Showing posts with label Building Conservation Faculty. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Building Conservation Faculty. Show all posts

Tuesday, March 20, 2007

Historic Preservation Blog Watch

In the past couple of days, there have been some great posts on other historic preservation and history blogs:
  • The MyHomeTown Ohio blog, which I have mentioned several times, most recently posted a story about The Most Historic Small Town in Ohio. The post describes the efforts of ePodunk, a web site dedicated to the "power of place" in American communities, to identify the most historic small towns in the U.S. and establish a Historic Small Towns Index. EPodunk uses four criteria: the number of individual listings on the National Register of Historic Places, the size of any existing National Register Historic Districts, the average age of housing, and the use of the Federal Rehabilitation Tax Credit. Based on this criteria, ePodunk's Historic Small Towns Index identifies New York State's most historic small towns as Hudson (Columbia County), Essex (Essex County), and Cooperstown (Otsego County).
  • New York City's Historic Districts Council Newsstand provides a link to the Gotham Gazette's Reading NYC Book Club's transcript from a February 27, 2007 discussion of historic preservation with Kevin Walsh, author of the recently published book, Forgotten New York (based on a popular web site of the same name), and Roberta Brandes Gratz, former New York Post reporter, author of and The Living City and Cities Back from the Edge (with Building Conservation guest lecturer and Main Street revitalization expert Norman Mintz), and a Commissioner on New York City's Landmarks Preservation Commission.
  • The My Florida History blog, created and maintained by a historical research consultant in Tampa, Florida, recently wrote this post about numerous history-related blogs and has also added a blogroll feature with links to more history blogs (including, I am happy to say ours -- thanks!). Today's post talks about 300-400 brief radio program podcasts on the Florida Humanities Council's web site.
I will be adding more links to this blog's sidebar as time allows (scroll down to see them), so please be sure to check back -- and thanks for reading!

Tuesday, March 06, 2007

Wall Street Makes The National Register

From The New York Times, 03/06/07

The Wall Street Historic District, comprising part or all of 36 blocks in Lower Manhattan, has been added to the National Register of Historic Places, an honorary designation that makes property owners within the district eligible for certain federal tax benefits and historic preservation grants. Representatives Jerrold L. Nadler and Charles B. Rangel, Manhattan Democrats, announced the designation in a news conference yesterday at the Federal Hall National Memorial, along with [Building Conservation adjunct professor] Ruth L. Pierpont, director of the New York State Historic Preservation Office, and Steven McClain, president of the National Architectural Trust. The historic district is bounded by Liberty Street and Maiden Lane on the north, Bridge and South William Streets on the south, Greenwich Street on the west and Pearl Street on the east. It contains 65 historic buildings and sites, of which 21 had been previously listed individually on the national register and 29 had been designated landmarks by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission. Buildings that now fall under all three of those designations include the New York Stock Exchange, the American Bank Note Company Building, the Equitable Building, Trinity Church, Federal Hall and the United States Custom House facing Bowling Green. SEWELL CHAN

Monday, February 19, 2007

NEWS: John G. Waite Architects and the Baltimore Basilica Restoration

Architect John G. Waite was on the committee that researched and created our Building Conservation program back in the late 1990s; Doug Bucher and Steve Reilly teach Preservation Design Studio and Recording Historic Structures. The firm's offices have hosted numerous of our Friday Night field trips.

From Albany Times Union

02/18/07
Religious conversion: Albany firm at the helm of the heralded Baltimore Basilica restoration

By Paul Grondahl

America's first cathedral, the Baltimore Basilica, reopened in November for a 200th anniversary celebration following a two-year, $32 million restoration. Perhaps nobody was more elated than the staff at the Albany architectural firm of John G. Waite Associates.

The weeklong festivities heralding the neoclassical masterpiece capped by a Mass that drew more than 200 American Catholic bishops on Nov. 12, 2006 offered an exclamation point for Waite and his crew on a project that represented one of the most challenging and rewarding assignments of their careers.

"It's the most important Catholic building in America and one of the world-class buildings in this country," Waite said. "We're proud of our work and think it turned out very well."

Press coverage, peer architectural reviews and preservation awards have praised the restoration.

"Baltimore's Basilica reborn ... an illuminating makeover," read the cover story in Preservation, the magazine of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.

Newsweek called it "a sacred mission."

The basilica restoration backstory for the Albany group involved a grueling eight-year process, beginning with a 700-page historic structure report begun in 1998, and tapped the expertise of a dozen members of the Waite firm as well as dozens of subcontractors and a few hundred workers.

On any given day, as many as 125 architects, engineers, carpenters, roofers, wood carvers, masons, glaziers and various artisans toiled inside and outside the vast structure.

Back story: Formally known as the Basilica of the National Shrine of the Assumption of the Virgin Mary and begun in 1806, it was the first great metropolitan cathedral and first major religious building in America after the adoption of the Constitution.

It took 15 years of fits and starts and periodic droughts of cash to complete the cathedral. The construction paired two of the young republic's great visionaries: Benjamin Henry Latrobe, the nation's first professional architect, and Bishop John Carroll, the first Catholic bishop in America.

Latrobe, an Englishman who was not Catholic, worked on the U.S. Capitol in collaboration with Thomas Jefferson. Latrobe also was friendly with George Washington and Robert Fulton.

Carroll asked Latrobe to submit drawings for a design of a monumental building he wanted to stand as a stirring symbol of Catholicism in America.

Eight of Latrobe's conceptual drawings leaned heavily on the Gothic architecture favored in the great cathedrals of Europe. As an alternative, he offered a ninth drawing with a neoclassical design.

Carroll chose Latrobe's neoclassical concept, and that made all the difference.
Translating his vision into brick and mortar was a different matter for Latrobe. The architect had to ride herd on the workmen. Many were notorious as incompetent drunkards who tried to cut corners or misinterpreted blueprints until Latrobe caught the errors and redirected the crews.

He actually quit twice during the course of construction, but Carroll managed to coax the architect back on both occasions.

Into disrepair: The Baltimore basilica which features a striking columned entrance, vast dome with skylights and two towers topped with onion-shaped copper domes is a National Historic Landmark. It had fallen into disrepair in recent decades, but perhaps the most egregious affronts to Latrobe's timeless design were more than a dozen well-meaning attempts over different eras to add contemporary touches.

"Between the Civil War and the 1950s, there were more than a dozen remodelings, none of them successful," Waite said.

For the past eight years, hardly a month has gone by that Waite and Michael Curcio, who served as project manager, and Stephen Reilly, project architect, were not in Baltimore and immersed in the work.

Their overarching challenge was to restore the daylight that originally flooded the basilica. Douglas Bucher, interiors specialist, also spent untold days on the site.

For the past five decades, though, stained-glass windows replaced the original translucent glass, the dome's skylights were covered over and the walls were repainted many times in somber tones. The cumulative effect was a dark and dour interior that retained none of Latrobe's bright, shimmering airiness.

Bucher uncovered more than 20 layers of paint in some areas during his research, which included microscopic analysis of paint chips. He was able to make a precise match with Latrobe's original wall color, labeled "straw." It splashed the basilica's walls with a rich, buttery hue as natural light streamed through nine nave windows that flank the sanctuary after they were replaced with translucent glass.

Curcio's biggest challenge was creating a chapel and functional areas in the basement, known as an undercroft in ecclesiastical parlance. The basilica's basement is a series of vaulted brick spaces with tight headroom, which required a visitor to duck while walking through.

Curcio's solution? Lower the floor by as much as 18 inches. It sounded simple, but involved a complex manual excavation process, completed in small phases, so that the walls didn't collapse.

In the end, by lowering the floor, the basilica's basement now includes a 50-seat chapel, a fully restored crypt, bathrooms, gift shop and exhibit space. For the bulky heating and air-conditioning equipment, Waite's crew created an underground vault adjacent to the basilica.

Reilly's special assignment on the restoration was the 77-foot-wide central dome, which Latrobe designed using Jefferson's innovation from the Capitol a wooden cap with 24 skylights placed atop a thick masonry structural support.

"It was an ingenious construction method at a time when most of the country was just a few years beyond living in crude log cabins," said Waite, noting that Latrobe's skill in architecture was matched by a deep knowledge of engineering.

Paying the costs: The cost of the basilica restoration became a controversial topic in Baltimore, but naysayers were silenced by the deft shepherding of the project by the basilica's leader, Cardinal William Keeler. In the end, none of the $32 million came from public funds, but was raised from individual donations and private sources.

Keeler--whose family is related to the Keelers of Albany's former Keeler's Restaurant and Keeler Motor Car in Latham selected Waite's firm from 15 other architectural firms in Chicago, New York City, Washington and other big cities.

Waite's firm is nationally recognized as a leader in historic preservation, and its project list includes work on some of the country's most notable buildings: Mount Vernon, the Lincoln Memorial and Tweed Courthouse in New York City.

"The basilica project tops the list when it came to the number of diverse, substantial challenges we faced," Curcio said.

"This was the longest period of time I've worked on one project, and it was great to be able to see it through from start to finish," Reilly said.
Cardinal Keeler called the restoration "absolutely splendid, so bright and upbeat. It's even more more striking than I'd hoped for."

After 200 years of gradual decline and ill-conceived remodeling, Keeler said the basilica was finally "treated with the respect it deserved."

Paul Grondahl can be reached at 454-5623 or by e-mail at pgrondahl@timesunion.com.

Copyright, Times Union, 2007.