Preservation Round-Up

Thoughts and updates from Utah Heritage Foundation
Tags >> rehabilitation
Dec 16
2011

Vacant school finds reuse

Posted by kirk in sustainability , school , Salt Lake County , Salt Lake City , rehabilitation , Recent Past , news , Modernism , education , adaptive use

Feb_1952_Vol_49_No._2Announced in the December 15th Sugar House Journal, the former Rosslyn Heights Elementary School is reopening as the Salt Lake School for the Performing Arts.  Located at 2291 South 2000 East in Salt Lake City, the 1950 school building was vacated about six years ago after consolidation.  Since that time, the school has remained vacant.

UHF toured the building with school district officials in 1999 after the $100 million+ bond was passed and the future of many older school buildings were immediately in doubt.  Our assessment at that time was that Rosslyn Heights was well-maintained and appropriate additions in c. 1955, c. 1980, and c. 1990 were all appropriately done and also in good condition.  At that time, the district had not made a commitment to replace the school building.

The SPA had formerly been housed at Highland High School.  Over the summer, Rosslyn Heights went through a renovation that created optimal space not only for high school students but also the SPA's requirements for dance floors, stages, and production and rehearsal space.  Interestingly, the school also contains a community vet clinic providing vaccinations and licensing at half the cost of a regular veterinarian.

Nov 07
2011

NPS provides great updates to preservation website

Posted by kirk in tax credits , sustainability , rehabilitation , preservation planning , guidelines , green preservation , documentation

fuller-paint_mainTechnical Preservation Services is pleased to announce the launch of our expanded and redesigned website at www.nps.gov/tps. In the new site, you will find the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards and Guidelines; information about the historic preservation tax incentives; all of our
publications, including the Preservation Briefs and Tech Notes; guidance on meeting the Standards in rehabilitation projects; information on the
Historic Surplus Property Program and the Historic Preservation Internship Training program; online training; and much more.  Big-D Construction's rehab of the Fuller Paint Warehouse is one of the featured sites that rotates on the home page.
The new site features expanded information on Sustainability and Historic Preservation, including the recently-published Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Rehabilitation & Illustrated Guidelines on Sustainability for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings. Also included are links to research and studies on energy efficiency and historic buildings and to sustainability resources for home owners, historic districts and communities and Federal agencies.
Case studies highlighting successful tax incentives projects and projects that combined historic rehabilitation and green building practices rotate
on the home page and in several sections of the site. A Site Map has been added, at www.nps.gov/about/site-map.htm, to help users navigate the site.
We will continue to add new information and features, particularly in the Sustainability section. We hope you will explore the new site and visit
often. 
In addition, the fillable PDF version of the Historic Preservation Certification Application, revised 2011, is now available.  Copies of the
forms are attached and are also available on our website at www.nps.gov/tps/tax-incentives/application.htm.  Please distribute them
widely to your tax program contacts.
Applicants will be able to type directly into the forms and save the information. Please note that the narrative boxes on the Part 1, Part 2,
and amendment forms are limited, not expandable. Applicants and consultants who have developed their own versions of the narrative pages beyond the cover sheets may continue to use their versions.

Oct 27
2011

Rockhill Cheese brings home national preservation award to Utah

Posted by kirk in sustainability , saved , rural preservation , Richmond , rehabilitation , news , National Trust , historic landscapes , heritage tourism , farms , events , cool stuff , Cache County , awards

UHF adds it’s congratulations to Rockhill Cheese for the National Honor Award they received from the National Trust for Historic Preservationlast Thursday, October 20, in Buffalo, New York.

UHF presented Rockhill Cheese with a Heritage Award in 2007 for the preservation of the original Burnham House and Farmstead (1895-1950).  Besides its primary function as a working artisan cheese farm, Rockhill has also become a community gathering place for local events and Saturday markets during the summer.  The Rockhill brand, which incorporates the historic granary in its logo, has become known for its quality cheeses throughout Utah and the region through their involvement in farmers’ markets and from sales in grocery and specialty stores.

As only the fourth National Honor Award for Utah in the last 20 years, this occasion is reason to celebrate why preservation works in Utah.  It’s all happened without millions of dollars, big government subsidies, or even expert craftsmen as the owners have done the vast majority of the work themselves to national preservation standards.  The other three National Honor Awards have been given to First Security Bank Building (Ken Garff Building) in 2004, Gastronomy, Inc. in 2001, and Cathedral of the Madeleine in 1996.

And it’s not just big news here in Utah.  The story was picked up by the Associated Press and run in media as far away as Clevelend, Ohio, Columbus, Indiana, and Washington, D.C.

Oct 17
2011

Five preservation stories you don't want to miss

Posted by kirk in Utah County , South Salt Lake , saved , Salt Lake County , Salt Lake City , rehabilitation , Recent Past , Provo , preservation planning , news , Modernism , issues , adaptive use

There's been lots of news in the world of Utah historic preservation lately, so I thought a summary would be in order.

Yes to Granite

On Monday, October 17, The Salt Lake Tribune endorsed the bond election in South Salt Lake to buy and rehabilitate Granite High School.  So has Utah Heritage Foundation.  The UHF Preservation Round-up blog talked about the benefits of this bond on three separate occasions (here and here and here).

Oct 17
2011

Former Douglas School achieves LEED Gold status

Posted by kirk in school , saved , Salt Lake County , Salt Lake City , rehabilitation , preservation planning , LEED , how to rehab , green preservation , education , adaptive use

Douglas_School_ext_after_rehab_01_09-22-03_KHSalt Lake City's McGillis School at 1300 East and 700 South is now a model for sustainable teaching.  As reported by The Salt Lake Tribune over the weekend. completion of the recent addition has resulted in certification for the building as LEED Gold, the first such certification for a school building in the state.  McGillis School was once Salt Lake City School District's Douglas School.  Built in 1915, the historic school was purchased by the McGillis School from the district in 2001 and subsequently renovated.  Utah Heritage Foundation advocated for sale of the building rather than demolition and sale as a vacant parcel of land.  It was the first time in decades that the district sold a building.  For their efforts to save and rehabilitate Douglas School, Utah Heritage Foundation awarded the McGillis School a Heritage Award in 2004.

The most recent addition of 57,000 square feet was completed this year in a style nearly matching the original understated Collegiate Gothic style of the original building.  LEED certification is a result of incorporating sustainable features into the site that reduce its carbon footprint including drought-tolerant landscaping, conservation of existing structures and fabric, incorporation of transportation options such as biking, walking, and mass transit, and recycling materials.

As quoted in the article, sixth grader Luke Chamberlain said that it's important to try to improve the world.  "If you don't repair the world then it will just be worse for the people who live after us, and it won't be a very fun place to live."  Fortunately, this exemplary line of thinking has been part of this project now for over ten years.  Chairman of the US Green Building Council's Utah Chapter, Dave Engel, added, "The daily choices we all make have a lasting impact on the environment as well as the community."

Oct 14
2011

Join in to support saving Granite High

Posted by kirk in take action , South Salt Lake , school , rehabilitation , preservation planning , issues , funding , events , advocacy alert , adaptive use

Granite_Rocks_logo

Utah Heritage Foundation has officially provided their support for the upcoming bond to save and rehabilitate Granite High School in South Salt Lake.  This would be a fabulous project that not only conserves an important historic structure, but could provide much needed flexible community space in the center of the valley.

Please join us to help inform voters in your neighborhood about the important Granite Bond election on November 8th. The City of South Salt Lake has proposed a $25 million bond to purchase former Granite High School and upgrade the campus into a community park, recreation center, arts center and public charter school. City residents are asked to vote to fund this project or not. This will be the only opportunity for the city to do so and the only way for your voice to be heard is to vote. We need your help informing voters!

Jul 26
2011

Former Trib Building could be housing

Posted by kirk in Salt Lake County , Salt Lake City , rehabilitation , Main Street , adaptive use

IMG_2435_resizedStudies have been underway for months to look at the possibility of rehabbing the former Salt Lake Tribune headquarters at 143 S. Main Street in downtown Salt Lake City for housing.  Owner Vasilios Priskos of Internet Properties has stated in meetings that there are positive signs that this new use could work.  Certainly, the idea of housing downtown, with proximity to the new Harmon's, City Creek Center, and TRAX transit out the front door help make the prospect of utilizing the historic building in the center of the proposed Cultural District more attractive.  And it would turn around one of the critical but vacant historic properties in downtown.

What do you think of putting housing into the Trib Building?

Jul 26
2011

Details for Main Street workshop in Panguitch

Posted by kirk in workshops , Wayne County , rehabilitation , preservation planning , Panguitch , Main Street , historic districts , events

PanguitchUtah Heritage Foundation, the City of Panguitch, and the Panguitch Main Street Committee invite you to get the inside scoop on how historic preservation can help you and your community reap the economic benefits of historic buildings and heritage resources. This workshop is open to anyone interested in historic preservation, but will be especially helpful for preservation commissioners, planning commissioners, mayors, planning and development staff, building inspectors, developers, and owners of historic properties. Whether you have – or wish you had – an effective historic preservation commission, this workshop's for you!

When?

August 23, 2011 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.
Panguitch City Hall
25 South 200 East
Panguitch, Utah

There is limited availability for this opportunity.  See how to register and more details here.




Jul 20
2011

Energy Efficient Schools and Much, Much More

Posted by susan in sustainability , St. George , school , rehabilitation , issues , green preservation , demolished , adaptive use

Utah Heritage Foundation commends The Spectrum for its editorial on July 18, 2011 urging that school buildings be more energy efficient.  But why stop there.  The National Trust for Historic Preservation has been pointing out for years that the greenest buildings are often those that are already built. 

In a planning meeting for the re-use of Denver’s Emerson School, consultant Jim Dinola, a principal with Green Building Services in Portland, Oregon noted that the energy efficiency of older schools can be improved by doing some of the simple things homeowners do to make old houses more efficient.  These include insulating the attic, tightening windows and doors to eliminate leaks, and making thermostats operable (so that rooms are not heated to 85 degrees while sitting empty overnight, for example). Other energy savings will require more substantial investment, such as the overhaul of the school’s heating and cooling systems.  These retrofits often compare favorably with the cost of new construction.

East Elementary School, St. George, UTOlder schools in established neighborhoods like East Elementary in St. George, Utah (photo courtesy Washington County Historical Society) can usually be reached safely by pedestrians, reducing traffic and pollution from vehicles.  A recent Preservation Nation blog gave a way to measure the walkability of schools and their neighborhoods using the Active School Neighborhood Checklist (ASNC).  The checklist was born out of the federal Safe Routes To School program. The goal of SRTS is to make it safer and easier for children to walk and bicycle to school. 

Jul 19
2011

Giving more money to The Leonardo

Posted by kirk in Salt Lake Modern , Salt Lake County , Salt Lake City , rehabilitation , Recent Past , position statements , how to rehab , adaptive use

07-18-2008_006This morning it was reported in the Salt Lake Tribune that The Leonardo will go before the City Council tonight with a request for a $600,000 loan to pay salaries.  Really?  They’ve spent all their finances on the capital project and now don’t have enough to keep their staff.  I’m not sure this bodes well for the future.

The preservation ethic that’s been established at The Leo also doesn’t bode well for the future.  The city received a grant from FEMA to do seismic stabilization to the former library building.  Under Section 106 of the National Historic Preservation Act, providing these federal funds required that impacts to the building from a new seismic system be reviewed by the Utah State Historic Preservation Office and interested consulting parties, of which Utah Heritage Foundation was one.  Utah Heritage Foundation helped make the case that the former Main Library is a significant structure that is eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places even though it had not reached the 50 year age mark.  We spent more than two years in intensive discussions with representatives of The Leonardo, FEMA, state emergency management, and Salt Lake City Public Services and Engineering.  On several walk-throughs of the building, we collectively identified the character defining features of the building to be preserved including the large plate glass windows, cast concrete panels, sculptural mural on the south side, leaflights, escalators, the auditorium, and several areas of extensive wood and marble paneling.

After many meetings, an agreement was reached about the best type of seismic system to be installed in this historic structure and how to lessen its impacts to the character defining features of the building.  These features were then protected during the renovation in order to satisfy the FEMA grant.  At the time of a walk through to see a “nearly completed” project (April 2011), we saw that all of the historic features were intact and in good condition.  The Leonardo indicated that they were within 1-2 months of opening and we walked away feeling good that the public would have a chance to experience the former library in a new way.  It’s exactly how the Section 106 process should work successfully.

Unfortunate

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