How do we preserve history?

Submitted by Kim Palmer  |  Last edited November 30, 2007 - 5:06pm
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1908 Rotunda building and Breuer TowerPreservationists argue that restoration is not only a means to protect and retain our culture but also the most sustainable option for redevelopment. However, if nothing is constant but change and if we are dedicated to a progressive economy, where does historical preservation fit in?

There are four approaches to preservation/restoration:

  • Preservation is the maintenance and retention of existing historic property as it has evolved over time;
  • Rehabilitation alters or adds to a historic property to meet continuing or changing uses;
  • Restoration changes property to emulate a particular period of time while removing evidence of other periods; and
  • Reconstruction re-creates changed portions of a property.

What tools do preservationists and concerned citizens have in their efforts to save threatened buildings or structures from the wrecking ball and set them on the path to adaptive reuse?

GCBL spoke to Cleveland Restoration Society staffer Sarah Beimers, who provided an overview of options for preservation of Northeast Ohio’s architectural and cultural treasures.

Section 106 reviews

When historic properties will be harmed by a federal agency, Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act offers a public review process that holds that agency responsible for gathering information on the properties, explores alternatives to harm, and reaches an agreement on measures to deal with any adverse effects.

If a project is on federal property or seeks federal funds, grants or loans–such as a transportation project–it must comply with federal policies such as the National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), which includes a Section 106 review. The following are some action steps you can take:

  • Review local newspaper for notices about projects being reviewed under federal statues, such as NEPA
  • Write the agency to request a project description and inquire about the status of project planning
  • Ask how the agency plans to comply with Section 106, and begin to voice your concerns
  • When the agency provides you with information, let the agency know if you disagree with its findings regarding what properties are eligible for the National Register of Historic Places or how the proposed project may affect them.
  • Tell the agency – in writing – about any important properties that you think have been overlooked or incorrectly evaluated. Be sure to provide documentation to support your views.

Resources:
Protecting Historic Properties: A Citizen’s Guide to Section 106 Review

Understanding preservation tools

Two of the most important legal protections for historic properties are local landmark designations and the National Register of Historic Places.

Local landmark designation offers local governments the most strength when it comes to protection, Beimers says, unless it’s a large federal project and then the National Register is more important.

Not all ordinances upholding local landmark designations are created equally. Cleveland’s ordinance was strengthened a few years ago. “The ordinance used to say if you had a landmark building that you wanted to demo, the (planning) commission could say, ‘you need more information. Come back in a six months.’ This is how the Humphrey Mansion was lost,” Beimers says.

Hulett Ore Unloaders on Cleveland's lakefront before being dismantledCleveland’s ordinance would still allow a Humphrey Mansion or a Hulett ore unloader to be dismantled. Other cities with historic properties are moving ahead with strengthening their ordinances. “In Shaker Heights, the ordinance allows for economic feasibility and rehabilitation studies when it comes to landmark buildings,” says Beimers, who is also a member of Shaker Heights Landmark Commission.

Some cities are leveraging their local ordinance by having them certified by the state and National Park Service, creating what is known as a Certified Local Government (CLG). As a CLG, cities can tap into funds from the State Historic Preservation Office for surveys to create local historic districts, for public education, or rewriting its landmarks ordinance. Currently, Cleveland, Shaker Heights and Parma are the only CLGs in Northeast Ohio. Parma used CLG funds in the process of adaptively reusing the Henninger House, Beimers says.

The process for getting a building listed on the National Register begins with the application from the National Park Service, which administers the register. The building needs to be more than fifty years old, otherwise, it needs be of “exceptional significance” to be listed.

The application has to follow the format established by the National Historic Register, which includes a physical description and its significance. Then, it's sent it to the State Historic Preservation Office for review before heading to the National Park Service for final review.

Making the case for the recent past

Significant architecture from the recent past is particularly vulnerable since it doesn't qualify for the National Register until it's fifty years old (unless a special exception is made). National groups like the Recent Past Preservation Network and the National Trust for Historic Preservation have suggested that local conservation districts might limit demolitions or drastic alterations. For example, a group of Cleveland architects, led by Ted Sande, began cataloguing downtown highrises in 2007 to consider a historic highrise district.

Some cities have established Modern Committees (or "ModComs") as part of their restoration society. ModComs can be volunteer-based but in cities like Dallas and Los Angeles, they have taken a leading role by hosting tours, workshops and educational series to explain the importance of often underappreciated but significant work from the Modern era. They see preserving significant buildings from the recent past as an effort toward establishing an appreciation for our contemporary buildings as they age. By 2030, half of the built environment in the U.S. will come after 2000, the Brookings Institution reports, making it imperative that we have an organized modern preservation network.

Preservation funds

Public and private grants and loans are readily available, however, most are earmarked for feasibility studies rather than capital improvements (i.e. hands-on restoration work).

The National Trust for Historic Preservation has smaller grants that can be used for stabilization of a building or to remove asbestos or to conduct adaptive reuse studies that include charettes and hiring historians.

Cuyahoga County’s Home Loan Program offers loans at 2.5% for historic preservation work on any house more than fifty years old. “It’s basically Key Banks’ Community Reinvestment Act money, available in Cleveland’s CDBG-eligible wards, if a ward buys into it,” says Beimers.

Restoration/preservation resources and links

Heritage Ohio's Downtown Assessment Resource Team (DART)
Preservation Ohio
Cleveland Restoration Society
Recent Past Preservation Network
DoCoMoMo U.S.
Ohio cemetery preservation society
Partners for Sacred Places
Scenic Ohio
Smart Growth


April 1, 2008 - 10:40am

CSU going down path of destruction

Marc Lefkowitz Says:

As CSU prepares to dismantle its campus (as reported in this week's Crain's), starting with the demolition of its 200,000 sq. ft. student union designed by Don Hisaka, a pioneer in modern architecture who once resided in Northeast Ohio, it raises the question: What is CSU teaching its students about sustainability by demolishing rather than reusing this building?

At the very least, the school needs a plan to reuse the materials and divert valuable concrete and steel from the landfill. As the age of climate change and scarce natural resources is upon us, we simply know too much to “throw away” another building, or do we?

Anthony Vidler, dean of the Cooper Union School of Architecture, captures it succinctly here:

What is needed is less a costing out of one obsolete structure against its apparently more efficient replacement; less the measuring of an old form against new demands; less even the fierce debates over the aesthetic worth of older buildings, than a creative assessment of a building's formal values and spatial qualities, in relation to a gamut of possible new uses, followed by a reshaping of these uses themselves. After all, even a new building like Frank Gehry's Guggenheim Museum in Bilbao, Spain, has demonstrated that buildings alone can provoke significant economic and cultural renewal. The concept of ''adaptive reuse'' might then be applied to function, not to form.

Plenty of interesting examples can be found where a “functionally obsolete” building like the CSU student center was given a second life. Do we really have no ideas left about how to reuse a glass and concrete box? Look at how many times an open floor plan building has been reused by filling it in with floors and making it into an office. For starters, check out this award-winning adaptive reuse of a medieval church in the Netherlands into a super cool bookstore using an open shelving system that climbs to the frescoed ceiling.

C’mon people, now, we have some creative folks here in Cleveland who can think up a way to reuse the student center—think about how much embodied energy will be wasted if we don't? If we really want it, it can be a lesson in environmental design—inspired perhaps by Modern architecture's tradition of innovation—that can inspire all of CSU’s impressionable minds.


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