then existing technology of reinforced concrete by beginning work developing the Kahn system of steel bars.[6][17] This new concept for reinforced concrete steel bars was the basis of the steel production company he later founded.[2]

Kahn understood the structural challenges inherent in the existing method of concrete reinforcement used at the end of the nineteenth century. The main problem was slippage of the steel within the hardened concrete, which weakened the structure. He experimented in his brother's basement, where he developed an improved type of reinforced beam called "the Kahn Bar".[6] Kahn patented his invention in 1903, the first of more than 75 patents awarded to him.[18]

The Jordahl (Jordahl GmbH) Company’s founders, Norwegian Anders Jordahl and his Swedish partner Ivar Kreuger, acquired the marketing rights to the Kahn system in Europe in 1907. Today, the company attributes the “… seeds of its founding …” to Albert and Julius Kahn’s passion for concrete.[19] Kahn formed Trussed Concrete Steel Company (Truscon) to manufacture his beams. He was the president, but spent much of his time in the design room.[2][20] The company was headquartered in Detroit, with manufacturing in Youngstown, Ohio.[16] Kahn chose Youngstown in 1907 as the ideal location because the city's proximity to steel production in Mahoning County and reduced shipping costs.[2][6]

Management edit

Kahn served as a director of the Mahoning Bank, the First National Bank, and Dollar Bank. In 1927, he was elected chairman of the Youngstown Chamber of Commerce grade elimination committee, and a director of the street car committee in 1928. He was the president of an eponymous realty firm in Detroit.[21] In 1930, Kahn was honorary chairman of the Allied Jewish financial campaign. He was also a member of several committees in metal-related industries as well as a member of the proxy committee that opposed the merger of Youngstown Sheet & Tube Company with Bethlehem Steel.[2]

Kahn was the founder of United Steel Company in Wooster, Ohio, and chairman of Truscon Laboratories in Detroit.[22][23] He was president of Truscon Steel Company from its inception in 1905 until 1935, when it was taken over by Republic Steel Corporation.[8] He then became a vice president for Republic, serving until 1939.[21]

Writing and publishing edit

Kahn wrote several published articles on engineering and on the steel business. One article titled "Confidence and cooperation", discussed the ills of industry.[2] Kahn was also a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers, which awarded him The Collingwood Prize for his paper "The Coal Hoists of the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company" in 1889.[24][22]

Inventions and impact edit

 
The Albert Kahn Building in Detroit, where Julius worked in fabrication designs

Kahn experimented and developed reinforced concrete construction materials, with at least 75 patented inventions in the field by 1934.[25] His first patent was "Kahn Trussed Bar", also called "the Kahn Bar" or "Kahn Bar System",[26] patented in 1903.[27] The Kahn bar was a straight steel beam whose edges were slightly bent, resulting in improved stress distribution "wings" that increased tension strength.[27] It was the principal product of the Trussed Concrete Steel Company, although the company manufactured many prefabricated steel products, as well as complete buildings — all used in construction around the world.[28] Kahn's co-workers noted that he would stop whatever he was doing to write down an idea immediately, no matter what else was engaging him.[25] Additionally he encouraged Truscon employees with financial incentives to develop new and improved ideas to benefit the company.[25] For example, employee David H. Morgan was financially rewarded for inventing a new type of airplane hangar door, subsequently manufactured by Truscon.[25]

The Kahn system of reinforced concrete was adapted by his brother Albert Kahn, an architect, for design and construction of industrial buildings. By 1939, Kahn's system was used in 134 U.S. cities and was adopted by builders in Africa, Europe, Canada, China, Brazil, and Mexico. The system was used in the first two automobile factories in the U.S., Packard and Cadillac, progenitors of the most prodigious industry of the 20th century. His unique engineering and construction method was also found in airplane plants, warehouses, docks, foundries, creameries, filtration plants, rubber factories, steel plants, silos, distilleries, smelters, and textile mills.[29]

The steel-reinforced concrete automobile factory has been heralded as one of the architectural breakthroughs of the 20th century. Many named the 1905 Packard Motor Car Company’s building No. 10 in Detroit as the first edifice built for the largest and most swiftly growing industry in the early 1900s.[30] Albert Kahn was the designer and architect for this use of the Kahn system in construction devoted entirely to the car.[31][32][33] However, the first was actually the Cadillac Motor Car plant in Detroit. Ironically, Julius Kahn supervised the engineering and construction of both buildings, using his patented system to make essential contributions to the construction and automotive industries in the US.[34]

There were two significant construction accidents in buildings using the Kahn system in the early 20th century. The first, in November 1906, occurred in Long Beach, California, when parts of the Bixby Hotel collapsed during construction. Also, that November, the Eastman Kodak Building in Rochester, New York, gave way. Investigations of both accidents found the quality of workmanship seriously at fault. Both queries came to the conclusion that the Kahn system was not to blame for either faulty design or errors; rather, poor construction techniques were responsible.[35]

Trussed Concrete Steel Company manufactured a product with a brand name of Hy-Rib starting in 1909. It was a steel meshed sheathing with deep stiffening ribs. It was filled with cement or plaster and used for floors, walls, and ceilings of houses, factories, and commercial buildings. It was a product derived from the Kahn Trussed Bar for beams and columns of reinforced concrete. Hy-Rib products were also used in the construction of tunnels, conduits, flumes, culverts, silos, cisterns, chimneys, and water tanks. Its technology cut down on labor time in construction.[36]

Personal life and death edit

 
The Kahn family, 1921

Kahn married Margaret K. Kohut, daughter of rabbi Alexander Kohut, on December 23, 1903. Margaret was born in Hungary in 1876; later, her family immigrated to the US. The Kahns had three children: Gisela Kahn Gresser (1906–2000), Katherine Kay (1909–1954), and Julius Kahn Jr. (1912–2009), all born in Detroit. Kahn enjoyed a one-year retirement "to private life" in 1939. In 1940, he exited retirement and became an executive of another steel fabricating company.[2] Kahn died at the age of 68 of pneumonia on November 4, 1942, in Cleveland, Ohio.[2][8]

References edit

  1. ^ Sedlar, Frank (April 23, 2013). "Engineering Industrial Architecture: Albert Kahn and the Trussed Concrete Steel Company" (PDF). University of Michigan Library.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Julius Kahn Dies at Home". Youngstown Vindicator. November 5, 1942. p. 1, column 3.
  3. ^ Shor, George G. Jr.; Shor, Elizabeth N.; Spiess, Fred N. (October 1979). "The Engineer". The George H. Scripps Memorial Marine Biological Laboratory of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego (Report). University of California. Retrieved July 15, 2014.
  4. ^ Matuz 2002, p. 15.
  5. ^ Matuz 2002, p. 16.
  6. ^ a b c d e f g Orr, Jack (January 1, 1933). "Julius Kahn". Youngstown Telegram. p. 7.
  7. ^ Bucci 2002, p. 31; Matuz 2002, p. 35.
  8. ^ a b c Derby, George (1947). "Kahn, Julius". The National Cyclopædia of American Biography. Vol. 33. J. T. White & company. p. 36. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  9. ^ "Albert Kahn Associates records". Bentley Historical Library. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  10. ^ Ferry 1987, p. 10.
  11. ^ Matuz 2002, p. 45.
  12. ^ Matuz 2002, p. 45; Ferry 1987, p. 10.
  13. ^ a b c Matuz 2002, p. 46.
  14. ^ Bucci 2002, p. 151.
  15. ^ Quivik, Fredric (2002). (PDF). Historic American Engineering Record (Report). National Park Service, U.S. Department of the Interior. pp. 25, 26. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 10, 2014. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  16. ^ a b Matuz 2002, p. 47.
  17. ^ "Albert Kahn (1869-1942)". Michigan State Historic Preservation Office. Retrieved July 4, 2021.
  18. ^ Kahn, Julius (August 18, 1903). "Concrete and metal construction / Patent US 736602 A". Google Patents. U.S. Patent Office. Retrieved July 8, 2014.
  19. ^ "History of the Jordahl Company". Jordahl GmbH. Retrieved March 25, 2021.
  20. ^ Ferry 1987, p. 11.
  21. ^ a b "Julius Kahn, former steel executive, dies". The Huntsville Times. Huntsville,, Alabama. November 5, 1942. p. 16 – via Newspapers.com  .
  22. ^ a b "Julius Kahn, 68, Steel Ex-official". New York Times. November 6, 1942. p. 23, column 6.
  23. ^ "Former Truscon Steel Company head passes". The Charlotte Observer. Charlotte, North Carolina. November 6, 1942. p. 36 – via Newspapers.com  .
  24. ^ Bucci 2002, p. 31; Municipal 1901, p. 104.
  25. ^ a b c d "Kahn given 75th patent". Youngstown Telegram. February 23, 1934. p. 1, column 7.
  26. ^ "Albert Kahn". Michigan Modern. Michigan State Historic Preservation Office. 2014. Retrieved July 30, 2014.
  27. ^ a b Cody 2005, p. 37.
  28. ^ Cody 2005, p. 38.
  29. ^ Nelson 1939, pp. 22–23.
  30. ^ Darley 2003, p. 82 " flexibility that he chose to illustrate was Albert Kahn's building of 1905 for Packard in Detroit, building No. 10, the first to use the Kahn reinforced concrete system successfully, which has been effortlessly extended by an additional two stories in 1911".
  31. ^ Olsen 2002, p. 38 "In 1905 Kahn and Julius designed the Packard Plant number 10 using steel-reinforced concrete, the first such application for an industrial plant".
  32. ^ Smith 1994, p. 59 "Together they built ten works buildings for Packard, Plant No. 10 (1905) being the first reinforced concrete structure in the automobile industry, notable for its lengths of open space between columns and the good lighting from near-floor-to-ceiling windows".
  33. ^ Baldwin 2002, p. 197 "His first major corporate client was the Packard Motor Car Company, headed by Henry B. Joy, from whom Kahn eventually designed ten buildings, culminating in Detroit's first large auto plant, the first reinforced concrete auto factory in America".
  34. ^ Smith, Michael (December 1, 2019). "The First Concrete Auto Factory: An Error in the Historical Record". Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians. 78 (4). Oakland California: University of California Press: 440–453. doi:10.1525/jsah.2019.78.4.442. S2CID 213601851.
  35. ^ Salmon, Ryan; Elliot, Meghan (April 2013). "The Kahn System of Reinforced Concrete". Structure Magazine. Chicago Illinois: National Council of Structural Engineers Associations.
  36. ^ Truscon 1917, pp. 119–130.

Bibliography edit

  • Bucci, Federico (2002). Albert Kahn: Architect of Ford. Princeton Architectural Press. ISBN 978-1-56898-343-1.
  • Cody, Jeffrey W. (2005). Exporting American Architecture 1870–2000. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-80487-9.
  • Ferry, W. Hawkins (1987) [1970]. The Legacy of Albert Kahn (reprint ed.). Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-1889-4.
  • Matuz, Roger (2002). Albert Kahn: Builder of Detroit. Wayne State University Press. ISBN 0-8143-2957-8.
  • "Municipal Engineering". Municipal Engineering: A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Improvement of Cities. 20. Municipal Engineering Company. 1901. ISSN 0097-4129. LCCN sn82003917.
  • Nelson, George (1939). Industrial architecture of Albert Kahn, Inc. Architectural Book Publishing Company. LCCN 39005868.
  • Truscon (1917). Hy-Rib Handbook; roofs—floors—walls—sidings—partitions—ceilings—furring—silos—tanks—conduits, concrete without forms. Youngstown, Ohio: Trussed Concrete Steel Company. OCLC 33111897.

External links edit

  • Michigan Historical Collections, Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, Albert Kahn Papers, 1896–2011
  • Video on "Engineering Industrial Architecture: Albert Kahn and the Trussed Concrete Steel Company"
  •   Media related to Julius Kahn (inventor) at Wikimedia Commons

julius, kahn, inventor, other, people, named, julius, kahn, julius, kahn, disambiguation, julius, kahn, march, 1874, november, 1942, american, engineer, industrialist, manufacturer, inventor, kahn, system, reinforced, concrete, engineering, technique, building. For other people named Julius Kahn see Julius Kahn disambiguation Julius Kahn March 8 1874 November 4 1942 was an American engineer industrialist and manufacturer He was the inventor of the Kahn system a reinforced concrete engineering technique for building construction 1 The Kahn system which he patented in 1903 was used worldwide for housing factories offices and industrial buildings He formed his own company Trussed Concrete Steel Company as a manufacturing source for his inventions He also founded United Steel Company and was chairman of Truscon Laboratories Julius KahnBorn 1874 03 08 March 8 1874Munstereifel GermanyDiedNovember 4 1942 1942 11 04 aged 68 Cleveland Ohio U S NationalityAmericanEducationUniversity of MichiganOccupationengineerKnown forKahn systemSpouseMargaret KohutChildrenGisela Katherine Julius Jr RelativesAlbert Kahn brotherSignature University of Michigan Ann Arbor Engineering Building 1905 Contents 1 Early life and education 2 Career 2 1 Reinforced concrete and Truscon 2 2 Management 2 3 Writing and publishing 3 Inventions and impact 4 Personal life and death 5 References 6 Bibliography 7 External linksEarly life and education editKahn was born in Munstereifel Germany March 8 1874 He immigrated to the United States with his family in 1880 entering at the port of Baltimore Maryland where they briefly lived 2 They continued to Detroit Michigan where he was raised along with five brothers and two sisters 3 Their father Joseph 1860 1924 was a rabbi and ran a restaurant 4 where Julius worked he also sold newspapers 2 Mother Rosalie was skilled in music and art 5 Kahn s elementary education was in Detroit Public Schools He completed the normal four year high school curriculum in three years 6 Kahn assisted financially by his older brother architect Albert attended the University of Michigan 6 7 He received a Bachelor of Science and a degree in Civil Engineering in 1896 2 Career editReinforced concrete and Truscon edit After graduating from the University of Michigan Kahn began his career as an engineering draftsman for the Union Bridge Company of New York 2 8 He worked as an engineer for both the United States Navy and the U S Army Corps of Engineers from 1896 to 1903 9 Kahn also was employed by C W Hunt Company of New York In 1900 Kahn moved to Japan for two years laboring in engineering construction and maintenance of iron and sulfur mines 6 10 11 Kahn returned to Detroit in 1903 joining Albert Kahn Associates an architectural firm founded by his brother Albert in 1895 6 12 13 Kahn s first assignment was collaborating with key architect Ernest Wilby in Ann Arbor on the University of Michigan s 13 new College of Engineering building 14 15 Kahn s focus was testing specific materials for sufficient strength in supporting the new building 13 Kahn and Wilby wanted to use reinforced concrete for the building s floors in place of traditional wood supports Kahn had previous experience in reinforced concrete with the U S Army Corps of Engineers 16 During the construction of U S War College building in Washington D C he initiated methods improving the then existing technology of reinforced concrete by beginning work developing the Kahn system of steel bars 6 17 This new concept for reinforced concrete steel bars was the basis of the steel production company he later founded 2 Kahn understood the structural challenges inherent in the existing method of concrete reinforcement used at the end of the nineteenth century The main problem was slippage of the steel within the hardened concrete which weakened the structure He experimented in his brother s basement where he developed an improved type of reinforced beam called the Kahn Bar 6 Kahn patented his invention in 1903 the first of more than 75 patents awarded to him 18 The Jordahl Jordahl GmbH Company s founders Norwegian Anders Jordahl and his Swedish partner Ivar Kreuger acquired the marketing rights to the Kahn system in Europe in 1907 Today the company attributes the seeds of its founding to Albert and Julius Kahn s passion for concrete 19 Kahn formed Trussed Concrete Steel Company Truscon to manufacture his beams He was the president but spent much of his time in the design room 2 20 The company was headquartered in Detroit with manufacturing in Youngstown Ohio 16 Kahn chose Youngstown in 1907 as the ideal location because the city s proximity to steel production in Mahoning County and reduced shipping costs 2 6 Management edit Kahn served as a director of the Mahoning Bank the First National Bank and Dollar Bank In 1927 he was elected chairman of the Youngstown Chamber of Commerce grade elimination committee and a director of the street car committee in 1928 He was the president of an eponymous realty firm in Detroit 21 In 1930 Kahn was honorary chairman of the Allied Jewish financial campaign He was also a member of several committees in metal related industries as well as a member of the proxy committee that opposed the merger of Youngstown Sheet amp Tube Company with Bethlehem Steel 2 Kahn was the founder of United Steel Company in Wooster Ohio and chairman of Truscon Laboratories in Detroit 22 23 He was president of Truscon Steel Company from its inception in 1905 until 1935 when it was taken over by Republic Steel Corporation 8 He then became a vice president for Republic serving until 1939 21 Writing and publishing edit Kahn wrote several published articles on engineering and on the steel business One article titled Confidence and cooperation discussed the ills of industry 2 Kahn was also a member of the American Society of Civil Engineers which awarded him The Collingwood Prize for his paper The Coal Hoists of the Calumet and Hecla Mining Company in 1889 24 22 Inventions and impact edit nbsp The Albert Kahn Building in Detroit where Julius worked in fabrication designs Kahn experimented and developed reinforced concrete construction materials with at least 75 patented inventions in the field by 1934 25 His first patent was Kahn Trussed Bar also called the Kahn Bar or Kahn Bar System 26 patented in 1903 27 The Kahn bar was a straight steel beam whose edges were slightly bent resulting in improved stress distribution wings that increased tension strength 27 It was the principal product of the Trussed Concrete Steel Company although the company manufactured many prefabricated steel products as well as complete buildings all used in construction around the world 28 Kahn s co workers noted that he would stop whatever he was doing to write down an idea immediately no matter what else was engaging him 25 Additionally he encouraged Truscon employees with financial incentives to develop new and improved ideas to benefit the company 25 For example employee David H Morgan was financially rewarded for inventing a new type of airplane hangar door subsequently manufactured by Truscon 25 The Kahn system of reinforced concrete was adapted by his brother Albert Kahn an architect for design and construction of industrial buildings By 1939 Kahn s system was used in 134 U S cities and was adopted by builders in Africa Europe Canada China Brazil and Mexico The system was used in the first two automobile factories in the U S Packard and Cadillac progenitors of the most prodigious industry of the 20th century His unique engineering and construction method was also found in airplane plants warehouses docks foundries creameries filtration plants rubber factories steel plants silos distilleries smelters and textile mills 29 The steel reinforced concrete automobile factory has been heralded as one of the architectural breakthroughs of the 20th century Many named the 1905 Packard Motor Car Company s building No 10 in Detroit as the first edifice built for the largest and most swiftly growing industry in the early 1900s 30 Albert Kahn was the designer and architect for this use of the Kahn system in construction devoted entirely to the car 31 32 33 However the first was actually the Cadillac Motor Car plant in Detroit Ironically Julius Kahn supervised the engineering and construction of both buildings using his patented system to make essential contributions to the construction and automotive industries in the US 34 There were two significant construction accidents in buildings using the Kahn system in the early 20th century The first in November 1906 occurred in Long Beach California when parts of the Bixby Hotel collapsed during construction Also that November the Eastman Kodak Building in Rochester New York gave way Investigations of both accidents found the quality of workmanship seriously at fault Both queries came to the conclusion that the Kahn system was not to blame for either faulty design or errors rather poor construction techniques were responsible 35 Trussed Concrete Steel Company manufactured a product with a brand name of Hy Rib starting in 1909 It was a steel meshed sheathing with deep stiffening ribs It was filled with cement or plaster and used for floors walls and ceilings of houses factories and commercial buildings It was a product derived from the Kahn Trussed Bar for beams and columns of reinforced concrete Hy Rib products were also used in the construction of tunnels conduits flumes culverts silos cisterns chimneys and water tanks Its technology cut down on labor time in construction 36 Personal life and death edit nbsp The Kahn family 1921 Kahn married Margaret K Kohut daughter of rabbi Alexander Kohut on December 23 1903 Margaret was born in Hungary in 1876 later her family immigrated to the US The Kahns had three children Gisela Kahn Gresser 1906 2000 Katherine Kay 1909 1954 and Julius Kahn Jr 1912 2009 all born in Detroit Kahn enjoyed a one year retirement to private life in 1939 In 1940 he exited retirement and became an executive of another steel fabricating company 2 Kahn died at the age of 68 of pneumonia on November 4 1942 in Cleveland Ohio 2 8 References edit Sedlar Frank April 23 2013 Engineering Industrial Architecture Albert Kahn and the Trussed Concrete Steel Company PDF University of Michigan Library a b c d e f g h i j k Julius Kahn Dies at Home Youngstown Vindicator November 5 1942 p 1 column 3 Shor George G Jr Shor Elizabeth N Spiess Fred N October 1979 The Engineer The George H Scripps Memorial Marine Biological Laboratory of the Scripps Institution of Oceanography University of California San Diego Report University of California Retrieved July 15 2014 Matuz 2002 p 15 Matuz 2002 p 16 a b c d e f g Orr Jack January 1 1933 Julius Kahn Youngstown Telegram p 7 Bucci 2002 p 31 Matuz 2002 p 35 a b c Derby George 1947 Kahn Julius The National Cyclopaedia of American Biography Vol 33 J T White amp company p 36 Retrieved July 30 2014 Albert Kahn Associates records Bentley Historical Library Retrieved July 4 2021 Ferry 1987 p 10 Matuz 2002 p 45 Matuz 2002 p 45 Ferry 1987 p 10 a b c Matuz 2002 p 46 Bucci 2002 p 151 Quivik Fredric 2002 Rosie the Riveter National Historic Park Ford Assembly Plant HAER No CA 326 H PDF Historic American Engineering Record Report National Park Service U S Department of the Interior pp 25 26 Archived from the original PDF on August 10 2014 Retrieved July 30 2014 a b Matuz 2002 p 47 Albert Kahn 1869 1942 Michigan State Historic Preservation Office Retrieved July 4 2021 Kahn Julius August 18 1903 Concrete and metal construction Patent US 736602 A Google Patents U S Patent Office Retrieved July 8 2014 History of the Jordahl Company Jordahl GmbH Retrieved March 25 2021 Ferry 1987 p 11 a b Julius Kahn former steel executive dies The Huntsville Times Huntsville Alabama November 5 1942 p 16 via Newspapers com nbsp a b Julius Kahn 68 Steel Ex official New York Times November 6 1942 p 23 column 6 Former Truscon Steel Company head passes The Charlotte Observer Charlotte North Carolina November 6 1942 p 36 via Newspapers com nbsp Bucci 2002 p 31 Municipal 1901 p 104 a b c d Kahn given 75th patent Youngstown Telegram February 23 1934 p 1 column 7 Albert Kahn Michigan Modern Michigan State Historic Preservation Office 2014 Retrieved July 30 2014 a b Cody 2005 p 37 Cody 2005 p 38 Nelson 1939 pp 22 23 Darley 2003 p 82 flexibility that he chose to illustrate was Albert Kahn s building of 1905 for Packard in Detroit building No 10 the first to use the Kahn reinforced concrete system successfully which has been effortlessly extended by an additional two stories in 1911 Olsen 2002 p 38 In 1905 Kahn and Julius designed the Packard Plant number 10 using steel reinforced concrete the first such application for an industrial plant Smith 1994 p 59 Together they built ten works buildings for Packard Plant No 10 1905 being the first reinforced concrete structure in the automobile industry notable for its lengths of open space between columns and the good lighting from near floor to ceiling windows Baldwin 2002 p 197 His first major corporate client was the Packard Motor Car Company headed by Henry B Joy from whom Kahn eventually designed ten buildings culminating in Detroit s first large auto plant the first reinforced concrete auto factory in America Smith Michael December 1 2019 The First Concrete Auto Factory An Error in the Historical Record Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 78 4 Oakland California University of California Press 440 453 doi 10 1525 jsah 2019 78 4 442 S2CID 213601851 Salmon Ryan Elliot Meghan April 2013 The Kahn System of Reinforced Concrete Structure Magazine Chicago Illinois National Council of Structural Engineers Associations Truscon 1917 pp 119 130 Bibliography editBucci Federico 2002 Albert Kahn Architect of Ford Princeton Architectural Press ISBN 978 1 56898 343 1 Cody Jeffrey W 2005 Exporting American Architecture 1870 2000 Routledge ISBN 978 1 135 80487 9 Ferry W Hawkins 1987 1970 The Legacy of Albert Kahn reprint ed Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 1889 4 Matuz Roger 2002 Albert Kahn Builder of Detroit Wayne State University Press ISBN 0 8143 2957 8 Municipal Engineering Municipal Engineering A Monthly Magazine Devoted to the Improvement of Cities 20 Municipal Engineering Company 1901 ISSN 0097 4129 LCCN sn82003917 Nelson George 1939 Industrial architecture of Albert Kahn Inc Architectural Book Publishing Company LCCN 39005868 Truscon 1917 Hy Rib Handbook roofs floors walls sidings partitions ceilings furring silos tanks conduits concrete without forms Youngstown Ohio Trussed Concrete Steel Company OCLC 33111897 Baldwin Neil 2002 Henry Ford and the Jews The Mass Production of Hate Public Affairs ISBN 978 1 58648 163 6 permanent dead link Darley Gillian 2003 Factory Reaktion Books ISBN 978 1 86189 155 6 Olsen Byron 2002 The American Auto Factory MotorBooks International ISBN 978 0 7603 1059 5 Smith Terry 1994 Making the Modern Industry Art and Design in America University of Chicago Press ISBN 978 0 226 76347 7 External links editMichigan Historical Collections Bentley Historical Library University of Michigan Albert Kahn Papers 1896 2011 Video on Engineering Industrial Architecture Albert Kahn and the Trussed Concrete Steel Company nbsp Media related to Julius Kahn inventor at Wikimedia Commons Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Julius Kahn inventor amp oldid 1215905466, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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