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Preservation

 

Art Deco Preservation Awards

Submissions Due March 18!

The Preservation Committee will be meeting soon to review nominations for this year's Art Deco Preservation Awards. If you wish to nominate a building, individual or organization for exemplary Art Deco preservation, please submit your nomination now! See our Preservation pages, http://www.artdecosociety.org/preservation/awards.htm, for guidelines.

You may mail your nomination to the ADSC, 100 Bush St., San Francisco, CA 94104, before March 18, or email our Preservation Director, Lynn Harrison at harrisonarchitects@sbcglobal.net. Download the award form here.

The winners will be honored at the Art Deco Preservation Ball on May 8th. Buy your tickets now!

 

 

Mr. Rick's Martini New Year

Save Berkeley Iceland!

Berkeley Iceland is once again in need of our community. The Berkeley City Council is being forced by the current owners, East Bay Iceland (EBI), to review and possibly overturn the Berkeley Landmark designation made by the Landmark Preservation Commission in 2007. As settlement to a suit filed by EBI in October 2009, the Landmark designation will be on the agenda of the City Council meeting on 19 January 2010. Our community needs to make our voice heard in support of Berkeley Iceland.

http://www.saveberkeleyiceland.org

 

 

 

New England Telephone Headquarters

- PRESERVATION ALERT -

New England Telephone Headquarters
Boston Landmarks Commission Meeting
Tuesday, November 10 - 5:30pm

What:
The Boston Redevelopment Authority (BRA) is reviewing a proposal from the developer Commonwealth Ventures to make design modifications to the 1947 Art Deco skyscraper at 185 Franklin Street, originally he headquarters of the New England Telephone & Telegraph Company, and more recently owned by the Verizon Corporation.

If you have seen the news coverage in the Boston Globe and Boston Herald, you are aware that Verizon removed the historic, WPA-style mural "New England Telephone Men and Women at Work" from the lobby, and announced that it was considering donating the mural to a museum in Rhode Island.

The Art Deco Society of Boston launched a public awareness campaign to protest the mural's removal. Along with the Boston Preservation Alliance, ADSB is in discussion with the new owners of the building to restore the mural to the building.

While the developer has proposed some acceptable and interesting design changes in keeping with the original Art Deco building, the Boston Preservation Alliance with the support of ADSB has filed a petition with the Boston Landmarks Commission to protect this magnificent Art Deco skyscraper by giving it landmark status. Landmarking will not protect the mural or require the developer to reinstall the mural, but it will provide for a measure of protection for any alterations to the building's exteriors.

When - Where:
Boston Landmarks Commission Meeting
Tuesday, November 10 - 5:30pm
Boston City Hall, Room 900 (9th Floor)

Note: At this hour, the public must enter Boston City Hall from the rear entrance, across from the Faneuil Hall Marketplace.

How to help:
Attend the public meeting of the Boston Landmarks Commission and voice your comments about the significance of the building as well as the mural.

Please call Tony at 617-363-0405 if you can be there.

Information:
For more information, please contact the Art Deco Society of Boston at 617-363-0405 or email: artdecoboston@aol.com


 

Art Deco Society of Los Angeles reports: "The ordinance passed! Thank you to everyone who wrote letters and turned out to speak on behalf of preservation in Los Angeles."

September 10, 2009

Important Preservation News Concerning Landmark L.A. Buildings!

September 7, 2009

First, a Bit of Background

You might be surprised to learn that, contrary to popular belief, Los Angeles adopted a historic preservation ordinance in 1962. Not only was this earlier than most major cities in the U.S., it was also considerably more comprehensive than most large cities have even today.

Earlier this year, the Los Angeles Office of Historic Resources (OHR), housed within the Department of Planning, had set out create a more comprehensive ordinance that sought to further strengthen the 1962 ordinance as well as clarify ambiguous language within the document.

The Back-Door Deal

Two meetings were held for owners of HCM (Historic-Cultural Monuments): one for owners of commercial properties; the other for private property owners. At these meetings HCM owners aired many concerns. The OHR then revised the Draft Ordinance with input from a very select group. During this time the Central City Association (CCA), a group of commercial property owners with holdings in the downtown core, had struck a separate deal with the Los Angeles Conservancy (LAC) that was adopted into the Draft Ordinance. This ?agreement? literally traded the Denial of Demolition on any HCM for the stripping of any interior of /any/ building to be declared an HCM.

The implications of this deal are positively chilling for historic properties in Los Angeles. For example, under the language agreed upon by the CCA and the LAC, any historic theater, say the Hollywood Pantages, could have the entirety of its interior demolished, provided that the exterior remained intact. It doesn?t take much imagination to see how the ripples from this change can impact any of our city?s architectural gems?properties designed by Frank Lloyd Wright, Richard Neutra, or the John Lautner house; the Central Library, Bullocks Wilshire, the Bradbury Building, even City Hall itself. This particular deal would also have allowed demolitions of any HCM in the case of a stated financial hardship on the part of the owner. It is not hard to see where this would have lead especially in a major recession like the one we are currently experiencing.

Preservation Community Pulls No Punches at Commission Hearing

News of this new language in the Draft Ordinance reached other preservation groups on the afternoon of July 3rd of this year. Because of the three-day weekend, this meant that preservation advocates had only two business days to rally forces to refute the new language before the July 9th Planning Commission hearing. Dozens of preservationists came to speak to the Commission bolstered by hundreds of letters from others who could not attend.

Then something extraordinary happened. In order to take a vote on any planning issue a simple majority of the nine (9) commissioners must be present for the vote, there were only 5 in attendance. But in order for an ordinance to pass there must be five (5) votes. Four (4) of the commissioners were so moved by the passion and reasoning of the preservationists? arguments outlining the vital importance of preserving both interiors and exteriors of L.A.?s HCMs that they voted to not only uphold the Draft Ordinance language, but also to supersede the closed-door deal struck by the CCA and the LAC!

The fifth commissioner, however, could not be moved (indeed, in a particularly telling moment he asked, in all seriousness:Who is this Secretary of Interiors anyway? Hopefully he has since done his homework to know why all in attendance laughed at him). And the ordinance vote was postponed to the September 10th mtg.

Where We Are Now

The objectionable portions of the ordinance have since been reviewed by two separate groups: Preservation advocates, including The Art Deco Society of Los Angeles, West Adams Heritage Association, Highland Park Trust, Hollywood Heritage, the LAC and others; and business owners and their team of lawyers, notably the Los Angeles Athletic Club and the CCA. The biggest point of contention was the insistence by the business faction that ONLY single-family residences should have their interiors protected, a point unequivocally opposed by preservation groups, because, if enacted, would leave remove all protections of the interiors (including lobbies) of any multiple-family dwelling like the El Royal, or hotels like the Biltmore, or movie palaces like the Wiltern. Complicating matters still further, how would a property that has undergone changes between commercial and residential be handled? This would include large mansions that may now be used as churches, schools or offices, as well as any of a number of commercial and industrial buildings that have undergone the transformation to loft housing.

After exploring a wide array of potential solutions to interior designations, the group came to a broad consensus around a preferred approach: Review of interior work would not be subject to a Certificate of Appropriateness under the new ordinance. Instead, the review of interior work would remain under the control of the current Cultural Heritage Ordinance.

Permits for interior work would continue to be referred to the Cultural Heritage Commission (CHC) and the Office of Historic Resources for review. However, the CHC could not deny approval of interior work altogether; it could only object to the issuance of the permit for no more than 180 days, with a possible 180-day extension of the objection period upon approval of the City Council.

The ordinance would require a Certificate of Appropriateness only for exterior work, or for additions or new construction; a Certificate of Hardship would be required for approval of demolition of a Historic-Cultural Monument.

This new consensus brings us very close to what the 1962 ordinance had established which by in large worked for all parties for close to 50 years.

All interested parties will have the ability to have their voices heard once again at the next Planning Commission Hearing on September 10th.

We Need Your Help

Please try to show up at City Hall on September 10th (time yet to be determined) for the Los Angeles City Planning Commission hearing and voice your opinion. Remember, in a democracy every voice counts, but you must speak to be heard!

What Else You Can Do

Please write a letter stressing your support for the current (Aug 28th) Draft Preservation Ordinance.

Include your name, and any preservation organization with which you may be affiliated.

Important issues that you should stress in your letter include:

      • Interior spaces of all HCMs are intrinsically important to the
        history of the building/structure, commercial as well as residential.
      • The CCA and other Downtown interests are not representative of all
        of Los Angeles.
      • Saving Los Angeles?s built past for future generations to study
        and enjoy will ensure that those who made our city great will not
        be forgotten.
      • Feel free to include specific examples of historic interior spaces
        which would diminish Los Angeles should they be lost forever!

Address your letters to: William Rauschen, President of the Planning Commission and email your letters to the following:

cpc@lacity.org
ken.bernstein@lacity.org
news@westadamsheritage.org
artdecola@sbcglobal.net

Los Angeles Planning Commisssion

By writing a letter in support of historic preservation, you will show that the citizens of Southern California care about our history. Please pass this info on to others to help save our historic and cultural past for future generations.


 

Our Mission

The Art Deco Society of California endevours to educate and inform the public about the preservation of Art Deco structures in Northern California and around the world. We research and document buildings and artifacts worthy of preservation and provide advice and assistance to Art Deco conservation efforts statewide.

 

We keep the community informed of preservation issues through various media, lectures and programs.

 

On this page, our preservation home, we hope to bring you news and alerts relating to preservation issues.

 

Questions or Problems? Contact our webmaster.


Updated: 3/11/10

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