From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic preservation
Historic preservation
Modernism was lending moral authority to destruction of the built heritage in the name of progress. The UK’s National Trust began with the preservation of historic houses and has steadily increased its scope. In the UK’s subsequent Town and Country Planning Act 1944, and the Town and Country Planning Act 1990, steps were taken toward historic preservation on an unprecedented scale. Concern about the demolition of historic buildings arose in institutions such as the pressure group The Society for the Preservation of Historic Buildings, which appealed against demolition and neglect on a case by case basis.[1]
Demolition of the former Penn Station concourse raised public awareness about preservation Historic preservation or heritage conservation is a professional endeavour that seeks to preserve, conserve and protect buildings, objects, landscapes or other artifacts of historic importance. Other names for the discipline include "urban conservation," "landscape preservation," "built environment conservation," "built heritage conservation," "object conservation," and "immovable object conservation." Mount Vernon plantation, near Alexandria, Virginia In The United States one of the first historic preservation efforts was the Washington’s Headquarters State Historic Site, in Newburgh, New York. It was the first-ever property designated as a historic site by a U.S. state. Another early Historic Preservation undertaking was that of George Washington’s Mount Vernon in 1858.[2] Founded in 1889, the Richmond, Virginia-based Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities was the United States’ first statewide historic preservation group.[3] The architectural firm of Simons & Lapham (Albert Simons and Samuel Lapham) was influential in creating the first historic presrvation ordinance in Charleston, South Carolina in 1930. The Vieux Carre (French Quarter in New Orleans was the second historic preservation ordinance.[4]
History
In England, Antiquarian interests were a familiar gentleman’s pursuit since the mid 17th century, developing in tandem with the rise in scientific curiosity. Fellows of the Royal Society were often also Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries. The UK’s Ancient Monuments Act of 1913 officially preserved certain decayed and obsolete structures of intrinsic historical and associative interest, just as
1
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The US National Trust for Historic Preservation, another privately funded non-profit organization, began in 1949 with a handful of privileged structures and has developed goals that provide "leadership, education, advocacy, and resources to save America’s diverse historic places and revitalize our communities" according to the Trust’s mission statement. In 1951 the Trust assumed responsibility for its first museum property, Woodlawn Plantation in northern Virginia. Twenty-eight sites in all have subsequently become part of the National Trust, representing the cultural diversity of American history. In New York City, the destruction of Pennsylvania Station in 1964 shocked many in that city into supporting preservation. On an international level, the New York-based World Monuments Fund was founded in 1965 to preserve historic sites all over the world. Under the direction of James Marston Fitch, the first advanced-degree historic preservation program began at Columbia University in 1964.[5] It became the model on which most other graduate historic preservation programs were created.[6] Many other programs were to follow before 1980: M.A. in Preservation Planning from Cornell (1975); M.S. in Historic Preservation from the University of Vermont (1975); M.S. in Historic Preservation Studies from Boston University (1976); M.S. in Historic Preservation from Eastern Michigan University (1979) and M.F.A. in Historic Preservation was one of the original programs at Savannah College of Art & Design[7]. The M.Sc. in Building Conservation degree program is offered by the School of Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. The first undergraduate programs (B.A.) appeared in 1977 from Goucher College and Roger Williams College, followed by Mary Washington College in 1979.[8]
Historic preservation
1848 Duncan House, Cooksville Historic District, Wisconsin The U.S. federal government designates historic districts through the U.S. Department of Interior, under the auspices of the National Park Service. Federally designated historic districts are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[9] Historic districts allows rural areas to preserve their characters through historic preservation programs. These include "Main Street" programs that can be used to redevelop rural downtowns. Using historic preservation programs as an economic development tool for local governments in rural areas has enabled some of those areas to take advantage of their history and develop a tourism market that in turn provides funds for maintaining an economic stability that these areas would not have seen otherwise.[10][11] A similar concept exists in the United Kingdom: a Conservation area is designated in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 in order to protect a zone in which there are buildings of architectural or cultural heritage interest.
Historic parks
The department of the interior designated several areas of Morristown, New Jersey as the first historic park in the United States national park system. It became designated as the Morristown National Historical Park. [1] The community had permanent settlements that date to 1715, is termed the military capital of the American Revolution, and contains many designations of sites and locations. The park includes three major sites in Morristown.
Historic districts
A historic district in the United States is a group of buildings, properties or sites that have been designated by one of several entities on different levels as historically or architecturally significant. Buildings, structures, objects and sites within a historic district are normally divided into two categories, contributing and non-contributing. Districts greatly vary in size, some having hundreds of structures while others have just a few.
2
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic preservation
handled by guidelines from the Federal Heritage Building Review Office. These guidelines are often ignored by other federal departments and has led to calls by groups such as the Heritage Canada Foundation for legislation to protect federal buildings. The only other direct protection provided to buildings by the federal government are that of "Heritage Railway Stations" (because railways are federally regulated).[13] and "Heritage Lighthouses", through the Act to Protect Heritage Lighthouses. passed in 2008.
Preserving historic landscapes
The United States led the world in the creation of National Parks, areas of unspoiled natural wilderness, where the intrusion of civilization are intentionally minimal. In addition to preserving the natural heritage, the U.S. Park Service also maintains the National Register of Historic Places to recognize significant buildings and places, including historic parks, battlefields, National Historic Landmarks, memorials and monuments. Landscapes and sites of outstanding universal value can be designated as World Heritage Sites. A requirement of such designation is that the designating nation has appropriate legislation in place to preserve them.
Provinces
Heritage conservation in Canada
In Canada, the phrase “heritage preservation” is sometimes seen as a specific approach to the treatment of historic places and sites, rather than a general concept of conservation. “Conservation” is taken as the more general term, referring to all actions or processes that are aimed at safeguarding the character-defining elements of a cultural resource so as to retain its heritage value and extend its physical life. Historic objects Canada may be granted special designation by any of the three levels of government: the federal government, the provincial governments, or a municipal government. The Heritage Canada Foundation acts as Canada’s lead advocacy organization for heritage buildings and landscapes.
This plaque indicates that the building is protected by the Government of Alberta. Each provincial government has distictive systems and approaches to heritage conservation. They may delegate the authority to preserve historic buildings to municipalities, and / or have a provincial heritage register. For example in the province of Alberta, only sites owned by the provincial government and run as a fuctioning historic site or museum are known as Provincial Historic Sites or Provincial Historic Areas. Buildings and sites owned by private citizens and companies or other levels or branches of government may gain one of two levels of historic designation, "Registered Historic Resource" or "Provincial Historic Resource".[14]. Historic designation in Alberta is governed by the Historic Resources Act.[15]. The province also lists buildings deemed historically significant by municipal governments on the Alberta Register of Historic Places, which is also part of the larger Canadian Register of Historic Places although this does not imply provincial or federal government status or protection.[16] To suppliment this system, the province also run the Alberta Main Street
Federal level
The most obviously way the federal government becomes involved with heritage conservation though the National Historic Sites of Canada. Plaques are erected by Parks Canada and the site is listed in the Directory of Designations of National Historic Significance of Canada. Only National Historic Sites commemorate buildings, there are also plaques for National Historic People and National Historic Events.[12] However National Historic Site designation provides no legal protection for the buildings on the site. Heritage management of federal buildings is
3
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Program which helps to preserve historic buildings in the downtowns of smaller communities.[17] The baisis for the preservation system in Alberta is the Heritage Survey Program, which is a survey of 80,000 historic buildings in Alberta which lack a protected status but are documented for possible future protection.[18] In Quebec, the Conseil du patrimoine religieux du Québec is a non-profit organization created in 1995 to promote the conservation of churches and other religious heritage buildings in the province.[19]
Historic preservation
regions of the country. In the document, conservation approaches are broken down into three categories: Preservation, Rehabilitation, and Restoration. As published in the Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada, these conservation approaches are defined as follows:[26] Preservation: the action or process of protecting, maintaining, and/or stabilizing the existing materials, form, and integrity of a historic place or of an individual component, while protecting its heritage value. Preservation can include both shortterm and interim measures to protect or stabilize the place, as well as long-term actions to retard deterioration or prevent damage so that the place can be kept serviceable through routine maintenance and minimal repair, rather than extensive replacement and new construction. Rehabilitation: the action or process of making possible a continuing or compatible contemporary use of a historic place or an individual component, through repair, alterations, and/ or additions, while protecting its heritage value. Restoration: the action or process of accurately revealing, recovering or representing the state of a historic place or of an individual component, as it appeared at a particular period in its history, while protecting its heritage value.
Municipalities
Cities, towns, counties and other local governments in Canada may use zoning and other bylaws to restrict the demolition of individual historic buildings or districts. They may maintain a municipal hertiage register, such as Edmonton’s "Register of Historic Resources in Edmonton".[20] The city of Vancouver uses a traditional heritage register [21] and a new system called a density bank, under which developers are rewarded for preserving and restoring heritage buildings by being awarded expections to restrictions (usually height restrictions) on other sites they own.[22] In Montreal, one of Canada’s oldest and most historically rich cities, the Le Conseil du patrimoine de Montréal advises the municipal government on matters related to heritage building preservation.[23] A pair of non-governmental groups have worked to preserve Montreal historic buildings since the 1970s: Save Montreal, co-founded by Michael Fish in 1974, and Heritage Montreal, founded by Phyllis Lambert two years later.[24][25]
Government approach to policy
Two of the primary conservation tools in Canada’s Historic Places Initiative are the Canadian Register of Historic Places and the Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada. This document was the result of a major collaborative effort among federal, provincial, territorial and municipal governments, heritage conservation professionals, heritage developers and many individual Canadians. A pan–Canadian collaboration, it is intended to reinforce the development of a culture of conservation in Canada, which will continue to find a unique expression in each of the jurisdictions and
Influential people
• Ann Pamela Cunningham: saved Mount Vernon (plantation) from demolition and created the Mount Vernon Ladies’ Association. • James Marston Fitch: educator, author, critic and design practitioner made a major contribution to the philosophical basis of the modern preservation movement and trained and inspired generations of preservationists. • William Morris: founded the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.
4
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
• W. Brown Morton: Author of "The Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation and Illustrated Guidelines for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings". • William J. Murtagh: first Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places in the United States and significant contributor to the literature of the discipline [2] • Lee H. Nelson: worked for Charles E. Peterson at the National Park Service’s Historic American Buildings Survey and helped to formulate national policies on historic preservation. • Charles E. Peterson: considered to be the "founding father" of historic preservation in the United States. • John Ruskin: established the basic theory of preservation (retention of status quo). • Eugène Viollet-le-Duc: well known French architect that restored Gothic buildings; believed that restoration could improve on the past--especially with the introduction of modern technology. • Walter Muir Whitehill: Chair of the Whitehill Report in the late 1960s which established the first guidelines for highered historic preservation programs.
Historic preservation
• Consultant for Section 106 reviews in accordance with the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 • Director or staff of a local, regional, statewide, or national preservation nonprofit such as the National Trust for Historic Preservation • Traditional trades practitioner.
See also
• Architectural conservation • Adaptive reuse • Category:Demolished buildings and structures • Category:Heritage organizations • List of historic houses • Mill conversion • National Register of Historic Places • National Trust, containing a listing of National Trusts worldwide • Pennsylvania Station, the New York landmark demolished in 1963 • Space archaeology • World Heritage Sites • World Monuments Fund
Careers
Although volunteers have traditionally engaged in historic preservation activities, since the 1960s, the field has seen an increased level of professionalization. Today, there are many career options in historic preservation. Institutes of secondary education (universities, colleges, etc.) in the United States offer both certificate and degree (A.A.S, B.A., B.F.A., B.S., M.A., M.F.A., M.S., and PhD) programs in historic preservation.[27] Some students—at schools with such programs available—choose to enroll in "joint degree" programs, earning a degree in historic preservation along with one in another, related subject, often an MArch, MUP or JD degree. Possible career fields include: • Architectural Conservator • Historic preservation planner (local/ county/state level) • State Historic Preservation Officer • Preservation Architect • Preservation Engineer • Resource interpreters • Public Historian • Historic site administrator
Notes
[1] Society for the Preservation of Historic Buildings [2] Lea, Diane. "America’s Preservation Ethos: A Tribute to Enduring Ideals." A Richer Heritage: Historic Preservation in the Twenty-First Century. ed. Robert Stipe. Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2003. p.2 [3] http://apva.org/aboutus/ (accessed 15 August 2008 ) [4] Blevins, Documentation of the Architecture of the Architecture of Samuel Lapham and the Firm of Simons & Lapham, Masters of Fine Arts in Historic Preservation Thesis, Savannah College of Art & Design, 2001 [5] Murtagh, William J. Keeping Time: The History and Theory of Preservation in America. New York: Sterling Publishing, Co., 1997. [6] Michael Tomlan. "Historic Preservation Education: Alongside Architecture in Academia." Journal of Architectural Education, Vol. 47, No. 4. (1994): 187-196. [7] www.scad.edu --~~~~ [8] Preservation News (Oct 1, 1979)
5
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Historic preservation
[9] Federal, State and Local Historic [25] "Phyllis Lambert". Canadian Urban Districts, TOOLBOX, FAQ, National Park Institute. http://e-city.ca/awards/ula/ Service. Retrieved 19 February 2007 leadershipawards2008.php. Retrieved on [10] Stenberg, Peter L. (October 1995). 2009-03-22. “Historic Preservation as Part of [26] Standards and Guidelines - Definitions of Downtown Redevelopment.” Rural Some Key Terms, Canada’s Historic Development Perspectives, Vol. 11, no.1, Places. Retrieved 30 March 2007. pp. 16-21. Washington, DC : Economic [27] National Council for Preservation Research Service. Retrieved December Education - Academic Programs in 30, 2008. Historic Preservation [11] John, Patricia LaCaille (July 2008). “Historic Preservation Resources.” Rural Information Center Publication Series • Fitch, James Marston. Historic no. 62. National Agricultural Library. Preservation: Curatorial Management of Rural Information Center. Retrieved the Built World. Charlottesville, VA: December 30, 2008. University Press of Virginia, 1990. [12] Parks Canada - National Historic Sites • Jokilehto, Jukka. A History of Architectural [13] Historic Sites and Monuments Board of Conservation. Oxford, UK: Butterwort/ Canada - Heritage Railway Stations - List Heinemann, 1999. of designated stations in Alberta • Munoz Vinas, Salvador. Contemporary [14] Alberta Culture and Community Spirit Theory of Conservation. Amsterdam: Historic Resources Management Elsevier/Butterworth Heinemann, 2005. Historic Places Stewardship Section • Page, Max & Randall Mason (eds.). Giving Alberta’s Historic Places Designation Preservation a History. New York: Program Routledge, 2004. [15] Alberta Queen’s Printer • Price, Nicholas Stanley et al. (eds.). [16] Alberta Culture and Community Spirit Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Historic Resources Management Conservation of Cultural Heritage. Los Historic Places Stewardship Section Angeles: The Getty Conservation Institute, Alberta’s Historic Places Designation 1996. Program - Municipal Historic Resource • Ruskin, John. The Seven Lamps of Designation Architecture. New York: Dover [17] The Alberta Main Street Program Publications, 1989. Originally published, [18] Alberta Culture and Community Spirit 1880. Important for preservation theory Historic Resources Management introduced in the section, "The Lamp of Historic Places Stewardship Section Memory." Heritage Survey Program • Stipe, Robert E. (ed.). A Richer Heritage: [19] "Conseil du patrimoine religieux du Historic Preservation in the Twenty-First Québec" (in English). Century. Chapel Hill, NC: The University http://www.patrimoine-religieux.qc.ca/ of North Carolina Press, 2003. en/organisme/mission.php. Retrieved on • Tyler, Norman. Historic Preservation: An 2009-03-27. Introduction to its History, Principles, and [20] City of Edmonton Practice. New York: W.W. Norton & [21] http://vancouver.ca/commsvcs/planning/ Company, 2000. heritage/Fact8.htm • Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène Emmanuel. The [22] http://vancouver.ca/commsvcs/planning/ Foundations of Architecture; Selections heritage/02-12-09table.pdf from the Dictionnaire Raisonné. New [23] "Le Conseil du patrimoine de Montréal" York: George Braziller, 1990. Originally (in English). City of Montreal. published, 1854. Important for its http://ville.montreal.qc.ca/portal/ introduction of restoration theory. page?_pageid=2981,3122714&_dad=portal&_schema=PORTAL. Retrieved on 2009-03-22. [24] Gravenor, Kristian (October 23, 2003). "The museum that is Montreal", • Historic Preservation Resources Montreal Mirror 19 (19). Retrieved on 2009-02-11.
Bibliography
External links
6
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
• The Annapolis Collection Story from Baltimore Sun • National Trust for Historic Preservation • National Trust for Historic Preservation Speech by 2007 Vincent Scully Prize winner Richard Moe about historic preservation with regards to "green" buildings • National Center for Preservation Technology and Training: A National Park Service research center that provides progressive technology-based research and training. • Advisory Council on Historic Preservation • Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada • PreserveNet: A Cornell-affiliated web page designed to provide preservationists with a comprehensive database of regularly updated internet resources and current professional opportunities. • PreservationDirectory.com: A resource for historic preservation, building restoration and cultural resource management in the US and Canada • The Association for Preservation Technology International (APT): is a crossdisciplinary, membership organization dedicated to promoting the best technology for conserving historic structures and their settings.
Historic preservation
• Preservation Trades Network (PTN): membership community organization focused on traditional trades practitioners and allied professionals in the international preservation industry • Preservation News Vol. 1 (1961) - Vol. 35 no. 1 (Feb/March 1995). Monthly publication of the Preservation Press of the National Trust for Historic Preservation of the United States. • National Council for Preservation Education: (NCPE) Guide to over fifty academic programs in historic preservation and allied fields in the United States and other information • WWW-VL US Historic Preservation Virtual Library of resources for preservation, including green LEED examples • Guide to the National Historic Preservation Program Oral Histories, 1986-1987 • Vieux Carré Property Owners, Residents, and Associates and VCPORA.org - Vieux Carre Property Owners, Residents and Associates • World Monuments Fund • Financing-Historic Tax Credits • US/ICOMOS, an overview of preservation in the United States. • Preservation of Historic Properties’ Environs: American and French Approaches
Retrieved from "http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Historic_preservation" Categories: Historic preservation, Architectural history, Cultural heritage, Museology This page was last modified on 3 May 2009, at 04:33 (UTC). All text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details.) Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc., a U.S. registered 501(c)(3) taxdeductible nonprofit charity. Privacy policy About Wikipedia Disclaimers
7