Inside Detroit’s Metropolitan Building And A Family Jewelry Legacy

April 12
14 mins

Episode Description

Week 15   2026-04-12 

Detroit can hit you two ways at once: as a big, loud city and as a deeply personal memory. I’m Doug Meadows from David Douglas Diamonds, and this week I’m recording from the Detroit Metropolitan Building, where my grandfather started our jewelry story back in 1926. I even booked the same room he worked from, then climbed up to the rooftop to talk about what it’s like to stand in the exact place your family’s legacy began. 

We get into the surprising craftsmanship behind the building itself, including how it was designed for jewelers with practical infrastructure like gas lines and compressed air, and how that purpose still shows up today in the restored hotel’s details. I also take you on a quick walk through the property, sharing the “what it was” vs “what it became” transformation that turned a near-loss into one of the coolest examples of Detroit building restoration and adaptive reuse. If you love Detroit history, architecture, or the behind-the-scenes realities of a luxury jewelry business, you’ll feel right at home here. 

Then the story opens up into my own downtown Detroit memories, from childhood glimpses of the Thanksgiving Day parade to a hard lesson learned on a late-night motorcycle ride that spiraled into a real chase down Jefferson Avenue. It’s honest, a little scary, and it ends where a lot of my Detroit stories do: Greektown. I talk about why the city’s ethnic neighborhoods matter, how festivals and food stitch communities together, and why a simple stop for a good gyro can feel like coming back to yourself. 

If this resonated, subscribe for more stories at the intersection of family business, diamonds, Detroit legacy, and the places that shape us. Share this with someone who loves Detroit, and leave a review telling me what location holds the strongest meaning in your life.

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