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COLORADO PRESERVATION, INC.’S SAVING PLACES ® CONFERENCE FE B 4 - 7 , 2 0 1 9 | D E N V E R , C O
SAVING PLACES 2019 Welcome to the 2019 Saving Places Conference! We are excited to host this annual gathering of preservation advocates, supporters, and professionals. Many of us were stunned when Larimer Square was listed on the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s 11 Most Endangered Places of 2018. Colorado’s shining example of how historic preservation can recreate a neighborhood is currently in danger of losing its historic character. In 1971, it served as a pivotal example of how preservation could transform a city when it became Denver’s first historic district. Today, 48 years later, it is sending a very different message -- a reminder that preservation in perpetuity is not a guarantee. Larimer Square is proof that we, as preservationists, must always be on guard and that preservation is a verb, not a noun. This conversation shaped our 2019 Saving Places Conference. The conference theme, “The Next Generation of Preservation: A Call to Action,” was chosen because our mission is in peril. If you are also concerned, our 2019 lineup of speakers and sessions is for you. Our plenary speaker, Bryan C. Lee, was named one of the National Trust’s “40 under 40,” a program recognizing movers and shakers expanding our view of preservation. Lee will challenge us to think outside the box when engaging diverse communities with architecture and preservation. Our Endangered Places Luncheon speaker, Mike Buhler is President and CEO of San Francisco Heritage, an organization leading the charge on civic discussion about the compatibility of rapid change and protecting the past – a very timely topic for Coloradoans! And because we at CPI recognize that ‘tried and true’ strategies may need some updates, we’re trying something new this year. CPI is working with the National Trust to bring you “TrustLive.” Danielle Del Sol, Executive Director of the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans, will present a keynote highlighting forward looking techniques for preserving heritage. A discussion featuring several preservationists – including Historic Denver’s Annie Levinsky! – will follow Del Sol’s address. All of us at CPI are very excited about the 2019 conference. Our work is not done, and complacency is not our friend. Coming together as preservationists offers our best path toward assuring that historic preservation plays a part in Colorado’s vibrant future.
Julie Johnson Conference Committee Chair
Jennifer Orrigo Charles CPI Executive Director
A special thank you to our Conference Committee, Board and Volunteers who helped make the annual Saving Places Conference possible! CPI Staff Jennifer Orrigo Charles - Executive Director Amanda Barker - Events and Development Director Jane Daniels - Preservation Services Program Director Kim Grant - Endangered Places Program Director
Rachel Carnahan - Saving Places Intern Hannah Clark - Endangered Places Intern Molly Casey - Endangered Places Intern
CPI Board Members Simone Belz (Frisco) Ashley Bushey (Denver) Andy Duckett-Emke (Golden) Peter Grosshuesch (Breckenridge) James Hewat (Boulder)
Graham Johnson (Denver) *Kim Kintz (Grand Junction) *Jim Kroll (Denver) *Alan Matlosz (Denver) *Blair Miller (Lakewood), Chair
Bill Nelson (Denver) *Drew Notestine (Greeley) Ariel Steele (Loveland) *Robin Theobald (Breckenridge) Jane Watkins (Englewood) *Executive Committee
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A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WE ARE COLORADO PRESERVATION, INC. Since 1984, Colorado Preservation, Inc. (CPI) has demonstrated the importance of Saving Places and the critical connection
between people and place. Historic Preservation is so much more than keeping “old” buildings standing; preservation is about creating a sense of place, enhancing communities, and revitalizing economies. CPI is your local statewide nonprofit partner, promoting historic preservation by advocating for preservation issues, providing technical assistance statewide and through our signature programs such as Colorado’s Most Endangered Places and the Saving Places Conference. CPI works to ensure historic places across Colorado are protected and will be preserved for future generations. The Saving Places Conference is one of the many ways CPI advances historic preservation, by bringing together individuals, organizations, communities, and projects from across the nation to discuss the latest in preservation, looking at common concerns and challenges while celebrating our collective accomplishments. For over 20 years, CPI has provided essential training and networking opportunities to individuals like YOU who are working to protect our state’s heritage. Thank you to the many people, organizations, and supporters who have helped (and continue to help) make the conference what it is today! CPI is particularly grateful to History Colorado - State Historical Fund for their generous support, which has made this conference possible. Thank you for joining us and please stop by our CPI table to introduce yourself to our Executive Director, Jennifer Orrigo Charles, CPI Board and Staff.
Our Mission in Action Colorado’s history is important to us, as we know it is to you. Each year conference attendees share ideas, make new connections, and learn new tools to advance the work of preservation in Colorado. Thank you for being a part of the preservation movement by attending this year! Thank you for your commitment to our shared history and places that collectively represent where we came from and shape the future. CPI works statewide with sites, community leaders, residents and organizations to ensure we build a future with Colorado’s historic resources. Through our signature initiatives like Colorado’s Most Endangered Places and our Preservation Services Program, we work with the public to identify and protect some of the state’s most important, yet threatened, sites. An important part of saving places is identifying what funding resources are available and how these programs can be used to the benefit of projects in the State. We are pleased to announce that with HB 1190, Colorado successfully reauthorized its Historic Preservation Tax Credit, which provide critical funds to projects statewide. CPI and our coalition partners advocated for its reauthorization, which were approved for an additional ten years with extra incentives introduced for communities in defined rural areas. Make sure to attend some of our in-depth sessions on state and federal tax credits that explain how they can become another tool for your project and/or community. If you have a property that could qualify for the credits and you would like to learn more, visit CPI’s information table in the lobby at the conference for more information.
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THANK YOU TO OUR 2019 SPONSORS!
Established in 1879, History Colorado—formerly the Colorado Historical Society—preserves Colorado’s rich heritage through the State Historical Fund, the Office of Archaeology and Historic Preservation, collections stewardship, statewide museums, and special programs for students, educators, and visitors of all ages. The State Historical Fund, a program of History Colorado, awards grants to public and non-profit organizations to preserve Colorado’s architectural and archaeological treasures for public benefit. This project is paid for in part by a History Colorado State Historical Fund grant.
This project has also been funded in part by a grant from the Gossard Fund for Colorado of the National Trust for Historic Preservation.
presenting Sponsor
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Silver Sponsors
A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
Copper Sponsors
Robert E. Musgraves and Joan Prusse
Granite Sponsors ClearOvations
Spectrum General Contracting
Colorado Scenic & Historic Byways - CDOT
Thomas & Tyler, LLC
Goucher College, MA in Historic Preservation
Town of Breckenridge
Martin/Martin Consulting Engineers
Wattle & Daub Contractors
Marvin Windows & Doors
Marble Sponsors ADA Compliance by Whiteley Consulting
GreenSky.Systems
Adrian Kinney
PROSOCO, INC.
Colorado Division Of Reclamation, Mining And Safety
Tax Credit Connection
Custom Plaster
Social Strategy Associates LLC
Denver Art Glass
Watkins Stained Glass
Fairmount Heritage Foundation
Vortic Watch Co
Thank you to our Program Partners and Supporters
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SAVING PLACES FEATURED SPEAKERS Colorado Preservation, Inc. is proud to bring preservation experts, community leaders, and property owners from across the nation to present important information to attendees of our Saving Places Conference. This year you can expect to hear from over 150 speakers and over 80 engaging sessions, workshops, and tours that will provide you with new ways to advance historic preservation in your community! CPI is honored to welcome our 2019 keynote speakers and special guests who will explore the changes, threats, challenges, and successes of the preservation movement. We strongly encourage you to attend these special presentations and we ensure you that you will leave inspired with new ideas for how to advance preservation in your community.
PLENARY PRESENTATION
Tuesday, February 5, 8:30am • Plaza Ballroom ABC Bryan C Lee, Jr. Director of Design, Colloqate CPI is pleased to host Bryan C. Lee, Jr., recently recognized by the National Trust as one of “40 Individuals Under 40 Making a Community Difference.” Mr. Lee is a Designer and Design Justice Advocate and Director of Design at Colloqate. Colloqate is a multidisciplinary Nonprofit Design Justice practice focused on expanding community access to, and building power through the design of social, civic, and cultural spaces. He is the founding organizer of the Design Justice Platform and organized the Design as Protest National Day of Action. Bryan has led two award-winning architecture and design programs for high school students through the Arts Council of New Orleans and the National Organization of Minority Architects. Among many achievements, he was selected for the 2018 Fast Company Most Creative People in Business.
TRUSTLIVE: RESAVING SAVED PLACES
Tuesday, February, 5 10:00am • Plaza Ballroom ABC CPI is pleased to announce a partnership presentation between CPI and the National Trust, which brings a TRUSTLIVE event to the Saving Places Conference. This dynamic event will be broadcasted live across the country and will address the question, is a place ever truly saved? Fifty years after the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act and decades since preservationists secured the future of places like Larimer Square and the Ashley River Road National Scenic Byway route near Charleston, South Carolina, we find ourselves revisiting familiar places confronting new threats. Resaving Saved Places will feature a keynote by Danielle Del Sol, the new Executive Director of the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. New Orleans, like Denver and Charleston, exemplify some of the best and most forward-looking techniques for preserving heritage. Danielle will be joined by Anne Nelson, associate general counsel at the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Annie Levinsky, Executive Director for Historic Denver for a facilitated conversation moderated by Susan West Montgomery, Vice-President for Preservation Resources at the National Trust.
ENDANGERED PLACES LUNCHEON
Tuesday, February 5, 12:00pm – 1:30pm • Plaza Ballroom ABC MIKE BUHLER, President & CEO, San Francisco Heritage Since 2010, Mike Buhler has served as executive director for San Francisco Heritage (SFH), a nonprofit committed to preserving and enhancing San Francisco’s architectural and cultural identity. In 2013, SFH initiated a program to celebrate and recognize the city’s iconic and longstanding legacy businesses; many of which were facing the threat of eviction and closure due to increased rents. What began as a registry of legacy bars and restaurants has since developed into a Legacy Business Historic Preservation Fund, which provides grants to both legacy business owners and property owners who agree to lease extensions with Legacy Business tenants. Mr. Buhler will share San Francisco’s story of saving its “intangible heritage” to inspire Colorado cities to advocate for their own legacy and heritage businesses.
WESTERN HERITAGE LUNCHEON
(a ticketed event)
Monday, February 4, 12:00pm – 1:30pm • Plaza Ballroom ABC DR. JARED ORSI, Professor, Department of History at Colorado State University and Director of the Public Lands History Center This lunch will provide a deep dive into the state of preservation in Colorado with Dr. Jared Orsi, Director of CSU’s Public Lands History Center and on Colorado’s State Historians Council. Dr. Orsi will use case studies from his research on the environmental history of the American West to imagine next-gen possibilities for bridging social divides through place-based preservation and interpretation on public lands. Dr. Jared Orsi is professor of history at Colorado State University, specializing in environmental and borderlands history. He is the author of the prize-winning Hazardous Metropolis: Flooding and Urban Ecology in Los Angeles (University of California Press, 2004) and Citizen Explorer: The Life of Zebulon Pike (Oxford University Press, 2014), as well as numerous articles, book chapters, and public history reports. He serves as director of CSU’s Public Lands History Center, for which he co-edited “National Parks beyond the Nation: Global Perspectives on America’s Best Idea” (University of Oklahoma Press, 2016). His favorite class to teach is a summer field trip course that follows Zebulon Pike’s 1806-1807 route across Colorado. Longtime Colorado preservationist Ann Pritzlaff will then conclude the luncheon with the presentation of the Ann Alexander Pritzlaff Leadership Award to Dana Crawford, esteemed member of our community.
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A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
BEYOND THE SESSIONS NETWORK, SHOP, & LEARN BETWEEN SESSIONS! Tattered Cover – This year the Tattered Cover will be selling books related to preservation, history, and specific to the speakers and sessions at the conference! Make sure to visit their booth in the Exhibitor Space on Monday and Tuesday of the Conference. Sponsor Bingo – How does winning a free conference registration for the 2020 Saving Places Conference sound!? This year, attending the Preservation Marketplace could win you a free registration. Complete the bingo card on the back of this program by visiting all of the exhibitors at the Preservation Marketplace and be entered to win a complimentary conference registration!
Plein Air Artists Colorado
– For the third year, CPI is pleased to partner with local artists who are bringing over 50 pieces of art from artists who have painted historic locations throughout the state. Through this partnership, CPI hopes to inspire the public to see historic places in a new light. A portion of the proceeds benefit our Endangered Places Program. Paintings can be purchased for the Buy it Now price immediately or throughout the conference through silent auction bids.
EXTRACURRICULARS
MONDAY:
Stephen H. Hart Awards (5:30pm – History Colorado) – History Colorado invites Saving Places attendees to join them for the annual Stephen H. Hart Awards, honoring some of the best preservation and archaeological projects in Colorado.
TUESDAY:
Preservation Marketplace and Endangered Places Silent Auction (4:30pm – Plaza Exhibit) – Enjoy live music, drinks and appetizers while you visit with our exhibitors and shop the Endangered Places Silent Auction! Always a popular event, this is the perfect opportunity to introduce yourself to someone new and make contacts sure to help you in your preservation work. Young Preservationists Gathering (7:00pm – Yard House) – Keep the party going and join this gathering for young preservationists, and the young at heart! Discuss your career and preservation in your community with passionate professionals just like you. This gathering is sponsored by Goucher College, which offers an M.A. in Historic Preservation.
WEDNESDAY:
Day at the Capitol (8:00am - 3:00pm - 1525 Sherman St. 6th Floor, Rm. 603) – Learn how to speak to local leaders, hone your legislative knowledge, and foster your relationship with local legislators directly in the field, under Colorado’s Capitol dome! *Must pre-register for this opportunity. Workshop: CAMP Training (9:00am - 5:00pm - History Colorado Center, MDC Room, 4th Floor) - Commission Assistance and Mentoring Program (CAMP) for Certified Local Government attendees for continuing education to local preservation commissions, planning staff, elected officials and partner organizations. *Must pre-register for this opportunity.
THURSDAY:
NEW! Workshop: Preservation Leadership Training (9:00am - 3:00pm - Tower Court D) - This year the National Trust for Historic Preservation is bringing to the Savings Places Conference an opportunity for attendees to learn ways they can build capacity for local non-profit historic preservation advocacy and ‘friends’ groups. *Must pre-register for this opportunity.
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BE A PART OF SOMETHING BIGGER! HELP SECURE A FUTURE WITH HISTORIC PLACES
crossan’s market before
crossan’s market saved!
Yampa, Colorado Crossan’s Market, officially listed in 2012 as one of Colorado’s Most Endangered Places, is a perfect example of a project that demonstrations the importance of Saving Places! Thanks to community collaboration with CPI, this building is once again the centerpiece of its community.
McElmo Flume before
McElmo flume SAVED!
Cortez, Colorado CPI began working with the McElmo Flume in 2011 when it was listed as one of Colorado’s Most Endangered Places. Now a “save” in 2019, it stands as a critical example demonstrating the impact of private and public partnerships in Saving Places.
Colorado Preservation, Inc. started small, but its founding members had a grand vision for a statewide organization that would work tirelessly to advocate for and preserve Colorado’s historic resources. That spirit continues to this day, and inspires the current staff, board, and volunteers to strive for the next level of success as the organization continues to evolve and find new ways to further the mission that was laid out over 25 years ago. Colorado Preservation, Inc. needs your support to continue to protect Colorado’s historic resources for residents, visitors, and for the generations to come. Join us today by becoming an individual or organization member. When you become a member of Colorado Preservation, Inc. you are helping us Build a Future with Historic Places!
coloradopreservation.org/get-involved/become-a-member/
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A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
Pushing the Boundaries It’s not your typical PastForward as we head out to the great wide open of the American West. In 2019 we’ll embrace the innovative, inspiring, and dynamic culture of Denver—exploring the role of new design in saving old places, learning to leverage planning and preservation to enhance communities, and discovering how our buildings and neighborhoods impact our health. PastForward 2019 will feature engaging programming, tours of this unique American city, and plenty of fun. Join us!
Saving Places Conference attendees receive a 25% discount on registration. Use coupon code CPI2019 before July 31, 2019. Registration opens July 1.
PastForwardConference.org | #PastForward19 Visit the Preservation Leadership Forum table near registration to learn more about PastForward 2019.
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MONDAY MONDAY TOURS
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE (Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House)
10:30am-1:00pm
TRANSFORMATION UNDERWAY AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN CENTER
1:30pm-4:00pm
FIVE POINTS: A TRANSFORMING NEIGHBORHOOD
1:30pm-4:00pm
DENVER HISTORY THROUGH BEER
APA
MONDAY MORNING WORKSHOP 9:00am-11:45am
Plaza Ballroom F
PRESERVATION 101
MONDAY MORNING | BLOCK A 9:00am-10:15am
DOWNTOWN UNDERGROUND: UNCOVERING COLORADO’S HIDDEN HISTORY AND POTENTIAL
Plaza Ballroom E
9:00am-10:15am
USING THE AMERICORPS VISTA PROGRAM TO SUPPORT HISTORIC PRESERVATION IN RURAL COMMUNITIES
Directors Row I
9:00am-10:15am
CAPITAL CAMPAIGNS FOR CAPITAL REPAIRS
Directors Row H
9:00am-10:15am
CHIMNEY ROCK: ANCIENT HERITAGE, LIVING CONNECTIONS
Plaza Ballroom D
9:00am-10:15am
MODERN COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS OF OLD LITTLETON 1950-1980
Governors Square 11
9:00am-9:30am
HOT TOPIC: LINSEED OIL PAINT: OLD WOOD’S NEW BEST FRIEND
Governors Square 10
9:45am-10:15am
HOT TOPIC: HIDDEN TOOLS FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION
Governors Square 10
APA
Plaza Ballroom D
AIA
AIA
APA
MONDAY MORNING | BLOCK B 10:30am-11:45am
LIGHTNING TALK: BUILDING REHABILITATION CHALLENGES AND TRIUMPHS
10:30am-11:45am
THE THREE PS: PUBLIC SCHOOL, POLITICS, AND PRESERVATION
Directors Row I
10:30am-11:45am
BUILDING A CASE FOR COUNTYWIDE PRESERVATION: LAUNCHING HISTORIC LARIMER COUNTY
Directors Row H
10:30am-11:45am
RURAL DEVELOPMENT PRESSURES AND SOLUTIONS
Governors Square 11
10:30am-11:45am
THE ENDANGERED PLACES PROGRAM – WORKING TO SAVE
Governors Square 10
10:30am-11:00am
HOT TOPIC: MID-CENTURY MODERN STAINED GLASS, ARCHITECTURE, AND DESIGN
Plaza Ballroom E
AIA HSW
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: BORDERLANDS OF SOUTHERN COLORADO: PLACE-BASED EDUCATION IN THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST
Plaza Ballroom E
APA
MONDAY AFTERNOON
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12:00pm-1:30pm
WESTERN HERITAGE LUNCHEON
Plaza Ballroom ABC
1:30pm-2:00pm
NETWORKING, EXHIBITS, & EXPLORE THE SILENT AUCTION
Plaza Exhibit
A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
MONDAY
MONDAY AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS 2:15pm-5:00pm
STATE HISTORICAL FUND GRANT WORKSHOP – BEGINNERS
Plaza Ballroom F
2:15pm-5:00pm
STATE HISTORICAL FUND GRANT WORKSHOP – ADVANCED
Plaza Ballroom D
MONDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK C 2:15pm-3:30pm
JUNIOR CITIZENS: CREATIVELY CONNECTING CHILDREN TO COMMUNITY
Directors Row H
AIA
2:15pm-3:30pm
CAN I REMOVE THIS WALL?
Governors Square 10
APA & AIA
2:15pm-3:30pm
COLORADO’S COMMERCIAL PRESERVATION TAX CREDIT – A NEW GENERATION OF PRESERVATION IN COLORADO
Directors Row I
APA
2:15pm-3:30pm
WALKING IN THEIR FOOTSTEPS: BRINGING HISTORIC PRESERVATION TO LIFE AT THE HUTCHINSON HOMESTEAD & LEARNING CENTER
Governors Square 11
Educator
2:15pm-3:30pm
FROM ROLL CALL TO ROCK ‘N ROLL: RED ROCKS SINCE 1900
Plaza Ballroom E
MONDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK D 3:45pm-5:00pm
FROM FIRES TO FLOODS: WHEN NATURAL DISASTERS RESULT IN CULTURAL RESOURCE DISASTERS
3:45pm-5:00pm
Plaza Ballroom E
AIA
PRESERVATION ORDINANCES: STANDARD LANGUAGE & INNOVATIVE TOOLS
Directors Row I
APA
3:45pm-5:00pm
TOURISM, MAKE-BELIEVE, AND THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT: COLORADO’S MIDCENTURY TOURIST PARKS
Directors Row H
APA
3:45pm-5:00pm
USING MEDIA, INFLUENCERS AND SOCIAL STRATEGIES TO GAIN SUPPORT
Governors Square 11
3:45pm-4:15pm
HOT TOPIC: 20TH CENTURY OPTIMISM: THE REAL VALUE OF PRESERVING MIDCENTURY MODERN HOMES AND NEIGHBORHOODS
Governors Square 10
4:30pm-5:00pm
HOT TOPIC: EL TECOLOTE TO DENVER: FAMILY ARCHIVING TECHNIQUES
Governors Square 10
MONDAY EVENING 5:30pm-8:00pm
STEPHEN H. HART AWARDS | History Colorado Center, 1200 Broadway
TUESDAY 8:30am-9:45am
PLENARY PRESENTATION - BRYAN C. LEE, JR.
Plaza Ballroom ABC
10:00am-11:00am
TRUSTLIVE: RESAVING SAVED PLACES
Plaza Ballroom ABC
TUESDAY TOURS 2:00pm-4:30pm
SAVING AND RESTORING THE NEON SIGNS OF COLFAX Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House
2:00pm-4:30pm
MOLLY BROWN HOUSE MUSEUM RESTORATION TOUR Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House
2:00pm-4:00pm
EVOLUTION OF LARIMER SQUARE: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE Meet at Governor’s Square 11
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TUESDAY
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
TUESDAY MORNING | BLOCK E 11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: DRONE TECHNOLOGY: THE IMPACT OF DIGITAL MODELING IN BUILDING PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
Directors Row H
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION AS A STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN NATIVE COMMUNITIES
Governors Square 11
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: POWER-UP: PLACEMAKING THROUGH INTERACTIVE STORY MAPS
Directors Row I
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: ENGAGING A WIDER AUDIENCE: UTILIZING LOW TO NO COST COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT METHODS
Governors Square 10
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: THE FUTURE OF PRESERVATION: COLORADO’S PRESERVATION PLAN FOR 2030
Plaza Ballroom F
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: DEMYSTIFYING EASEMENTS & COVENANTS (WHAT’S THE POINT?)
Plaza Ballroom D
11:15am-11:45am
HOT TOPIC: TRAILER TRASH? INVESTIGATING THE HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE OF AMERICA’S MOBILE HOME PARKS
Plaza Ballroom E
COLORADO’S MOST ENDANGERED PLACES PROGRAM LUNCHEON
Plaza Ballroom ABC
12:00pm-1:30pm
APA
APA & AIA
TUESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK F 1:45pm-3:00pm
BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE ON FEDERAL HISTORIC TAX CREDITS
Plaza Ballroom F
AIA
1:45pm-3:00pm
HARNESSING THE POWER OF PRIMARY SOURCES FOR YOUR HISTORIC SITE WITH THE NEXT GENERATION OF PRESERVATIONISTS
Governors Square 10
Educator
1:45pm-3:00pm
DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIPS BETWEEN PRESERVATION & ARCHAEOLOGY TO INCREASE PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT
1:45pm-3:00pm
DO WE CARE ABOUT THAT? DECIDING WHAT TO REGULATE
Plaza Ballroom D
2:00pm-2:30pm
DANA CRAWFORD INTRO TO TOUR: “EVOLUTION OF LARIMER SQUARE: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE”
Governors Square 11
1:45pm-3:00pm
PRESERVATION STARTING LINE: HOW WRITTEN STRUCTURE ASSESSMENTS CAN KICK OFF YOUR PRESERVATION PROJECT
Plaza Ballroom E
AIA
1:45pm-3:00pm
COLORADO’S HISPANO RURAL HERITAGE IN THE SAN LUIS VALLEY: FOUR NATIONAL REGISTER EXAMPLES
Directors Row H
APA
Directors Row I
APA
TUESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK G
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3:15-4:30pm
A COLORADO HERITAGE JOURNEY TOWARDS REGIONAL VISIBILITY
Governors Square 10
APA
3:15-4:30pm
HOW TO CREATE A HISTORIC DISTRICT IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD: LESSONS LEARNED FROM GRASS-ROOTS EFFORTS AND THE STATE
Plaza Ballroom F
APA
3:15-4:30pm
PRESERVATION TRIVIA: PAST AND FUTURE
3:15-4:30pm
RESPARKING PUEBLO’S ICONIC POWER PLANT
Plaza Ballroom E
APA
3:15-4:30pm
USING PROJECT ARCHAEOLOGY TO SHAPE THE NEXT GENERATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION
Governors Square 11
Educator
3:15-4:30pm
MISSION 66 ARCHITECTURE AND THE FUTURE OF MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARKS’ FAR VIEW VISITOR CENTER
Plaza Ballroom D
AIA
3:15-4:30pm
IMPACT OF MURALS ON PLACEMAKING
Directors Row I
Directors Row H A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
TUESDAY
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE TUESDAY EVENING 4:30pm-7:00pm
PRESERVATION MARKETPLACE
Plaza Exhibit
7:00pm-10:00pm
YOUNG PRESERVATIONIST GATHERING
Yard House 1550 Court Pl inside the Sheraton
7:30pm-9:00pm
SKI TOWN GATHERING
Tequila Room at Hacienda Colorado Ground Floor Sheraton Downtown Tower
WEDNESDAY TOURS
WEDNESDAY (Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House)
11:00am-4:00pm
CENTRAL CITY’S HISTORIC MAIN STREET
10:00am-11:30am
DENVER’S MAIN STREET: THE FUTURE OF THE 16TH ST MALL
WEDNESDAY ALL-DAY WORKSHOPS 9:00am-5:00pm
CAMP CLG TRAINING Location: History Colorado Center, MDC Room, 4th Floor
8:00am-3:00pm
DAY AT THE CAPITOL Location: 1525 Sherman St. 6th Floor, Rm. 603
APA
WEDNESDAY MORNING WORKSHOP 9:00am-12:00pm
ALL POLITICS IS LOCAL, AND ALL ADVOCACY IS LOCAL!
Plaza Ballroom E
WEDNESDAY MORNING | BLOCK H Plaza Ballroom F
9:00am-10:15am
MATERIALS!! - WHAT TO KEEP, WHAT TO TOSS, HOW TO DOCUMENT
9:00am-10:15am
HISTORY, ARCHITECTURE, AND ARCHAEOLOGY AT THE NORTH LONDON MILL IN ALMA, CO
Directors Row I
9:00am-10:15am
I SAW THE SIGN: DENVER’S SIGNAGE & PRESERVATION
Governors Square 11
9:00am-10:15am
AMAZING A-FRAMES: UNDERSTANDING, EVALUATING, AND PRESERVING THE DISTINCTIVE FORM
9:00am-10:15am
TRAILMAP TO RESTORATION - A GRASSROOTS JOURNEY TO SUCCESS
9:00am-10:15am
INCORPORATING MULTI-MODAL TRANSPORTATION INTO HISTORIC MAIN STREET
Plaza Ballroom D
AIA
APA
Directors Row H Governors Square 10
APA
Plaza Ballroom F
APA & AIA
Directors Row I
APA APA
WEDNESDAY MORNING | BLOCK I 10:30am-11:45am
TOOLS FOR DESIGN REVIEW
10:30am-11:45am
SAFEGUARDING COLORADO’S MINING HERITAGE: EXPLORING TOOLS AND TECHNOLOGY
10:30am-11:45am
TAX INCREMENT FINANCING: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT CAN SUPPORT HISTORIC PRESERVATION PROJECTS
Plaza Ballroom D
10:30am-11:45am
SHE’S A WOW: CREATING MUSEUM EXHIBITS WITH UNIVERSITY STUDENT AND PUBLIC LIBRARY PARTNERSHIPS
Governors Square 11
10:30am-11:45am
NEW THREATS TO CULTURAL RESOURCES: THE CASE OF UTE PRAYER TREES IN COLORADO AND DISRESPECT TO NATIVE CULTURES
Directors Row H
10:30am-11:45am
CONNECTING COLORADO’S WATER HERITAGE TO PRESERVATION PLANNING
Governors Square 10
APA
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WEDNESDAY
SCHEDULE AT A GLANCE
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS 1:00pm-5:00pm
HISTORICAL ROOFING: EMPHASIS ON ORNAMENTAL AND COPPER APPLICATIONS Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House
1:15pm-4:00pm
HANDS-ON WITH HISTORIC WINDOWS
Governors Square 10
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK J 1:15pm-2:30pm
LESSONS LEARNED IN DEMOLITION REVIEW: DENVER, BOULDER, AND FORT COLLINS
Directors Row I
APA
1:15pm-2:30pm
RESTORING DARK SKIES: DESIGNING EFFECTIVE OUTDOOR AND INTERIOR ILLUMINATION TO SAVE THE NIGHT
Plaza Ballroom E
APA
1:15pm-2:30pm
PRESERVATION NOW – THE VALUE OF HISTORIC STRUCTURES IN THE SHADOW OF GENTRIFICATION
Plaza Ballroom D
APA
1:15pm-2:30pm
CO-AUTHORING HISTORY: MEMORY & STORYTELLING AS RESISTANCE
Governors Square 11
1:15pm-2:30pm
COLORADO’S COMMERCIAL HISTORIC PRESERVATION TAX CREDIT: HOW IT WORKS FOR MORE PROJECTS THAN BEFORE AND HOW IT CAN HELP YOU FINANCE YOURS
Plaza Ballroom F
APA
1:15pm-1:45pm
HOT TOPIC: EXPLAINING USE MANAGEMENT IN FEDERAL HISTORIC PROPERTIES
Directors Row H
APA
2:00pm-2:30pm
HOT TOPIC: WHO IS SERVED BY WHAT IS PRESERVED? UNDERSTANDING THE PRESERVATION NEEDS OF UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES
Directors Row H
APA
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK K 2:45pm-4:00pm
GRAVE MATTERS: PLANNING FOR OUR FUTURE WHILE PRESERVING OUR PAST IN HISTORIC CEMETERIES
2:45pm-4:00pm
PENITENTES OF SOUTHERN COLORADO
2:45pm-4:00pm
SURVEYS AND NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATIONS IN RURAL CHAFFEE COUNTY: PRESERVING PLACES THAT MATTER
Plaza Ballroom D
2:45pm-4:00pm
CU-DENVER STAR STUDENT PRESERVATION PROJECTS
Governors Square 11
2:45pm-4:00pm
HISTORIC PRESERVATION AND REDEVELOPMENT AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN CENTER: THREE DIFFERENT APPROACHES
Plaza Ballroom F
APA
2:45pm-3:15pm
HOT TOPIC: PRESERVING AND PROTECTING THE LEGACY AND ARTWORK OF COLORADO’S CHICANO MURALS
Directors Row H
APA
3:30pm-4:00pm
HOT TOPIC: SALT CREEK: A JOURNEY INTO THE PAST
Directors Row H
Plaza Ballroom E Directors Row I APA
THURSDAY THURSDAY
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9:00am-3:00pm
PRESERVATION LEADERSHIP TRAINING: ADVOCACY FOR ALL Location - Sheraton Tower Court D
APA & AIA
9:00am-4:00pm
PROJECT ARCHAEOLOGY CURRICULUM WORKSHOP LOCATION History Colorado 4th Floor-MDC room
Educator
9:00am-12:00pm
LODO WALKING TOUR (TOM NOEL) Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
We are architects of the west who enrich communities through legacy projects. CRAFT
andarch.com
BALANCE
WHIMSY
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SILENT AUCTION SNEAK PEEK Beginning Monday morning, the 2019 Endangered Places Silent Auction will be ready and waiting for Conference attendees to begin bidding on a wide array of items and experiences. Take in the rich history of Colorado – or even take it home with you – through a variety of experiences, stays, items, and more offered at this year’s Saving Places Conference. All purchases support saving threatened resources throughout the state through Colorado’s Most Endangered Places Program. The higher you bid, the greater your impact! The Silent Auction will begin Monday morning and conclude Tuesday evening during the Preservation Marketplace. Items can be purchased immediately through the Buy It Now option or bid up through auction close. Expect live music, appetizers, drinks, and mingling among exhibitors, sponsors, and attendees! CPI friends and supporters have donated some unique items for this year’s silent auction – so get your best bids ready!
Below are just a few of the highlights of the 140+ items that will be for sale at the Silent Auction! Check your registration packet for a more complete list of items for bid. • Feel like Colorado royalty when you stay a night at the historic Redstone Castle. Tour the Great Hall or enjoy your evening in the gentleman’s Game Room and Bar. • Private, VIP tour and tasting of State 38 Distilling. These spirits - sourced, created, and sold in Golden, Colorado - will leave your spirits feeling Rocky Mountain high. • Take in the history of LoDo with Dr. Colorado himself, Tom Noel. This personal, guided tour will immerse you in the rich background of the area through stories, stops, and more. • Kick back and relax for a night at the Joyful Journey Hot Springs in Moffat, CO. Take in the beauty of the Sangre De Cristo mountain range from the comforts of your very own mineral pool. • Take home your very own John Fielder print or historic Tivoli poster – just two of the incredible items waiting to go home with you! • Colorado’s beer scene is booming, and now you can take a trip around the brewery world with a Denver PubPass. • Go back in mining history with a family tour of the Capital Prize Gold Mine in Georgetown, CO. You can even test your luck and pan for gold!
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A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
MONDAY TOURS Tours have offsite locations: Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House. Pre-registration is required - visit the registration table for availability.
TRANSFORMATION UNDERWAY AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN CENTER 10:30am-1:00pm Since 1906, the National Western Center has been a part of Denver and Colorado’s history. Redevelopment represents a transformation of the National Western Complex into a yearround global destination for agricultural heritage and innovation. Led by the Mayor’s Office of the National Western Center, join this tour for a boots-on-the-ground view of future plans, preservation challenges, and construction underway at the National Western Center. No special attire is required to participate in this tour, but please wear sturdy walking shoes and outdoor winter attire.
FIVE POINTS: A TRANSFORMING NEIGHBORHOOD 1:30pm-4:00pm APA Come tour Denver’s historic Five Points neighborhood with Five Points resident Julie Johnson (Cultural Resources Manager, City of Boulder Open Space and Mountain Parks). While this tour has been offered in past years, much has happened and changed in just two years. Historically, Five Points has been home to Denver’s African-American community. There was a time when it was known for the jazz musicians who would stay at the Rossonian Hotel, as well as the bustling community supported by Welton street businesses. It fell on hard times and was also known as a ‘bad neighborhood.’ It’s recently been ground zero for development and change. Meet some of the people involved in this transformation while learning the history and the issues involved with this neighborhood transformation.
DENVER HISTORY THROUGH BEER 1:30pm-4:00pm Join us as we explore two local breweries that demonstrate how Colorado’s beer culture is taking advantage helping save unique historic places! The tour will begin with a visit to Station 26 brewery, a brewery located in Denver’s Park Hill neighborhood in a renovated Fire Station. Following Station 26, attendees will be transported via bus to the next site, driving through the RiNo Art District where they will see how the neighborhood utilizes former warehouses for breweries and other businesses. The tour will end at Colorado’s oldest brewery, the Tivoli Brewing Company. The Tivoli Brewing Company started in 1859, selling beer to thirsty miners and early Denver settlers. It eventually grew to become the largest brewery west of the Missouri River. The Tivoli Brewing Company is a great example of a project that used Historic Preservation Tax Credits to help fund recent rehabilitations.
MONDAY MORNING WORKSHOP PRESERVATION 101
9:00am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner Historic preservation can be confusing. What is the difference in the many preservation organizations? What programs are available for assistance, training, and/or funding? Join leaders from a diverse group of national, state, and local organizations to learn how they can help you achieve your project goals. Participants include representatives from the National Park Service, Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, History Colorado, Colorado Preservation, Inc., Colorado Archaeological Society, Colorado Historical Foundation, and Colorado’s Main Street Program - DOLA. Come armed with questions! Speakers: Mark Rodman (History Colorado), Astrid Liverman (National Park Service), Barbara Pahl/Amy Webb (National Trust for Historic Preservation) Steve Turner (History Colorado), Jennifer Orrigo Charles (Colorado Preservation, Inc.), Cathy Rosset (Colorado Historical Foundation), Gayle Langley (Colorado Main Street), Bob Rushforth (Colorado Archaeological Society)
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MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
MONDAY MORNING | BLOCK A DOWNTOWN UNDERGROUND: UNCOVERING COLORADO’S HIDDEN HISTORY AND POTENTIAL 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner AIA Are there really tunnels under Colorado’s downtowns? Why do many downtown buildings still have outside staircases leading from sidewalks to lower level basements? Why do many of these sidewalks have vaults under them? These and other intriguing questions will be addressed in a session that explores the origins and functions of Downtown Underground. The session will include a discussion of the threats to these historic resources and current efforts to save them. Expect an overview of where these sites are located as well as case studies that focus on adaptive reuse of projects located in Colorado Main Street communities. Tracy Beach, author of “The Tunnels Under our Feet: Colorado’s Forgotten Hollow Sidewalks”, will share her insights that helped raise awareness of these threatened resources and got them added to Colorado’s Most Endangered Places Program in 2017. Kim Grant, CPI’s Endangered Places Program director and Larry Lucas, Colorado Main Street Program architect, will explore barriers to adaptive re-use and ways to address design and building code challenges in order to help save more of these resources. Speakers: Kim Grant (Colorado Preservation, Inc.), Larry Lucas (Colorado Main Street), Tracy Beach (Author)
USING THE AMERICORPS VISTA PROGRAM TO SUPPORT HISTORIC PRESERVATION IN RURAL COMMUNITIES 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner
Downtown Colorado, Inc.’s AmeriCorps VISTA program places volunteers in communities and at non-profit organizations across the country to fight and alleviate poverty. Some DCI VISTA members have been critical in building local capacity around supporting the celebration of in communities statewide. Join this session to about how AmeriCorps VISTA members are impacting historic preservation in rural communities, learn if a VISTA member is right for your community, and the types of projects they have helped manage statewide. Some of the methods utilized by AmeriCorps VISTA program include: the Main Street Program, Historic Structure Assessment (HSA) Grants, acquiring Certified Local Government (CLG) status, and architectural surveys. Speakers: Andrew Curtis (Downtown Colorado, Inc.), Destinee Lukianoff (Leadville Main Street), Tara Marshal (Trinidad), Katy Welter (Buena Vista)
CAPITAL CAMPAIGNS FOR CAPITAL REPAIRS
9:00am-10:15am • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Intermediate Historic Denver recently engaged in a successful capital campaign to complete restoration and accessibility projects at their flagship property, the Molly Brown House Museum. Through this campaign, they were also able to increase organizational capacity for ongoing community engagement. Learn how to build capacity and think creatively about developing your own capital campaign while learning from Historic Denver’s successes and lessons learned. This presentation will help you launch your own successful campaign and will cover everything from the pre-campaign to post-campaign strategies. Topics include revamping the Board roster, building membership, discovering and cultivating major gift donors, and sustaining ongoing donor stewardship. Other items that will be discussed include developing campaign timelines, campaign events, seeking outside consultant help, and addressing staffing needs. Speakers: Andrea Malcolm (Molly Brown House), Annie Levinsky (Historic Denver)
CHIMNEY ROCK: ANCIENT HERITAGE, LIVING CONNECTIONS 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Beginner
Chimney Rock National Monument was designated as a National Monument in 2012 under Presidential Proclamation for its unique archaeological, archaeoastronomical and Tribal significance. While the Monument is best known by archaeologists as the north-easternmost Chaco outlier, it represents a multi-layered cultural landscape that is valued by Apache, Navajo, Puebloan, and Ute people for its diverse history and abundant resources. For the last three years, an ethnographic study has been underway that focuses on ancient and current connections between Tribal people, Chimney Rock and their ancestral homeland. Led by a panel of speakers that include a Zuni Tribal Elder, ethnographers, and Forest Service archaeologists; the session will focus on the results of the study and how its findings will inform management and interpretation of the Monument. Speakers: Julie Coleman (San Juan National Forest), Octavius Seowtewa (Pueblo of Zuni), Dr. T. J. Ferguson (University of Arizona), Maren P. Hopkins (Anthropological Research, LLC), Price Steinbrecher (Anthropological Research, LLC), Michael C. Spears (Anthropological Research, LLC)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
MONDAY MODERN COMMERCIAL BUILDINGS OF OLD LITTLETON 1950-1980 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Intermediate
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE APA
In 2014, CPI placed the “Mid-Century Resources of Littleton Boulevard” on their list of Colorado’s Most Endangered Places. Since listing, the City of Littleton successfully applied for a SHF grant to survey and document every postwar Modernist commercial building in and around West Littleton Boulevard. Littleton plans to use the research and survey information as a foundational component informing city planning in the area. This session will teach attendees the survey methods used by consultants Diane Wray Tomasso and Michael Paglia, which have been refined and developed over the last thirty years. The session will also look at issues related to surveying Modern architecture that presented challenges for preservationists accustomed to dealing with traditional buildings displaying an entirely different set of defining features. To help bridge this gap, the consultants adopted and further developed an architectural vocabulary to present the methods, materials and styles of Modernism. The session will conclude with tools that attendees can use to present survey results to city staff, elected officials, community leaders, building owners and development interests as well as the general public. Speakers: Diane Wray Tomasso (Consultant for City of Littleton), Michael Paglia (Consultant for City of Littleton)
HOT TOPIC: LINSEED OIL PAINT: OLD WOOD’S NEW BEST FRIEND 9:00am-9:30am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Intermediate
Discover why linseed oil paint is amazing! This traditional paint fell out of popularity in the 1950s as latex and petroleum-based oil paints took favor. Linseed oil paint has been used and manufactured in Scandinavian countries for years and is making a comeback in the USA. Traditional linseed oil paint offers many advantages over modern commercial paints, offering durability, cost effectiveness, and compatibility with historic materials. It is particularly well suited to protecting old wood and forms a hydrating, penetrating bond rather than a short-lived surface film application commonly seen with modern paints. This session will focus on the benefits of using linseed oil paint, methods of application, modern results, and provide hands-on samples. Find out why linseed oil paint is and should be old wood’s new best friend! Speakers: Shannon Dennison (Denver Mountain Parks)
HOT TOPIC: HIDDEN TOOLS FOR HISTORIC PRESERVATION
9:45am-10:15am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Intermediate
APA
Communities with limited staff time and funding need to utilize every tool available to preserve properties and neighborhoods with historic significance. Sometimes these threatened properties are not landmarked, the community does not have developed design guidelines, and/or there may not be a preservation plan in place. How can a community use existing plans and development codes to support their preservation efforts? This session will look at this issue with the goal of identifying ways to look beyond existing plans, codes, policies etc. that are directly related to historic preservation to identify new tools and resources. Many communities fail to realize that existing plans and development codes include goals, policies, and standards that already indirectly support preservation efforts. This session will include examples and observations from the City of Longmont’s Comprehensive Plan, Envision Longmont, and the newly updated Land Development Codes. Speakers: Karen Bryant (City of Longmont), Erin Fosdick (City of Longmont)
MONDAY MORNING | BLOCK B LIGHTNING TALK: BUILDING REHABILITATION CHALLENGES AND TRIUMPHS 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate AIA Learn how a community can restore deteriorated buildings to new uses, the impacts of design decisions on building longevity, the work required to convert a temporary structure to permanent use, and how technical challenges for engineered wood products are very different than those for wood construction.This session includes four dynamic presentations covering Colorado preservation projects and topics. Each presenter will present for 15 minutes with slides changing every 30 seconds. This fast-paced format will create a quick and highly informative overview of these topics: “Three Different Properties, Three Different Uses for Three Different Communities,” “Preservation of the Temporary,” “The Saga of the Sagging Ceilings,” and “Challenges with Wood as a Changing Construction Material.” Speakers: Anne McCleave (History Colorado State Historical Fund), Jessica Reske (Form+Works Design Group), Tim and Kris Hoehn (Hoehn Architects PC), Ron Anthony (Anthony & Associates)
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MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
THE THREE P’S: PUBLIC SCHOOL, POLITICS, AND PRESERVATION 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner
The session will explain the difficulties working with public school districts in Colorado. We will explain why politically and pragmatically they might be difficult to enlist youth engagement as well as building landmark nominations. We will also delve into experiences nominating schools to the NR, using students to nominate buildings, and then how to engage students and school staff as commissioners and advocates. Speakers: Wade Broadhead (City of Florence/City of Pueblo), Abigail Christman (City and County of Denver), Michelle Pearson (Adams 12 School District)
BUILDING A CASE FOR COUNTYWIDE PRESERVATION: LAUNCHING HISTORIC LARIMER COUNTY 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Intermediate
If you are looking to launch or grow a countywide preservation organization, this case study will offer ideas on how to go about achieving your goals. Explore countywide preservation efforts by looking at how Historic Larimer County was launched and developed over the past two years. Topics will include how the organization came together, its goals and priorities, and issues such as membership, board development, community outreach, special activities, and the providing of educational programming, technical support, and preservation advocacy. Speakers: Ron Sladek (Historic Larimer County), Meg Dunn (Historic Larimer County)
RURAL DEVELOPMENT PRESSURES AND SOLUTIONS
10:30am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner Rural Colorado communities face unique development pressures. These community challenges are particularly difficult to overcome with little access to money and capacity. Town ethos can prompt a negative approach for municipal planning and municipal guidelines are influenced by this ethos, but if not us, who? Economic development of downtown and redevelopment of spaces is the key to the long-term viability of rural Colorado towns. Join this session to get an education toolkit to move that dial in your community! Speakers: Cynthia Nieb (City of La Junta)
THE ENDANGERED PLACES PROGRAM—WORKING TO SAVE
10:30am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner For over 22 years, Colorado’s Most Endangered Places program has worked with communities across Colorado to save the threatened historic buildings and resources that give our cities, towns and rural places their distinctive heritage, identity and character. By so doing CPI works with individuals, organizations and communities to build a future with historic resources. In many cases, the sites in question are severely dilapidated by the time communities rally to save them. But this session, focusing on The McElmo Creek Flume near Cortez and the 4Bar4 Ranch near Fraser, proves that it’s never too late to get started. Both presentations offer lessons on the development of partnerships and resources at the local level to save important historic architecture and engineering infrastructure, including their unique wooden elements that were threatened by weatherization and natural forces. Speakers: Linda Towle (Historic Preservation Consultant), Ronda Dorchester (Save the 4Bar4), Kim Grant (Colorado Preservation, Inc.)
HOT TOPIC: MID-CENTURY MODERN STAINED GLASS, ARCHITECTURE, AND DESIGN 10:30am-11:00am • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner/Intermediate AIA HSW The Mid-Century Modern movement was a combination of Frank Lloyd Wright’s Prairie Style inspiration of the melding of home with an environment and a generation of primarily German architects; a variety of styles also ranged from Bauhaus “glass houses” to Cliff May’s Spanish Hacienda. Mid-Century properties feature simplicity and extensive use of glass windows that dissolve boundaries between the indoors and outdoors. The stained glass they used followed the architectural geometric designs and angular shapes incorporating in the building design, thus continuing the philosophy to be in harmony with nature - in essence “bringing the outdoors in”. The Space Age was a time of exciting new discoveries, dramatic architectural design, and a new boldness of contemporary stained glass design in churches with massive glass walls. The time provided opportunities for majestic stained glass windows, yet with many challenges. Speakers: Jane Watkins (Watkins Stained Glass Studio)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HOT TOPIC: BORDERLANDS OF SOUTHERN COLORADO: PLACE-BASED EDUCATION IN THE AMERICAN SOUTHWEST 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner APA In June 2018, History Colorado’s Community Museums hosted our first Borderlands of Southern Colorado K-12 Educator Workshop in the San Luis Valley. Borderlands is a place-based educator workshop illuminating the complex history of the American southwest through the intersection of geopolitical, geographic, cultural, ethnic, and religious landscapes. As home to several unique historic sites, the San Luis Valley provided educators with the ideal setting to discover and explore key curricular topics such as early American history, westward and northward expansion, land and water rights, and cultural identity. In the context of today’s social and political climate, the workshop provided participants with the opportunity to critically examine the region’s rich history, engage in critical dialogue, and develop new ways of incorporating diverse viewpoints across the K-12 curriculum. Join us to learn about the history and evolution of the Borderlands project and how the workshop utilized historic site visits, primary source materials, and scholar engagement to develop lesson plans and classroom materials aligned with state and national standards. Use this information to spark ideas for developing education curriculums in your own community. Speakers: Eric J. Carpio (History Colorado), Kimba Rael (Literacy Design Collaborative)
WESTERN HERITAGE LUNCHEON (a ticketed event)
Monday, February 4, 12:00pm – 1:30pm • Plaza Ballroom ABC
This lunch will provide a deep dive into the state of preservation in Colorado with Dr. Jared Orsi, Director of CSU’s Public Lands History Center and on Colorado’s State Historians Council. Dr. Orsi will use case studies from his research on the environmental history of the American West to imagine next-gen possibilities for bridging social divides through place-based preservation and interpretation on public lands. Longtime Colorado preservationist Ann Pritzlaff will then conclude the luncheon with the presentation of the Ann Alexander Pritzlaff Leadership Award to Dana Crawford, esteemed member of our community.
MONDAY AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS STATE HISTORICAL FUND GRANT WORKSHOP- BEGINNERS 2:15pm-5:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner
Project funding is a critical component to any preservation project. Join State Historical Fund staff for a beginners session that will provide guidance and tips for individuals new to obtaining and managing a State Historical Fund grant. The State Historical Fund grants funds throughout the year for preservation projects including restoration and rehabilitation, architectural assessments, archaeological excavations, designation and interpretation, preservation planning studies, and education and training programs. Speakers: Megan Eflin (State Historical Fund)
STATE HISTORICAL FUND GRANT WORKSHOP- ADVANCED 2:15pm-5:00pm • Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Advanced
This training session, presented by State Historical Fund staff, will provide guidance and tips for obtaining and managing a State Historical Fund grant to those already familiar with the process. This workshop will briefly go over program requirements and the mechanics of applying but mainly focuses on how to make an application as competitive as possible, and how to manage a grant once you receive one. The State Historical Fund grants funds for preservation projects including restoration and rehabilitation, architectural assessments, archaeological excavations, designation and interpretation, preservation planning studies, and preservation education and training programs. Speakers: Gheda Gayou (State Historical Fund)
MONDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK C JUNIOR CITIZENS: CREATIVELY CONNECTING YOUTH TO COMMUNITY 2:15pm-3:30pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner AIA As K-12 curriculum evolves and millennials shift cultural norms, how can we ensure relevance of the past? Creatively cultivating connections can reach new audiences, build civic duty, and inspire new preservationists. This session will highlight a variety of outreach strategies including refreshing existing tours, coloring books, young preservationist initiatives, and more! Participants will walk away with a toolkit of strategies to develop and fund successful outreach techniques for children K-12 and millennials in communities of all sizes. Did we mention you will actually be engaging with ambassadors from the Preserve America Youth Summit and have a big of hands-on learning? Get ready to learn from the next generation of historic preservationists! Speakers: Sarah Marsom (Heritage Resource Consultant), Ambassadors of the Preserve America Youth Summit
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MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
CAN I REMOVE THIS WALL?
2:15pm-3:30pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Intermediate
AIA & APA
Colorado’s Residential Historic Preservation Tax Credit is one of the best in the nation, based on its value and how long it can be used. To qualify, all work must meet the Secretary of the Interior’s Standard for the Treatment of Historic Properties. While the National Park Service provides excellent guidance for building exteriors and interiors of commercial buildings, little to no direction is provided for residential interiors. This lack of information leaves both homeowners and preservation commissions operating in a vacuum when it comes to applying for and reviewing residential credits. Bring the blurry vision of interior residential design and review into focus. Listen and learn as experts in the field present questions, options, and decisions to assist in determining important character-defining features that aid in modernizing while adhering to the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards. Speakers: Abigail Christman (City and County of Denver), Lynn Cowan (Lynmar Group, LLC)
COLORADO’S COMMERCIAL PRESERVATION TAX CREDIT - A NEW GENERATION OF PRESERVATION IN COLORADO 2:15pm-3:30pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner APA Historic tax credits have been critically important to Colorado’s revitalization efforts. Hear experts explain how the process works and offer tips on how to successfully complete your own historic tax credit project. You will also learn how you can help encourage the use of these impactful incentives in your community. Attendees will leave better informed about how Colorado passed its historic preservation tax credit and how its subsequent reauthorization will reignite interest in preservation for a whole new generation of Coloradans. The second half of the session will discuss how to engage the next generation and elected officials of your preservation activities. The session will provide tips on how to connect with your local elected officials, what messaging is more appealing when talking about preservation, and how to make sure preservation stays top of mind even after an initial policy achievement. Speakers: Jeannie Vanderburg (The Capstone Group LLC), Christine Staberg (The Capstone Group LLC), Annie Levinsky (Historic Denver, Inc.)
WALKING IN THEIR FOOTSTEPS: BRINGING HISTORIC PRESERVATION TO LIFE AT THE HUTCHINSON HOMESTEAD & LEARNING CENTER 2:15pm-3:30pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner EDUCATOR The Hutchinson Homestead & Learning Center (HH&LC), operated by Guidestone Colorado, is a dynamic heritage site where history and preservation bring the story of the land to life. Extensive preservation work highlights the 150-year development and evolution of the Hutchinson Homestead, one of the first homesteads in the Chaffee County region. Preservation is at the heart of what makes these stories come alive! Learn how to engage visitors in the experience of history and historic preservation by developing educational programs, tours, partnerships, and events, to provide opportunities for youth, families and visitors at your own museum or site. Program outlines and hands-on activities will be shared that can be adapted for your programs. Come prepared to learn, participate and bring the past to life, to inspire the next generation of preservation supporters and enthusiasts! Speakers: Andrea Earley Coen (Guidestone Colorado/ Hutchinson Homestead & Learning Center)
FROM ROLL CALL TO ROCK ‘N ROLL: RED ROCKS SINCE 1900
2:15pm-3:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Intermediate Red Rocks Amphitheatre is a legendary landmark that has enchanted generations of concertgoers since 1941. Although most famous as a music venue, Red Rocks has other surprises unknown to even some locals. Did you know Red Rocks Park and Amphitheatre is owned by the City and County of Denver? That it is part of the Denver Mountain Parks system? Did you know that it is home to one of the most intact Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) camp in the nation? In this session we will explore the developmental context of Red Rocks, learn what characteristics make it a National Historic Landmark, examine the music and culture that brings Red Rocks to life, take a deep dive into what it took to implement the adaptive reuse of Barracks 1, and explore the future of the Red Rocks CCC camp. Speakers: Shannon Dennison (City and County of Denver Mountain Parks), Kathleen Corbett (Corbett AHS, Inc.), Andy Duckett-Emke (Anderson Hallas Architects, PC), Brad Eckert (City and County of Denver Mountain Parks)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
MONDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK D FROM FIRES TO FLOODS: WHEN NATURAL DISASTERS RESULT IN CULTURAL RESOURCE DISASTERS 3:45pm-5:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Intermediate AIA Natural disasters are a real concern for historic cultural resources. This session will provide several case studies that demonstrate the effects of natural disasters on prominent historic buildings. Learn how to quickly react to prevent further damage and what can be done to save what remains. Case studies include the iconic Scotty’s Castle in Death Valley National Park, Sperry Chalet in Glacier National Park and many others. In addition to the specific details of the on the ground preservation efforts, the team will also share tips on how we can best prepare our historic buildings from climate change effects in the future. Speakers: Liz Hallas (Anderson Hallas Architects), Jon Brooks (AE Design Group), Ben Heppe (Anderson Hallas Architects), Denise M. Dihle (360 Engineering)
PRESERVATION ORDINANCES: STANDARD LANGUAGE & INNOVATIVE TOOLS 3:45pm-5:00pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Intermediate APA Local Historic Preservation Ordinances come in all shapes and sizes. While History Colorado has developed a Model Historic Preservation Ordinance, one size does not fit all. Whether your community has an ordinance or is considering language for adopting your first, this session will identify standard ideas and innovative tools from across Colorado and the U.S., which can be used to inform preservation in your local community. Speakers: Mark Rodman (AHistory Colorado), Jennifer Buddenborg (City and County of Denver)
TOURISM, MAKE-BELIEVE, AND THE BUILT ENVIRONMENT: COLORADO’S MID-CENTURY TOURIST PARKS
3:45pm-5:00pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner
APA
Join our panel as we take a visual journey to Colorado’s historic theme parks, featuring those built around the mid-century heyday of American tourism and family road trips (envision wood-paneled station wagon and no seatbelts!). Design, kitsch and make-believe all merge in these creative, nostalgic, and visually rich set designs that have become part of our historic Colorado fabric. Speakers: Michelle Slaughter (Metcalf Archaeology), Cindy Nasky (Colorado Historical Foundation), Abigail Christman (City and County of Denver), Jane Watkins (Watkins Stained Glass)
USING MEDIA, INFLUENCERS AND SOCIAL STRATEGIES TO GAIN SUPPORT 3:45pm-5:00pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Intermediate
You work hard on behalf of your project and community, but have you been able to get recognition for your achievements? Gaining project recognition is an art form that can make the difference in building support for your project. The session will tell you how to build awareness for your programs through media, influencers, and social strategies. Attendees learn how to examine their key audience(s), develop news angles, and organize messages to get the media’s attention. The session will also address how to align your communication message to gain the support of elected officials. If you struggle with promoting your project and managing the message when controversial issues arise, then this is a session that you won’t want to miss! Speakers: Kristi Harpst (Charlotte-Mecklenburg Planning Department Historic District Commission), Jennifer Lester (Philosophy Communication, Inc.), Tera Haselden Keatts (Publicist)
HOT TOPIC: 20TH CENTURY OPTIMISM: THE REAL VALUE OF PRESERVING MID-CENTURY MODERN HOMES AND NEIGHBORHOODS 3:45pm-4:15pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner
At an average of 60 years old, mid-century modern homes in original condition are significantly more valuable than when they were when new, even accounting for inflation and regardless of their condition. People have re-discovered the unique idealistic architecture that held quality of life over architectural ornament and style, and are searching for these homes that are simple, casual, open, and connected to the outdoors. Learn why this is, how preserving mid-century modern homes and the neighborhoods surrounding them is good for their value, and some of the preservation challenges that stand in the way. Speakers: Adrian Kinney (Real Estate Agent and Designer)
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MONDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HOT TOPIC: EL TECOLOTE TO DENVER: FAMILY ARCHIVING TECHNIQUES 4:30pm-5:00pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner
We all have a story. Learn how family archiving techniques can be used to develop your family’s past as demonstrated by Paul Matthew Marquez. Mr. Marquez has researched his family’s ancestral path and through that research identified and confirmed family lore of a relationship with New Mexico’s most notorious outlaw of the 19th century “Billy the Kid”. Marquez will explore his great-great-grandparents Celsa and Saval Gutierrez and their relationship with the outlaw and their kinship to the famous Lincoln County Sheriff Pat Garrett who killed Billy the Kid, on July 14th, 1881 in Ft. Sumner, New Mexico. Attendees will learn “how-to-methods” for you and the next generation researching past generations. Speakers: Paul Matthew Marquez (Ancestral Research)
MONDAY EVENING STEPHEN H. HART AWARDS
5:30pm-8:00pm • Location: History Colorado Center, 1200 Broadway The Stephen H. Hart Awards for Historic Preservation recognize the strongest and most dynamic archaeology and preservation projects in Colorado. Each year, History Colorado presents these awards to a select group of archaeologists, preservationists, advocates, and historians who have done exceptional work to preserve Colorado’s historic places and heritage. All Saving Places Conference attendees are invited to join the celebration from 5:30pm to 8:00pm at the History Colorado Center at 1200 Broadway, Denver. Light fare and refreshments will be available.
TUESDAY TUESDAY TOURS
Pre-registration is required - visit the registration table for availability.
SAVING AND RESTORING THE NEON SIGNS OF COLFAX 2:00pm-4:30pm • Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House Experience Colfax Avenue under the neon lights of Denver’s most infamous street. Learn about the importance of these iconic signs and how organizations, the city, and local businesses are making sure they survive for future generations! Make sure you wear comfortable shoes on this combination walking and driving tour, as you will leave the bus to enjoy up close some of the Denver’s neon signs before ending at Strange Brewing Company. Speakers: Corky Scholl (Save the Signs), Dan Shah (West Colfax Business Improvement District), Glen Morry (Morry’s Neon)
MOLLY BROWN HOUSE MUSEUM RESTORATION TOUR 2:00pm-4:30pm • Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House After four years and over $1 million in work, Historic Denver’s Molly Brown House Museum stands as an iconic reminder of Denver’s beginnings. It also serves as a model for best preservation practices, creative approaches to capturing underutilized spaces, and making a historic house more accessibility friendly. See the work done and hear first-hand from the contractors and trades involved in the project. Learn scheduling tips, how to manage multiple budgets, and how to think on your feet when surprises arise. Speakers: Andrew Malcolm (Molly Brown House), Graham Johnson (Spectrum General Contractors), Jane Watkins (Watkins Stained Glass)
EVOLUTION OF LARIMER SQUARE: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE 2:00pm-4:00pm • Meet at Governors Square 11 for intro by Dana Crawford As Denver’s original commercial center and the city’s first historic district (1971), Larimer Square is a nationally known preservation success story and one of the city’s most iconic places. Saved from urban renewal in the 1960s, Larimer Square today is an anchor in Denver’s thriving Lower Downtown commercial, entertainment and residential district. Begin the tour with an introduction to the history and comments on recent issues with Dana Crawford. Then, explore on foot Larimer Square, the site of Denver’s founding, led by a representative of Historic Denver. Learn about Larimer’s transformation to a skid row, and how local citizens saved the block of buildings from demolition to create Denver’s first historic district. This tour includes exclusive access to the Daniels & Fisher Clock Tower with 360 views of Denver from the 17th floor. Speakers: Dana Crawford (Urban Neighborhoods, Inc.), Diane Travis (Tour Guide with Historic Denver).
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
TUESDAY MORNING
PLENARY PRESENTATION - BRYAN C. LEE, JR.
8:30am-9:45am • Plaza Ballroom ABC
Join us for the official kickoff to Colorado Preservation, Inc’s Saving Places Conference. Following the conference theme of inspiring the next generation, CPI is pleased to host Bryan C. Lee, Jr. Recently recognized by the National Trust as one of “40 Individuals Under 40 Making a Community Difference,” Mr. Lee is a Designer and Design Justice Advocate and Director of Design at Colloqate. Colloqate is a multidisciplinary Nonprofit Design Justice practice focused on expanding community access to, and building power through the design of social, civic, and cultural spaces. He is the founding organizer of the Design Justice Platform and organized the Design as Protest National Day of Action. Bryan has led two award-winning architecture and design programs for high school students through the Arts Council of New Orleans and the National Organization of Minority Architects. Among many achievements, he was selected for the 2018 Fast Company Most Creative People in Business.
NEW! TRUSTLIVE: RESAVING SAVED PLACES
10:00am-11:00am • Plaza Ballroom ABC
Join CPI and the National Trust for Historic Preservation as we look at case studies to address the question, is a place ever truly saved? Fifty years after the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act and decades since we secured the future of places like Larimer Square and the Ashley River Road near Charleston, we find ourselves revisiting familiar places confronting new threats. Resaving Saved Places will feature a keynote by Danielle Del Sol, the new executive director of the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. New Orleans, like Larimer Square and the Ashley River Road, exemplify some of our best and most forward-looking techniques for preserving heritage. And yet, each in its own way, now faces threats almost unimaginable to its early champions. Danielle will be joined by Will Cook, associate general counsel at the National Trust for Historic Preservation and Annie Levinsky, Executive Director for Historic Denver, for a facilitated conversation moderated by Susan West Montgomery, vice president for Preservation Resources at the National Trust. The panel will discuss present day threats and potential solutions in a dynamic, live streamed plenary session.
TUESDAY MORNING | BLOCK E
HOT TOPIC: DRONE TECHNOLOGY AND 3D WEB PUBLISHING FOR BUILDING PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner/Intermediate Emerging sUAS (Small Unmanned Aircraft System) capabilities have much to offer preservation and sustainability efforts in Colorado. Learn how you can use aerial imagery and 3D models to enhance your project. Aerial imagery solutions are no longer about just taking amazing photographs with drones, many groups are using them to identify things not visible to the eye such as heat loss and water leakage. Accurate elevation maps and digital surface models can help you better understand your site topography, surroundings and how to manage natural resources. Multimedia content can be used to create an immersive experiences that inspire and educate. Learn how developing custom, interactive 3D models can help you engage the public with your project in a completely unique and powerful way. Speakers: Joshin Bogatin (GreenSky.Systems), Doug La Farge (GreenSky.Systems)
HOT TOPIC: ECONOMIC DIVERSIFICATION AS A STRATEGY FOR SUSTAINABLE DEVELOPMENT IN NATIVE COMMUNITIES 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner/Intermediate
How do we promote development and economic prosperity while preserving Native American culture and identity? This is one of the questions we’ll explore as we share a case study on the Change Labs Project, a bottom-up and placed-based initiative to promote Native American entrepreneurship and elevate small businesses on the Navajo Nation. In this session you’ll hear from Heather Fleming, one of the Change Labs Project co-founders, on the challenges to this work, lessons learned, and successful strategies for promoting sustainable development and cultural retention. Speakers: Heather Fleming (Change Labs Project)
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TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HOT TOPIC: POWER-UP: PLACEMAKING THROUGH INTERACTIVE STORY MAPS 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner/Intermediate APA Technology can be a great tool for governments, nonprofits, and special interest groups. Unfortunately, many of the tools we hear about and see showcased are expensive and time consuming to implement and maintain. Fortunately, there are tools that can be implemented and maintained on almost any budget, using limited resources and time. Come learn what it takes to transform your historical resources into powerful placemaking tools using Story Maps. Attendees will learn how this tool can support community education and outreach in both a public sector and school context. Speakers: Josh Olhava (City and County of Broomfield), Michelle Pearson (Adams 12 School District)
HOT TOPIC: ENGAGING A WIDER AUDIENCE UTILIZING LOW-TO-NO COST COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT METHODS 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner
The session will discuss ways to engage a wider audience for little to no cost via social media, Facebook Live, speakers series, and even getting down to knee level and engaging small kids and schools. At the end of the session, presenters will open up and invite audience members to share additional examples of good projects from across the state. Speakers: Wade Broadhead (City of Florence), Jessi White (City and County of Denver)
HOT TOPIC: THE FUTURE OF PRESERVATION: COLORADO’S PRESERVATION PLAN FOR 2030 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner
Colorado’s preservation plan through 2020 is almost coming to an end, and History Colorado, as the State Historic Preservation Office, is gearing up to write the plan for 2030 with lots of public input. Please come to hear a brief overview of the 2020 plan – the challenges and opportunities for preservation and archaeology that were identified almost a decade ago – and get ready to start thinking about what the new preservation plan should include and how it can work for you. The preservation plan for 2030 is an opportunity to understand what common and unique preservation challenges and opportunities are being faced by communities, advocates, professionals, and citizens across the state, and how we can continue through mutual support and working together! Speakers: Erika Warzel (History Colorado)
HOT TOPIC: DEMYSTIFYING EASEMENTS & COVENANTS (WHAT’S THE POINT?) 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate AIA & APA Whether you like it or not, the next generation is reaching every corner of our great state, motivated (and often forced) by a hearty economic climate and dramatically shifting demographics. How do we effectively preserve those historic buildings, prehistoric sites, Main Streets and landscapes that define our community and collective identity? What is the “Call to Action” around property protection? Join Korbin Pugh of the State Historical Fund and Cindy Nasky of The Colorado Historical Foundation for a casual discussion of various property protection tools available to preservationists, from the real scoop on the National Register vs. local designation including covenants and perpetual easements. Are these tools as scary and limiting as they sound, or can they be an active and comforting part of your preservation toolbox? Speakers: Cindy Nasky (Colorado Historical Foundation), Korbin Pugh (State Historical Fund)
HOT TOPIC: TRAILER TRASH? INVESTIGATING THE HISTORIC SIGNIFICANCE OF AMERICA’S MOBILE HOME PARKS 11:15am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner
This session will provide a brief overview of the history and shifting perceptions of mobile home parks in the United States and attempt to persuade the audience that mobile home parks are a significant historic resource that is worthy of preservation. The session will delve into a few case studies of mobile home parks that have been preserved or re-purposed and offer suggestions as to how we might begin to look at these resources with fresh eyes. The session is meant to foster discussion about newly eligible historic resource types and demonstrate how values are ascribed rather than inherent, and therefore change over time. As such, audience participation will be critical. Speakers: Thomas J. Wilson (Pinyon Environmental)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
COLORADO’S MOST ENDANGERED PLACES PROGRAM LUNCHEON
12:00pm-1:30pm • Plaza Ballroom ABC
Included in your registration, Tuesday’s Endangered Places Luncheon will highlight Colorado’s threatened historic resources and the groups that are working to save them. 2019 will be mark the 22nd year CPI has announced Colorado’s Most Endangered Places at the Conference. Throughout the years the luncheon has highlighted over 100 historic sites. Join CPI’s Executive Director, Jennifer Orrigo Charles, CPI’s Board Chair, Blair Miller, and CPI’s Endangered Places Program Director, Kim Grant as we look at the 40+ sites have since been designated as Saved and the newly listed sites joining the list. This year CPI will be joined by CBS4 meteorologist, Dave Aguilar, who will MC the event. Mike Buhler, Executive Director for San Francisco Heritage, will share San Francisco’s story of saving its “intangible heritage” to inspire Colorado cities to advocate for their own legacy and heritage businesses.
TUESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK F BUT WAIT, THERE’S MORE ON FEDERAL HISTORIC TAX CREDITS 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Intermediate
AIA
Federal Historic Tax Credits can be paired with state credits and other funding tools to provide necessary funding for a project. Learn about these tax credits, how they differ from state credits, and how the tax reform effort in 2017 impacted these credits as well as the rehabilitation of Colorado’s historic buildings. Learn from a group of national panelists changes in the program, the transition rules, and current efforts to modernize the credit. Hear what other states are doing at the local level and how Colorado’s state historic preservation tax credits compared to others. Participants will see examples of historic tax credit projects before and after these changes and learn what still needs to be adjusted in the tax code. Speakers: Renee Kuhlman (National Trust for Historic Preservation), Shaw Sprague (National Trust for Historic Preservation) Charlie Wooley (St. Charles Town Company), Liz Hallas (Anderson Hallas Architects)
HARNESSING THE POWER OF PRIMARY SOURCES FOR YOUR HISTORIC SITE WITH THE NEXT GENERATION OF PRESERVATIONISTS 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Intermediate EDUCATOR How can classrooms in Colorado connect with historic places across the state? Join the Library of Congress’ Teaching with Primary Sources Western Region team in an interactive session to explore how to best use Colorado’s newly revised State Standards. Explore examples of how this team has collaborated with partners across the state to share the story of historic preservation with students, teachers, and the community through workshops, research, curriculum, media support, and grants. Leave the session with a wealth of ideas for your historic site! Learn what grant funding tools are available at the Library of Congress, and can help make your historic site come alive in partnership with our national library. Inspire the next generation pf preservationists with your resources and make a difference for the future! Speakers: Michelle Pearson (Adams 12 School District), Keith Patterson (Metropolitan State University of Denver), Dr. Peggy O’Neill-Jones (Metropolitan State University of Denver), Kile Clabaugh (Metropolitan State University of Denver), Cynthia Stout (Colorado Encyclopedia)
DEVELOPING PARTNERSHIP BETWEEN PRESERVATION & ARCHAEOLOGY TO INCREASE PUBLIC ENGAGEMENT 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Intermediate Join Adventures in Preservation (AiP), Martorano Consultants, and the Fairfield Foundation as they discuss the benefits of developing partnerships between historic preservation and archaeology. This session will use two case studies to demonstrate how archaeology can be critical to interpreting historic sites. Traditionally, archaeology and historic preservation of buildings are viewed separately – archaeology is seen as below ground and preservation as the above-ground built environment. This call to action will show that these commonly-held ideas limit the benefits of potential dynamic partnerships between archaeologists and historic preservationists. Speakers: Jolie Diepenhorst (Adventures in Preservation), Marilyn A. Martorano (Martorano Consultants LLC), Dr. David Brown (Fairfield Foundation), Thane Harpole (Fairfield Foundation), Marcia Klopf (Winter & Company)
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TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
DO WE CARE ABOUT THAT? DECIDING WHAT TO REGULATE. 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate/Advanced
APA
Though all local design guidelines are based on the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards, these guidelines vary widely in what and how they regulate. Each community must decide what defines their community’s character and the most effective way to preserve it; balancing preservation standards with public support, practicality, and economics. This session will examine the different ways communities interpret standards for their community. Where does your community take a stand? If it cannot be seen, do you chose to still regulate it? If it is reversible, does it matter? Come see how design guidelines from across the country vary in how they address issues such as windows, site work, paint, alternative materials, energy efficiency, additions, storefronts, and accessory buildings. Approve and deny sample projects to see how your community compares to other attendees. Gain a better understanding of how communities make these choices through several commission case studies. Speakers: Abigail Christman (City and County of Denver), Mark Rodman (History Colorado)
DANA CRAWFORD INTRO TO TOUR: “EVOLUTION OF LARIMER SQUARE: PAST, PRESENT, FUTURE” 2:00pm-2:30pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner Larimer Square is a nationally known preservation success story and one of the city’s most iconic places. Before the tour departs from the Sheraton, join this open session with an introduction to the history and comments on recent issues with Dana Crawford. For the tour portion departing at 2:30, pre-registration is required. Check with the registration table for availability.
PRESERVATION STARTING LINE: HOW WRITTEN STRUCTURE ASSESSMENTS CAN KICK-OF YOUR PRESERVATION PROJECT 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner AIA Why are Historic Structure Assessments important? What might you discover by using them and which report is the right approach to kick off a project to preserve, rehabilitate or restore your historic structure? One of the first steps to saving a building is first researching it to discover its history and why it is important and then scheduling a visit to the site to determine existing conditions. Since there are many formats for written reports, where do you start and what type of information do you need for each? This session will outline several types of reports (including but not limited to Historic Structure Reports, Historic Structure Assessments, and rapid visual assessments), go over the upfront research and investigation process, present the pros and cons of each report format, and suggest ways to adjust the scope to meet project needs using case studies. Speakers: Kristen Craig (Anderson Hallas Architects, PC), Christine Britton (JVA, Inc.), Jill Seyfarth (Cultural Resource Planning), Denise Dihle
COLORADO’S HISPANO RURAL HERITAGE IN THE SAN LUIS VALLEY: FOUR NATIONAL REGISTER EXAMPLES 1:45pm-3:00pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Intermediate APA How can we expand the National Register listing of properties associated with under-represented communities? How should we approach the research and nomination process to do so? This session will highlight the nomination of four rural properties in the San Luis Valley associated with Hispano heritage and representing several aspects of that heritage: St. Joseph’s Church (Capulin), SPMDTU Lodge Hall (Chama), Garcia Ranch (Antonito), and Our Lady of Guadalupe Church (Conejos). Ranging from the sublime to the utilitarian, these powerful places reveal unique stories, nurture public memory, and promote further understanding of cultural places and landscapes changing over time. Come to hear about techniques used to connect the local rural, Hispano community to their past and to preserve the places that matter to them, while involving student researchers in the process. Speakers: Erika Warzel (History Colorado), Tori Martinez (Sangre de Cristo National Heritage Area), Tom Simmons (Front Range Research Associates, Inc.), Zoe Rierson (Student - Adams State University)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
TUESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK G A COLORADO HERITAGE JOURNEY TOWARDS REGIONAL VISIBILITY 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner APA This session will consist of a panel of nonprofit leaders and the CTO regarding a collaboration on a CTO grant between Colorado’s three National Heritage Areas. The Colorado Heritage Journey grant was an evolved marketing plan to implement events within the local community for a regional audience. Elizabeth From CTO will also discuss a promotional/marketing grant for the national heritage areas and how they leveraged multiple groups to get their message out and create a new tourism event including history, culture, and heritage for the state of Colorado. Speakers: Kathleen Benedict (Cache La Poudre National Heritage Area), Tori Martinez (Sangre de Cristo National Heritage Area), Andy Spencer (South Park National Heritage Area), Elizabeth O’Rear (Colorado Tourism Office)
HOW TO CREATE A HISTORIC DISTRICT IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD: LESSONS LEARNED 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner APA Have you ever wondered, “How can I create a historic district in my neighborhood”? Many times these efforts start from the grassroot hard work from neighbors like you. The districting process can be daunting, but neighbors have navigated the water with the help of local organizations and other groups that have worked on creating historic districts. Join us for a panel discussion with multiple perspectives on this issue, from local neighbors to preservation professionals including Historic Denver,; History Colorado,; Packard’s Hill historic district in Denver;, Loomis Addition historic district in Fort Collins;, City of Brighton, and the Brighton Downtown Commercial District. Learn how to begin your own efforts in creating grassroot support in your community and to create a successful historic district to preserve our unique neighborhoods across the Western states. Speakers: Shannon Stage (Historic Denver), Annie Levinsky (Historic Denver), Marie Benedix, Aja Tibbs (City of Brighton) Meg Dunn (Historic Larimer County), Gina Janett, Mark Rodman (History Colorado)
PRESERVATION TRIVIA: PAST AND FUTURE 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner Get your time machines ready! This year’s conference trivia session will quiz your knowledge of preservation’s past as well as your ability to predict its future. The quiz will include questions about significant moments in the preservation movement including its successes and failures. It will also look to the future with questions about the challenges facing preservationists in the future and what they will be fighting to save. You might want to brush up on your Post Modern Architecture! This interactive session invites audience members to play along as we journey through preservation past and future. Play solo or team up! Speakers: Abigail Christman (City and County of Denver), Kathleen Corbett, Ph.D. (Corbett AHS, Inc.), Jim Steely (SWCA)
RESPARKING PUEBLO’S ICONIC POWER PLANT 3:15pm-4:30 pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Intermediate
APA
When Dana Crawford got the call asking for her help in saving Pueblo’s iconic power plant from demolition she couldn’t say no. What ensued was months of crafting the message of why the building had to be saved and culminated in a presentation to city council to vote on the fate of the structure. This session will lead participants through the thinking and planning of how best to craft the message and engage the community around preservation projects. You will learn about the importance of having good working relationships with local press and how and when to involve city council, county commissioners and city officials in the process. There will be an opportunity to ask questions following the presentation. Speakers: Stephanie Bakken (Urban Neighborhoods, Inc.), Dana Crawford, Ryan McWilliams (Project Archaeology teacher)
USING PROJECT ARCHAEOLOGY TO SHAPE THE NEXT GENERATION OF ARCHAEOLOGICAL AND HISTORIC PRESERVATION 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Intermediate EDUCATOR Preserving the past only matters if there are future generations that appreciate, respect, and care what that past represents. Project Archaeology is a partnership between Montana State University and the Bureau of Land Management that creates curriculum and networking opportunities to teach important concepts of preservation and stewardship of archaeological sites. In Colorado, a network of educators, archaeologists, and other professionals are using Project Archaeology to further their preservation and educational reach. This session presents examples of the next generation of preservationists hard at work and suggestions for future action. Speakers: Rebecca Simon (History Colorado), Rachel Smith (Project Archaeology teacher), Todd McMahon (History Colorado), Ginger Keahi DeCavitch (Mesa County School District 51), Bonnie Gibson (Colorado Council of Professional Archaeologists), Rebekah Schields (Student-CSU), Cara McCain (Crow Canyon Archaeological Center), Michelle Pearson (Adams 12 School District)
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TUESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
MISSION 66 ARCHITECTURE AND THE FUTURE OF MESA VERDE NATIONAL PARKS’ FAR VIEW VISITOR CENTER 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Beginner AIA This session will present the history of Far View Visitor Center, an analysis of its current condition, a vision for adaptive reuse, and work to recognize its national significance. Architectural historians Astrid Liverman and Elizabeth Dickey will discuss how the mid-century Modern resources of the National Park Service’s Mission 66 program are being evaluated for significance and integrity. Jane Crisler, AIA, LEED AP, K-12 Market Leader with Eppstein Uhen Architects (EUA), will present the findings of the Historic Structure Report and cost analysis for rehabilitation of Far View, which was, until recently, mothballed (made possible with the assistance of the State Historical Fund). University of Colorado Boulder’s Museum of Natural History Director Dr. Patrick Kociolek will speak to the unique opportunity for adaptive reuse to showcase exhibits about Mesa Verde’s biodiversity. Such a use would both be in keeping with the visitor center’s original function to facilitate interpretation of park resources, but strengthen research partnership between the Park and public university as a potential model collaboration. Speakers: Astrid Liverman (National Park Service), Elizabeth Dickey (Mesa Verde National Park), Jane Crisler (Eppstein Uhen Architects), Patrick Kociolek (University of Colorado, Boulder)
IMPACT OF MURALS ON PLACEMAKING 3:15pm-4:30pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner Historic neighborhoods in Denver are reimagining themselves through art, space, and placemaking. This session will share the successes and experience of the annual CRUSH Urban Art Festival in the RiNo (River North) Art District which defines itself as a community “Where Art is Made”. CRUSH celebrates the craft of graffiti and street artists who bring life to walls while maintaining the unique cultural identity in this rapidly evolving community. The annual event transforms streets and alleys into year long open-air galleries. CRUSH raises awareness of the cultural significance and importance of art for all ages and all demographics that may not have the opportunity to experience it otherwise. CRUSH offers art inspiration through this urban art form. The organization serves as a forum for community engagement and creative expression, inviting locals and visitors to engage in this rich history and forward-thinking public art in Denver, Colorado. Be inspired by this annual event with applications in your own historic district all over Colorado. Speakers: Tracy Weil (RiNo Art District), Sonia Danielsen (Danielsen Investments, LLC)
TUESDAY EVENING PRESERVATION MARKETPLACE
4:30pm-7:00pm • Location: Plaza Exhibit Enjoy live music, drinks, and appetizers Tuesday evening during CPI’s Preservation Marketplace! Visit with our exhibitors to learn about their work and how they can help your project, while shopping the Endangered Places Silent Auction and networking with other attendees during this lively event. Don’t forget to turn in your BINGO to be entered for a free 2020 conference registration!
YOUNG PRESERVATIONISTS RECEPTION 7:00pm-10:00pm • Location: Yard House (1550 Court Pl inside the Sheraton) Immediately following the Preservation Marketplace Reception, keep the networking going at the Young Preservationists Gathering. Connect with young professionals (and the young at heart) during this fun event concluding Tuesday of the conference. This gathering is sponsored by Goucher College, featuring a MA in Historic Preservation and the nation’s first limited-residency graduate program in the field.
SKI TOWN GATHERING 7:30pm-9:00pm Location: Tequila Room at Hacienda Colorado Ground Floor Sheraton Downtown Tower Colorado’s Ski Towns and friends are invited to Hacienda Colorado for a dutch treat dinner. Protecting the historic environment and promoting heritage tourism, while also supporting infrastructure for residents and the large numbers of visitors, pose unique opportunities and challenges for these communities. Successes and concerns from 2018 and plans for 2019 will be presented and discussed. Speakers: Erica Duvic (History Colorado), Mark Rodman (History Colorado)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
WEDNESDAY TOURS WEDNESDAY TOURS Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House. Pre-registration is required - visit the registration table for availability
CENTRAL CITY’S HISTORIC MAIN STREET 11:00am-4:00pm Relive the old west and visit an organically settled and terraced town in the mountains reminiscent of Europe full of Victorian-era architecture. Central City, founded in 1859 by John Gregory’s discovery of gold which brought the first significant population to the territory. Historically known for being a leading mining center in Colorado with more than 4.2 million ounces of gold the City was dubbed as the “Richest Square Mile on Earth”. Come and see the Central City Opera House, the casinos [where a portion of the historic preservation funds are generated from], and other historic treasures which attract visitors from all over the world. Witness our effort to revitalize the City, as we attempt to pivot away from a gaming-centric destination alone and embrace the tremendous potential of arts and recreation in a historically significant venue where people like Aunt Clara Brown and Senator Henry Teller once walked. This tour will feature some of the historic highlights and you will get to see a famous old western shootout featuring the Central City Wild Bunch. You will have the opportunity to visit the famous Teller House, Central City Opera House, the Belvidere Theater (Colorado Endangered Place 2016, with plans for restoration) and the Gilpin History Museum. Walking is required up and down slopes/stairs at an elevation of 8,400 ft above sea level.
DENVER’S MAIN STREET: THE FUTURE OF THE 16TH ST MALL 10:00am-11:30am
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Denver’s iconic 16th Street Mall is the work of recognized masters I.M. Pei and Partners and Hanna/Olin landscape architects, and represents a successful landscape/ streetscape intervention that helped transform a struggling downtown into a unique, one-of-a-kind destination place in the heart of Denver. In 2008, the Urban Land Institute lauded the Mall as “public art of the highest international quality.” The 16th Street Mall features a unique diamond backed granite paver design along with custom-designed and built light fixtures, signage, telephone stands, planters and trash receptacles, drinking and pavement fountains, along with dozens of oak trees and honey locusts. Whether you’re new to Denver or not, take advantage of the opportunity to join one of Historic Denver’s best tour guides for a comprehensive look at the Mall before it undergoes a massive rebuilding effort that will change it forever while attempting to pay homage to its essential characteristics and features.
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WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
WEDNESDAY ALL-DAY WORKSHOPS CAMP CLG WORKSHOP: COMMISSION ASSISTANCE AND MENTORING PROGRAM 9:00am-5:00pm • Offsite: History Colorado Center, MDC Room, 4th Floor APA Join the National Alliance of Preservation Commissions, History Colorado, Colorado Preservation, Inc. and the City of Greeley as they present this Commission Assistance and Mentoring Program (CAMP). CAMP provides continuing education to local preservation commissions, planning staff, elected officials and partner organizations. Topics for CAMP will include sessions for the entire group and sessions geared for the experienced Commissioners and Staff and for beginning Commissioners and Staff. Speakers: Adrian Scott Fine (Los Angeles Conservancy), Frederike Mittner (City of West Palm Beach), Will Cook (National Trust for Historic Preservation)
DAY AT THE CAPITOL 8:00am-3:00pm • Offsite: 1525 Sherman St. 6th Floor, Rm. 603 Join us for a fun and informative day under Colorado’s Capitol dome where you will learn how to speak to local leaders, hone your legislative knowledge, and foster your relationship with your legislators to support historic preservation efforts in your community. The day will include an interactive session with government affairs professionals to ensure you have the tools to engage with your legislator. You will also hear from those who have utilized the tax credit to spur economic activity in their communities. Attendees will end their day meeting with elected officials and witnessing the political process in action. This session is open to all and your participation will aid the preservation community’s top legislative priorities in 2019.
WEDNESDAY MORNING WORKSHOP ALL POLITICS IS LOCAL, AND ALL ADVOCACY IS LOCAL! 9:00am-12:00pm • Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner Have you ever thought about how you would go about saving a specific building, public space or raising awareness for the need for historic preservation in your community? If so, this in-depth workshop is for you! Presented by Bill Bobrick, former Union Business Agent and Organizer, former Legislative Aide to the Alaska state Legislature, and former Executive Director of the Alaska state Democratic Party. For 25 years, he was the owner of a lobbying and public relations business specializing in designing grassroots lobbying campaigns for social service agencies and environmental organizations. You will be given the tools to design your own grassroots lobbying campaign, focusing on lowcost earned media techniques and community organizing. Bring your proposed need/project to this workshop and come away with a plan to make a difference in your community! This is a hands-on workshop, brainstorming with the other participants in a collaborative manner, exactly the same way you will need to do it when you return to your own community. Speakers: Bill Bobrick (Advocacy Consultant)
WEDNESDAY MORNING | BLOCK H MATERIALS!! - WHAT TO KEEP, WHAT TO TOSS, HOW TO DOCUMENT 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Intermediate Join us for an overview of materials analysis in preservation: when to save, when not to save, and how to document before discarding. Presenters will talk through key processes for masonry, wood, and glass projects. Examples will show all types of materials can be valuable and worth conserving, but that the materials must be relevant or saving can be redundant and inefficient. Adequate documentation is key because once you toss it, it’s not reversible. Learn from experts in the field for best practices and tricks of the trade. Speakers: Natalie Feinberg Lopez (Built Environment Evolution (BEE))
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HISTORY, ARCHITECTURE, AND ARCHAEOLOGY AT THE NORTH LONDON MILL IN ALMA, CO 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner AIA The North London Mill site in Mosquito Gulch (near Alma) provides an experiential link to Colorado’s mining history and a prime opportunity to bring relevancy to and engagement with populations new to historic preservation. The North London Mill is a special place along County Route 12 for locals and tourists. In summer, it is popular among the 4-wheel-drive crowd going over Mosquito Pass. In winter, backcountry skiers and snowshoers enjoy the high alpine grandeur and quiet beauty of the site. A team comprised of a historian and educator, a backcountry skier and educator, archaeologists, and architects is working to preserve the site, rehabilitating the buildings for education and backcountry recreation in a way that is environmentally and financially responsible and sustainable. Through this case study you will learn the methods and challenges of conducting historical research with limited archival material and archaeological recording safely on an unsafe site with limited seasonal access; how to deal with design challenges in rehabilitating buildings for permanent use that were built to be temporary; and methods for making these structures safe and accessible for public enjoyment. Speakers: Kate McCoy (North London Mill Preservation, Inc.), Jessica Reske (Form+Works Design Group), Natalie Lord (Form+Works Design Group), Michelle Slaughter (Metcalf Archeology), Natasha Krasnow
I SAW THE SIGN: DENVER’S SIGNAGE & PRESERVATION 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Intermediate Signage can be vital to attracting customers, but how do you create visually interesting signs that enhance the historic streetscape, promote business activity, and are compatible with the surrounding historic context? Come learn how Denver’s Landmark Preservation Staff works with sign applicants through the design review process to serve business needs while also enhancing historic buildings and streetscape. Attendees will understand how staff apply design guidelines in relation to different sign types and comprehensive sign plans. Staff will also discuss how Denver deals with historic & modern signage in comparison to other cities. Speakers: Krystal Marquez (City and County of Denver), Brittany Paige Bryant (Denver Landmark Preservation)
AMAZING A-FRAMES: UNDERSTANDING, EVALUATING, AND PRESERVING THE DISTINCTIVE FORM 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate APA Learn all about the emblematic A-frame structural type, its place in the Boulder/ Rocky Mountain built landscape, as well as eligibility criteria that can be used by communities across Colorado to evaluate this unique structural type. Preservation planners in Boulder County were faced with an increasing number of applications for alterations to A-frame buildings without a context for understanding this unique building type. In response, an historic context study was undertaken to understand the role of the A-frame nationally and within Boulder County in particular- bringing to light the story of a Front Range company responsible for producing hundreds of prefabricated A-frame buildings found throughout the Rocky Mountain region. Speakers: Jennifer Wahlers (ARCH Professionals), Dianna Litvak (Mead & Hunt, Inc.)
TRAILMAP TO RESTORATION - A GRASSROOTS JOURNEY TO SUCCESS 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner Like many small towns in Southeast Colorado, the Main Street of Eads was in a state of decline. Then, a high school teacher and her students dreamed a vision to formed a strong group of stakeholders - citizens, elected officials, the National Park Service, and others - all united in a common goal. Part of their vision even served as a model for other communities in the region. Many trails lead to restoration, and the story of Eads started at a grassroots level. This session will provide participants with a hands-on, nuts-and-bolts trail map for that journey as presented by someone who was in on it from the beginning. Throughout the presentation, participants will be encouraged to imagine taking their own journey to save that significant place by answering such questions as: What is your destination? Who is willing to go along? Who do you need that you don’t have? Who will be the guide? Where do you start? Who will be getting the resources? Where is the quicksand? How do you keep people believing in the journey and motivated to keep going? Those are just a sample of the questions that will be addressed (and answered) by someone who’s been down that trail and can tell that tale about a project that not only changed an entire town and a county but now looks like it might impact the entire region. Speakers: Cindy McLoud (Kiowa County)
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WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
INCORPORATING MULTI-MODAL TRANSPORTATION INTO HISTORIC MAIN STREET 9:00am-10:15am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Intermediate APA Longmont has worked hard to create a vibrant downtown especially its Main Street, which includes a National Historic District and a Creative District. With current trends in transportation moving towards multi-modal systems that include cars, buses, light rail, trains, and bicycles; conflicts have arisen. This presentation will look at the proposed use of Coffman Street, one block west of Main Street, as a multi-modal corridor to preserve the historic properties on Main Street while meeting the City’s growing transportation needs. The proposed corridor includes center-running bus lanes, general purpose traffic lanes, protected bike lanes, and parking. A 100-foot wide right of way (back of sidewalk to back of sidewalk) makes this possible, originally platted for Coffman Street with the founding of Longmont in 1871. With this width, a multi-use corridor was designed and can be constructed with few impacts to adjacent historic properties. The project invigorates the downtown by moving buses and bikes to a safer, less congested facility and away from the busy Main Street/US-287 while ensuring preservation goals are met. The presentation will include a discussion on the in-process Main Street Corridor Plan. Speakers: Karen Bryant (City of Longmont), Phil Greenwald (City of Longmont), Erin Fosdick (City of Longmont)
WEDNESDAY MORNING | BLOCK I TOOLS FOR DESIGN REVIEW 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Intermediate
APA & AIA
Communities often have limited staff or resources for reviewing projects affecting their historic buildings and districts. Despite this limitation, accelerated growth in many places has increased the pressure on Colorado’s historic resources. How can a community retain its historic resources despite this growth? Come learn the techniques and tools for reviewing applications, and examines the review process from before the application is submitted to after construction is completed. The session looks at the larger context, the participants in the process, the relation to different codes such as building and accessibility, information available from records and in the field, design guidelines, decisionmaking, and review before, during, and after construction. The session also includes sources of further information and identifies digital tools that are comparatively low-cost or free. Speakers: Michael Davenport (Community Design)
SAFEGUARDING COLORADO’S MINING HERITAGE: EXPLORING TOOLS AND TECHNOLOGY 10:30am-11:45am • Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner APA Colorado is home to an estimated 23,000 abandoned coal and hard rock mines. The Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety has been working for over thirty years to safeguard and reclaim the hazards often associated with these sites. They have a history of collaborating with private landowners, preservation groups, and Federal partners to preserve historic mining resources that are important to many of Colorado’s communities. These projects range from installing interpretive signs to oral histories to stabilizing historic structures. Come learn how you can use DRMS to take action employing a new range of technologies that will help identify potentially historic abandoned mine sites and assist in documenting resources. Speakers: Sarah Russell (Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining & Safety), Lisa Thompson (Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining, and Safety), Erica Crosby (Colorado Division of Reclamation, Mining and Safety)
TAX INCREMENT FINANCING: WHAT IT IS AND HOW IT CAN SUPPORT HISTORIC PRESERVATION PROJECTS 10:30am-11:45am • Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate APA Urban Renewal and Downtown Development Authorities in Colorado use tax increment financing (TIF) as a unique financing mechanism focused on removing (or stopping) the spread of blight. TIF is a powerful tool, which when used smartly, can drive historic preservation through public-private partnerships. Downtown Colorado, Inc. (DCI) is the Colorado association that supports organizations using TIF and sharing education about successful projects and how to bring these tools to a community. Join us as we dive into TIF 101 and some examples of urban renewal and downtown development authorities that are leading the charge to protect and celebrate Colorado history. Speakers: Katherine Correll (Downtown Colorado, Inc.), Kimberlee Mckee (City of Longmont), Andrea De La Garza, Dee Wisor (Butler Snow)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
SHE’S A WOW: CREATING MUSEUM EXHIBITS WITH UNIVERSITY STUDENT AND PUBLIC LIBRARY PARTNERSHIPS 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner Learn how students in CSU-Pueblo’s Honors Program are working with the Pueblo City-County Library and the Pueblo Chemical Depot to tell the history of the Pueblo Chemical Depot. Presenters will discuss the process of executing the, “She’s a WOW” exhibit through communicating with organizations, sharing their experience with exhibit design, and illustrating the potential for university partnerships. The session will illustrate the different contributions of these 3 organizations. Learn how university students can design independent study or thesis projects connected to their home communities and your local projects. Speakers: Alyssa Vargas-Lopez (She’s a WOW Exhibit), Lauren Knight (She’s a WOW Exhibit), Maria Tucker (Pueblo City-County Library District)
NEW THREATS TO CULTURAL RESOURCES: THE CASE OF UTE PRAYER TREES IN COLORADO AND DISRESPECT TO NATIVE CULTURES 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Intermediate Throughout traditional Ute ancestral lands, hundreds of culturally scarred trees have been identified, including Prayer Trees. Join the discussion about a new type of threat to legitimate and scientifically-recognized cultural resources in Colorado. Learn how the spread of non-factual data is affecting many different people, including Native cultures. This specific threat consists of the ongoing efforts by certain persons and groups to legitimize Ute Prayer Trees and other alleged culturally bent/shaped trees in Colorado. These misguided ideas and interpretations shared with the public and others have created multiple issues for officially-designated tribal representatives, federal, state and municipal agency personnel, foresters, archaeologists and other researchers. The panelists, including officially-designated tribal consultants, archaeologists, a cultural anthropologist/ethnographer, and a forester, will present and discuss the history of Culturally Modified Trees (CMTs) in Colorado, Native cultural perspectives, the science behind the facts, the effects of the sharing of flawed data with the public, and ideas for addressing and resolving these types of issues. Speakers: Holly Kathryn Norton (History Colorado), Marilyn A. Martorano (Martorano Consultants LLC), Cassandra J. Atencio (Southern Ute Indian Tribe), Sally McBeth (University of Northern Colorado), Anna Cordova (City of Colorado Springs Parks, Recreation, and Cultural Services), Dennis Will (City of Colorado Springs), Susan Johnson (Rocky Mountain Region Forest Service)
CONNECTING COLORADO’S WATER HERITAGE TO PRESERVATION PLANNING 10:30am-11:45am • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: Beginner APA This session will look at the importance of how the current built environment is based on people’s historic relationship to water, and how our relationship to water still shapes our cities and farms today. This is an especially important heritage to pass on to future generations given the importance of water for sustaining any society. It will focus on how to define, recognize, and interpret water resource sites. This session will help inform preservationists and preservation advocacy organizations who work with project partners who run utilities (water districts, water companies, utility companies), municipalities, schools, and other local groups. It will also be of interest to those of us who do public interpretation work in relation to S106 NHPA consulting: consultants, agency members looking for better ways to do public outreach on projects involving historical water diversions, dams, hydropower, ditches, and reservoirs. Speakers: Thomas Carr (Colorado Cultural Research Associates), Abigail Sanocki (ERO Resources Corporation), Ron Sladek (Tatanka Historical Associates Inc.)
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON WORKSHOPS HISTORICAL ROOFING: EMPHASIS ON ORNAMENTAL AND COPPER APPLICATIONS 1:00pm-5:00pm • Workshop has offsite location: Meet at Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House. Pre-registration is required - visit the registration table for availability. Restoration of historic roofs can be tricky, especially with different approaches needed for the four types of historical roofing: tile, slate, wood, and sheet metal. Join this hands-on workshop at an expert practitioner’s studio in Aurora to see different techniques with copper fabrication. Learn the history behind roofing starting from the invention of the shingle. Get an overview of techniques used to install 100-year roof systems and the most likely problems that occur on these types of roofs. Discuss the reasons for using copper in historic preservation projects and areas on buildings where these sheet metal components are used. Copper fabrication techniques will be demonstrated and people will be able to use tools to cut and form basic sheet metal components for homes. Speakers: Lucas Raleigh (Raleigh Roofing)
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WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HANDS-ON WITH HISTORIC WINDOWS 1:15pm-4:00pm • Location: Governors Square 10 • Session Level: All Levels Join Kevin Murray and Richard Massey of Empire Carpentry as he discusses the ever-popular topic of historic windows and demonstrate common restoration techniques! The presentation will include a discussion on the anatomy of a double-hung window system, explore how deterioration occurs, and provide details on improving energy efficiency. Videos and speech are supplemented by a workshop where glazing, epoxy repairs, and sash repairs are first demonstrated and then opened to the audience for a hands-on experience. Time will be made available for questions, so please bring your stubborn window issues in for a discussion with the group! Speakers: Kevin Murray (Empire Carpentry, LLC), Richard Massey (Empire Carpentry, LLC)
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK J LESSONS LEARNED IN DEMOLITION REVIEW: DENVER, BOULDER, AND FORT COLLINS 1:15pm-2:30pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Advanced APA Demolition review provides local historic preservation program with a safetynet to assess a property’s potential significance before the wrecking ball arrives. Demolition review, in its reactive nature, can often lead to the most contentious cases that preservation programs are faced with. In this session, Historic Preservation Planners from Denver, Fort Collins and Boulder will provide an overview of their demolition review processes and share lessons learned in a moderated panel discussion. Speakers: James Hewat (City of Boulder), Marcy Cameron (City of Boulder), Kara Hahn (City and County of Denver), Cassandra Bumgarner (City of Fort Collins)
RESTORING DARK SKIES: DESIGNING EFFECTIVE OUTDOOR AND INTERIOR ILLUMINATION TO SAVE THE NIGHT 1:15pm-2:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner
APA
Light pollution and skyglow pose significant health risks to humans and animals. Promoting collaborative advocacy among preservationists and community organizations to reverse these trends, experts will share the latest methodologies and education for implementing lighting ordinances and promoting appropriate dark-sky friendly illumination of historic venues. Moreover. guidance will be offered on implementing state-of-the-art lighting technology to effectively enhance the appearance and visibility of art, artifacts and conserve the viability of priceless photographs, fabrics, and pigments. Key elements include choosing light sources that eliminate harmful ultraviolet and infrared radiation found in conventional fluorescent and incandescent lighting through the use of high color-rendering light emitting diode [LED] and cutoff luminaire technology, while dramatically reducing energy and maintenance expenses. Speakers: Kale LaCroux (LS Group), Dr. Robert E. Stencel (University of Denver)
PRESERVATION NOW - THE VALUE OF HISTORIC STRUCTURES IN THE SHADOW OF GENTRIFICATION 1:15pm-2:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate APA This presentation will present four points of view on the value of historic structures in the middle of gentrification patterns - preservation in the immediate past versus preservation we need to focus on for the future, and how it differs. The presented case studies will identify concerns such as pressures from rapid development, gentrification, and how best to address them, followed by a panel discussion, with additional time allocated to take questions from the audience. As preservation practices change, we need to review how it best works for our communities as an important counterbalance to increased development pressures and gentrification issues. Speakers: Natalie Feinberg Lopez (Built Environment Evolution), Albus Brooks (Denver City Councilman District 9), Amy Simon (City of Aspen), Melanie Short (Humphries Poli)
CO-AUTHORING HISTORY: MEMORY & STORYTELLING AS RESISTANCE 1:15pm-2:30pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner Museum of Memory, a project of History Colorado Community Museums, is a human-centered, community-based public history initiative intended to provide a pathway for community members to reclaim and preserve their collective history and utilize site-based memory as a tool of resistance and cultural healing. Museum of Memory projects use community narrative, storytelling, and the arts to foster resilience and vibrancy. Learn about the history and evolution of the Museum of Memory initiative, how these projects have authored a deeper understanding of local heritage, culture, and a greater appreciation for the built environment in communities throughout Pueblo and Denver. Neighborhoods that will be highlighted include Salt Creek and Dog Patch in Pueblo and Globeville in Denver. Join us as you learn how to use memory and storytelling in your own communities. Speakers: Dawn DiPrince (History Colorado), Jose Ortega (History Colorado), Marissa Volpe (History Colorado),
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
COLORADO’S COMMERCIAL HISTORIC PRESERVATION TAX CREDIT: HOW IT WORKS FOR MORE PROJECTS THAN BEFORE AND HOW IT CAN HELP YOU FINANCE YOURS 1:15pm-2:30pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner APA Earn money back when you rehab a historic building! The Colorado Commercial Historic Preservation Tax Credit is now available through 2029! Come learn how it has changed, how to qualify, and all about the application process. We’ll go over which improvements are eligible, what the state looks for in tax credit applications, and the status of the tax credit cap. You’ll also hear from a property owner who will describe their historic preservation project and how the tax credits helped them pay for it! Speakers: Amber Furness (Tax Credit Connection), Ariel Steele (Tax Credit Connection), Joe Saldibar (History Colorado), Betse Grassby (Steamboat Art Museum)
HOT TOPIC: EXPLAINING USE MANAGEMENT IN FEDERAL HISTORIC PROPERTIES 1:15pm-1:45pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Intermediate APA Federal cultural resource managers often face unique challenges when it comes to preserving historic properties, especially when these historic properties are still serving their original purpose and their preservation conflicts with the agency’s mission. For over a century, Reclamation’s water delivery projects have been integral to the settlement and development of the American West; these Reclamation projects have created a number of historic landscapes with sites and districts eligible for inclusion on the National Register of Historic Places. However, these properties are still performing their original purpose, and oftentimes must be structurally altered, if not destroyed, in order to fulfill agreements and treaties with local water user associations, tribes, and foreign nations. This session explores this topic through the historic properties owned by the Bureau of Reclamation and by archaeologists working out of Reclamation’s Western Colorado Area Office. Speakers: Steven Mac Manion Jr. (Bureau of Reclamation), Kristin Bowen (Bureau of Reclamation)
HOT TOPIC: WHO IS SERVED BY WHAT IS PRESERVED? UNDERSTANDING THE PRESERVATION NEEDS OF UNDERSERVED COMMUNITIES 2:00pm-2:30pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner APA For many underserved communities, preservation of histories is also preservation of identity, culture, and rights. Loss of history can have devastating and far-reaching impacts on sovereignty, access to resources, and the health, safety, well-being, and continuity of cultures and individuals. Traditional preservation of materials and the built environment is evocative of permanence, yet history is also preserved through language and stories that are retained in social memory. Historical complexity is also characteristic of underserved communities. Identities intersect and compete with each other based on ethnicity, culture, gender, and sexual orientation. The next generation of preservation has a chance to unite diverse and intersecting communities through the common desire to have our many and diverse stories told and retold. Preserving our complex and common human past can unite humanity in a divided present and provides myriad opportunities for connection and awareness of our common humanity, its challenges, celebrations, and hopes. Speakers: Elizabeth Perry (Crow Canyon Archaeological Center)
WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON | BLOCK K GRAVE MATTERS: PLANNING FOR OUR FUTURE WHILE PRESERVING OUR PAST IN HISTORIC CEMETERIES 2:45pm-4:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom E • Session Level: Beginner In cemeteries there’s a saying, “deadmen tell no tales, but tombstones do”. Grave Matters will explore ways to creatively use research, planning, and civic engagement to preserve historic cemeteries. Repurposing the role of these existing repositories of history and art can highlight a town’s unique qualities. The session will give attendees an overview of how historic cemeteries can help develop a vision for the future surrounded by development. Learn how various small cemeteries are using civic engagement to advance preservation. Learn about a recently developed, searchable database, developed from the surface surveys of several small cemeteries.The session presents historic cemeteries as destinations where contemporary blends with the past, providing a pathway for the future. Speakers: Patricia Carmody (Colorado Historic Cemetery Association), Estella Cole (Architect), Ruth Lambert (Anthropologist), Larry Dorsey (Colorado Railroad Museum)
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WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
PENITENTES OF SOUTHERN COLORADO 2:45pm-4:00pm • Location: Directors Row I • Session Level: Beginner La Fraternidad Piadosa de Nuestro Padre Jesus Nazareno, known as Los Penitentes, was the lay religious brotherhood of Spanish- American Catholic men that arose in northern New Mexico and southern Colorado during the late-eighteenth and early-nineteenth century. The Penitentes were active until the early-twentieth centuries and built and maintained religious meeting buildings called moradas. Because of the absence of priests, they devoted themselves to maintaining spiritually and providing mutual and community aid. They are known for their religious chants of worship, called alabados. The passion of Christ is the central theme of the religious rituals and ceremonies of the penitentes during Holy Week. Come learn about the Penitentes also known as La Fraternidad Piadosa de Nuestro Padre Jesús Nazareno and their traditional buildings. Speakers: Dr. Antonio Esquibel (Metropolitan State University of Denver), Rick Vigil (Film Producer), Manuel Salazar (Film Producer)
SURVEYS AND NATIONAL REGISTER NOMINATIONS IN RURAL CHAFFEE COUNTY: PRESERVING PLACES THAT MATTER 2:45pm-4:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom D • Session Level: Intermediate APA The Chaffee County Heritage Area has successfully led a campaign to recognize Chaffee County’s historic resources through designation of the Collegiate Peaks Scenic and Historic Byway. The heritage area conducted a county-wide Reconnaissance Survey, historic ranch surveys, and National and State Register Nominations. Documentation included a variety of structures – everything from a Livestock Sale Barn, Miner’s Cabin, Drive-in Movie Theater, School House and Historic Ranches. These resources, diverse in nature and history, are important to the people of Chaffee County and are an important component to heritage tourism. Come learn how the Heritage Area was able to successfully complete a recent countywide Reconnaissance Survey, several State and National Register nominations, and receive State Historical Fund grants with the support of the public. Through a process of “Celebrating our Successes”, the county has successfully debunked State and National Register myths and courted their agricultural land owners to understand the benefits of historic preservation. Speakers: Melanie Roth (Chaffee County Heritage Area), Erika Warzel (History Colorado), Nancy Roberts (Arrowpoint Cattle Ranch), Tom and Laurie Simmons (Front Range Research Associates)
CU-DENVER STAR STUDENT PRESERVATION PROJECTS 2:45pm-4:00pm • Location: Governors Square 11 • Session Level: Beginner CU-Denver graduate students receiving degrees in architecture, history, or preservation will present their research during this session. An annual tradition at the Saving Places Conference, this informative and interactive session will provide attendees with a wide variety of stories from throughout history and gives attendees a chance to engage with students on the verge of beginning their preservation careers. Students will present on the following: • “Preserving The Crawford Hill Mansion” - Shelby Carr • “Minefields of Preservation; or, How Deep Does Preservation Go?” - Lindsey Flewelling • “Adaptive Reuse in Aurora: the Stanley Marketplace Project” - Emma Lane • “Preserving Five Points” - Maggie McNiar • “Repurposing Railway Stations” - Mary O’Neil • “Heavenly Salvation: Preserving St. Andrews Episcopal Church” - Trump, T. J.
HISTORIC PRESERVATION AND REDEVELOPMENT AT THE NATIONAL WESTERN CENTER: THREE DIFFERENT APPROACHES 2:45pm-4:00pm • Location: Plaza Ballroom F • Session Level: Beginner APA Historians working with the National Western Center (NWC) will explain why this site matters to the history of Denver and Colorado. Since 1906, this site has hosted the National Western Stock Show (and many other events) and the redevelopment that starts in 2019 aims to keep the NWC functional for the next 100 years. From the smallest objects to the largest buildings, the redevelopment of the NWC requires flexible and innovative approaches to historic preservation. The session includes three parts: 1) overview of the history of the Denver Union Stock Yards and the historic and prehistoric surveys of the site; 2) the Landmark Office’s approach to preserve and landmark important structures; and 3) and the in-depth cataloging of site elements that has resulted in a rich record of artifacts that help tell the story of the site. All of these projects are designed to preserve the history of the NWC for future generations and make sure the history of this vibrant site is in the forefront of the venues and programs that will make the site into a global, year-round destination. Speakers: Dianna Litvak (Mead & Hunt, Inc.), Kara Hahn (City and County of Denver), Shawn Snow (Jacobs Engineering)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
WEDNESDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
HOT TOPIC: PRESERVING AND PROTECTING THE LEGACY AND ARTWORK OF COLORADO’S CHICANO MURALS 2:45pm-3:15pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner APA Walking through the streets of Denver, Greeley, Pueblo, San Luis, etc. one cannot help but notice the splashes of vibrant colors decorating the walls of buildings throughout the state. Many compositions tell of historical narratives of the state’s colorful past, stories related to individual communities, the environment, war and peace and the multicultural populations from the past, present, and future in Colorado. Join us as we explore the stories behind these brilliant Chicana/o murals and how we as a community can preserve/protect these important cultural sites for future generations. Speakers: Lucha Martínez de Luna (Chicano Murals of Colorado Project), Dr. Jillian Mollenhauer (Metropolitan State University of Denver)
HOT TOPIC: SALT CREEK: A JOURNEY INTO THE PAST 3:30pm-4:00pm • Location: Directors Row H • Session Level: Beginner Salt Creek, which dates back to the 1800s, is one of the oldest communities in Pueblo, Colorado, perhaps even the oldest in the entire state. Salt Creek is a very unique area, with generations of residents that have lived in the community for decades, raised children, worked in surrounding areas, and attended the local schools. Salt Creek is an old community that has endured over time. It is a fascinating community where residents are called “Creekers,” and many of them have nicknames that are known throughout the community. Even the residents that left the area maintain a strong attachment to this community and still refer to themselves as “Creekers.” This presentation is a testimony to their unique identity and way of life during modern times, including the similarity of intergenerational memories of the community. Learn how to use archival data, including recorded interviews, transcriptions, newspaper articles, and other documents to recreate and record the experiences of people who lived an old way of life, endured difficult times, and maintained a strong connection to their community. Speakers: Judy Baca (Colorado State University Pueblo)
THURSDAY All conference activities on Thursday require pre-registration. Visit the registration table for availability.
THURSDAY TOUR LODO WALKING TOUR 9:00am-12:00pm Join Dr. Tom Noel and friends for a walking tour of the historic Lower Downtown neighborhood of Denver! This tour, a Conference tradition, meets at the Sheraton Lobby at 1550 Lounge area, adjacent to Yard House at 9:00 am. Conclude the Conference by exploring historic streets of Denver! The tour ends at the Wynkoop Brewery.
PRESERVATION LEADERSHIP TRAINING: ADVOCACY FOR ALL 9:00am-3:00pm • Location: Tower Court D in the Sheraton Hotel • Session Level: Intermediate Pre-registration is required - visit the registration table for availability.
APA & AIA
Join the National Trust for Historic Preservation for intensive learning focused on building capacity for local non-profit historic preservation advocacy and ‘friends’ groups. This workshop, led by Adrian Scott Fine of the Los Angeles Conservancy and Shaw Sprague of the National Trust for Historic Preservation and developed in cooperation with the American Institute of Architects will examine elements of successful advocacy by providing perspectives from various stakeholders. Hear how to be a more effective advocate from elected officials, what resonates from those working in the media, and tips for getting results from lobbyists. The workshop will include hands-on exercises to learn how to create a campaign message. Participants will gain practical, transferable skills for use in their own communities. AIA and APA credits provided. *Additional fee required for this training. Speakers: Rhonda Sincavage (National Trust for Historic Preservation), Adrian Scott Fine (Los Angeles Conservancy), Shaw Sprague (National Trust for Historic Preservation)
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THURSDAY
SAVING PLACES® 2019 SCHEDULE
PROJECT ARCHAEOLOGY CURRICULUM WORKSHOP AND SITE VISIT 9:00am-4:00pm • Offsite: History Colorado 4th Floor-MDC room EDUCATOR Colorado is home to over 100,000 documented archaeological sites. However, teaching archaeology is often easier said than done. Learn how to bring Project Archaeology lesson plans to your historic site by joining us for a workshop. Attendees will delve into Project Archaeology’s “Investigating a Shotgun House: A Curriculum Guide for Grades 3 through 5” at the History Colorado Center. Attendees will regroup after lunch for hands-on application of the materials at a historical archaeology site in Denver. Speakers: Katie Arntzen (State Historical Fund), Dani Hoeffer (WinterTree Consulting, LLC), Cara McCain (Crow Canyon Archaeological Center)
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A Call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
2019 Dana Crawford & State honors Awards May 13, 2019 | 5:00pm-8:30pm Seawell Ballroom at the DCPA 1350 Arapahoe St, Denver, CO 80204
Each year, Colorado Preservation, Inc. (CPI) recognizes the efforts of individuals, organizations, public agencies, and businesses from across the state of Colorado, whose work demonstrates excellence in historic preservation. Accomplishments are recognized in the areas of preservation, rehabilitation, stewardship, preservation leadership, and philanthropy. The 2019 Dana Crawford award this year will go to Bart Berger who founded the Denver Mountain Parks Foundation in 2004 to educate about and fundraise for the Denver Mountain Parks. Recent success includes a recent ballot initiative to raise money for parks that will provide more than $45 million per year for parks construction and maintenance.
BART BERGER 2019 Dana crawford award recipient
Invitation to follow. Questions? Contact Amanda Barker (Events & Development Director) abarker@coloradopreservation.org • 303-893-4260 ext. 230
Thank You! Together, our work in historic preservation has helped provide a catalyst for positive change in communities statewide, improving our quality of life and stimulating local economies. As your grassroots nonprofit preservation organization, we depend on your continued support to help us save the historic places that matter now and for future generations. www.ColoradoPreservation.org
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Thank you to the 2019 Conference Advisory Committee for their time and assistance in developing this year’s session schedule. The Saving Places Conference would not be possible without their support and guidance.
Committee Members Julie Johnson *Conference Committee Chair City of Boulder Open Space and Mountain Parks
Cindy Nasky Colorado Historical Foundation
Heather Bailey Previously with City of Durango
Cynthia Nieb City of La Junta Urban Renewal Authority
Abbey Christman Community Planning and Development, City and County of Denver
Breanne Nugent History Colorado State Historical Fund
Katherine Correll Downtown Colorado, Inc. Jennifer Deichman History Colorado State Historical Fund Rebecca Goodwin Historic Preservation Officer, Otero County Elizabeth Hallas Anderson Hallas Architects Betsy Kellums City of Greeley, Historic Preservation Specialist Karl Kumli Diezte and Davis, P.C.
Elizabeth O’Rear Colorado Tourism Office Jonathan Raab Previously with History Colorado State Historical Fund Jeanne Ramsay Lakewood Historic Preservation Commission Mark Rodman History Colorado Michelle Slaughter Metcalf Archaeological Consultants Tim Stroh History Colorado State Historical Fund
Gayle Langley Colorado Main Street, Department of Local Affairs
Kat Vlahos Center of Preservation Research, University of Colorado Denver
Annie Levinsky Historic Denver
Erika Warzel History Colorado
Tori Martinez Sangre de Cristo National Heritage Area
Jane Watkins Watkin Stained Glass Colorado Preservation, Inc. Board Member
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A call to Action | Saving Places® 2019
PRESERVATION MARKETPLACE - EXHIBITOR BINGO Take this page with you to the Preservation Marketplace (Tuesday, Feb. 5 at 4:30pm in the Plaza Exhibit) and each time you speak with an exhibitor, get them to sign their square in the Bingo sheet below! Visit every exhibitor to complete your Bingo sheet and then drop it off in the basket at the front of the stage in the ballroom or with a CPI staff member by 4:00pm on Wednesday to be entered to win a FREE registration to the 2020 Saving Places Conference!
bingo sheet ANDERSON HALLAS ARCHITECTS
APA COLORADO
TREANORHL
JVA, INC.
HISTORICORPS
METCALF ARCHAEOLOGICAL CONSULTANTS, INC.
SUMMIT SEALANTS & RESTORATION, INC.
COLORADO SCENIC & HISTORIC BYWAYSCDOT
GOUCHER COLLEGE
MARTIN/MARTIN CONSULTING ENGINEERS
MARVIN WINDOWS & DOORS
WATTLE & DAUB
ClearOvations
Preservation Leadership Forum
Rocky Mountain PBS
Your Name: Your Email: 43
HELP SUPPORT THE WORK OF CPI! VOLUNTEER BECOME A MEMBER GET INVOLVED MAKE A DONATION To make a donation throughout the conference, join our #givebycell campaign. Text the letters CPI, your pledge amount, and your name to 56512 (Example: CPI 200 Jane Doe)
Thank you!