Cadillac House at Vanderbilt in Warren to Offer Bespoke CELESTIQ Client Experience

Cadillac, a division of General Motors Co. in Detroit, today announced the development of Cadillac House at Vanderbilt, a new, state-of-the-art facility dedicated to the individualized, bespoke client experience of the Cadillac CELESTIQ, an all-electric ultra-luxury sedan.
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The Cadillac House at Vanderbilt is dedicated to the new Celestiq EV sedan. // Photo courtesy of General Motors

Cadillac, a division of General Motors Co. in Detroit, today announced the development of Cadillac House at Vanderbilt, a new, state-of-the-art facility dedicated to the individualized, bespoke client experience of the Cadillac CELESTIQ, an all-electric ultra-luxury sedan.

Located at the General Motors Global Technical Center campus in Warren, Cadillac House at Vanderbilt will welcome clients to collaborate personally with CELESTIQ designers and a concierge for a custom commission experience.

Cadillac will start the process of selected client engagements in late spring, with the facility welcoming the first clients in late-summer 2023.

“Every CELESTIQ is personally commissioned, and working on-site with our Cadillac designers provides clients an elevated experience,” says Bryan Nesbitt, executive director of global Cadillac design. “It’s a unique opportunity to collaborate with our design team, enabling clients to directly translate their vision of their CELESTIQ into a one-of-one piece of moving sculpture.”

The new Cadillac House will be named after pioneering designer Suzanne Vanderbilt, who, in her day, was one of only a few women working in automotive design industry wide. She joined GM Design in 1955, shortly before the Global Technical Center was inaugurated, and worked in the Cadillac studio.

Her early work included the design of two unique vehicles: a 1958 Eldorado Seville Coupe called Baroness and the Cadillac Saxony convertible. She performed collaborative work with the Advanced Interior and Research Studios, designing safer vehicle interiors and securing two patents. Over the years, she provided essential mentorship to the next generation of women designers, before retiring in 1977.

The Global Technical Center, designated a National Historic Landmark in 2014, is an example of midcentury design and set the standard for the modern American corporate campus. It was the first major commission awarded to the celebrated modern architect Eero Saarinen, who worked out of a studio along W. Long Lake Road, west of Woodward Avenue in Bloomfield Hills (his Finnish American father, Eliel, was the chief architect for the Cranbrook Educational Community).

The building that Cadillac House at Vanderbilt inhabits — located directly across the lake from the main entrance of the GM Tech Center — originally served as Central Restaurant and was an open space, where creative and technical minds met to collaborate and design the future of transportation. In 1955, the design won an Honor Award from the American Institute of Architects.

Distinctive among the other buildings on the Global Technical Center campus, the elegant, single-story structure optimizes aesthetic views. For the redesign, a stepped-floor elevation and glass curtain wall offer a panoramic view of the campus, with its iconic dome, new GM Design building, lake, and the Alexander Calder-designed fountain.

Saarinen’s signature modernist style is expressed through carefully weighted proportions, elongated horizontal orientation, and purity of materials such as travertine and terrazzo slabs, wood panels, and stainless steel details.

The most noteworthy feature of Cadillac House at Vanderbilt is a large-scale, sculptural screen of glimmering gold designed by Harry Bertoia — one of only a few created by the Italian-born, Detroit-based artist and designer. Measuring 36 feet long and 10 feet tall, it is formed by individual plaques of enameled steel which Bertoia coated in molten metal for artistic effect.

The personalization experience at Cadillac House at Vanderbilt is open to CELESTIQ clients around the globe, but for those who participate virtually, their journey remains highly personalized — and it also begins at the Cadillac House. It includes a one-on-one concierge experience to guide clients through the personalization process, while also providing them access to a Cadillac designer and additional exclusive services.

“From start to finish, the process is meticulously curated,” says Melissa Grady Dias, global chief marketing officer at Cadillac. “And regardless of where clients choose to collaborate with the Cadillac team, we will offer an extraordinary variety of commission options, ensuring every desire for their vehicle can be fulfilled. Each CELESTIQ is tailored to reflect its owner’s tastes, which are conveyed directly to the design team.”

Selected clients will be led through a design consultation process by a concierge, in addition to their CELESTIQ Certified Dealer of choice, who is dedicated to guiding them through every aspect of the journey.

In addition to Cadillac House at Vanderbilt, every CELESTIQ will be constructed at the Artisan Center — another facility on GM’s 67-year-old, 710-acre campus that is globally recognized as an innovation center for automotive engineering, design, and advanced technology. The campus has been referred to as an Industrial Versailles.

Within the Artisan Center’s walls, a hand-selected team of artisan makers will hand-craft every client’s CELESTIQ from the ground up. It’s a return to the type of bespoke craftsmanship that was common for luxury car buyers more than a century ago.

CELESTIQ is expected to arrive to clients in late-spring 2024. Production will be limited and the vehicle is available through inquiry only.

Visit cadillac.com for more information.