ETHIEL GARLINGTON
AGENDA Executive Director’s Welcome and Report Annual Meeting of the Membership Highlights from the Year Elections
Insuring Investment…Ensuring Compatibility, Ken Kocher Annual Preservation Awards
Member’s Choice Award Maryel Battin Award Jenny Thurston Award Thad E. Murphey Chair’s Choice Award
SHARING EVERYONE’S STORIES
FUTURE
POWERFUL ECONOMIC IMPACT REVITALIZING NEIGHBORHOODS
CREATING JOBS
FINDING SOLUTIONS
WALKABILITY
TEAM SPORT
SEEING POTENTIAL IN FORGOTTEN PLACES ENHANCING QUALITY OF LIFE
REDUCING WASTE
MONEY STAYS IN MACON
STRATEGIC PLAN Public Relations Education/Outreach Governance/Operations Diversity Advocacy Financial Preservation
NET ASSETS $3,500,000.00 $3,000,000.00 $2,500,000.00 $2.9 M $2,000,000.00 $1,500,000.00
$2.4 M
$1,000,000.00 $500,000.00 $-‐ FY 2012
FY 2013
LONG TERM FUNDS $140,000.00 $120,000.00 $100,000.00 $80,000.00 $60,000.00
2013
2013 2012
2012
$40,000.00 $20,000.00 $0.00 COTTAGE GUILD
ROSE HILL & JONES FUND
BOARD ENDOWMENT $880,000.00 $860,000.00 $840,000.00 2013 $820,000.00 $800,000.00 $780,000.00 $760,000.00 2012 $740,000.00 $720,000.00 BOARD RESTRICTED ENDOWMENT
JOY DYER
2014 ANNUAL MEETING
Al Gerhardt Virginia Elder Kitty Oliver Sara Beth Hertwig
HEATHER MOORE Chair of the Board, 2014-15
RETIRING TRUSTEES Mrs. Amy Abel-Kiker Mrs. Barbara Boyer Mrs Nancy Brown Cornett Mrs. Pricilla Esser Mrs. Muriel Jackson Dr. Ron Lemon Captain Willie May Mrs. Gloria McAfeee Wynn
NEW TRUSTEES Jim Barfield Dr. Cameron Garvin Jordan Griffith Pat Muse, CPA Terry Parker, CPA
2014-15 TRUSTEES
Joe Adams Jim Barfield Jim Burt Patricia Buttram Max Crook Monique Davis-Smith Joy Dyer John Fox Cameron Garvin Leigh Glenn
Ryan Griffin Betsy Griffith Jordan Griffith
Sally McKay
Richard Guerreiro
Heather Moore
Kristi Harpst Sally Heard Chris Howard Amber Lawson Blake Lisenby
Canaan Marshall Alex Morrison Pat Muse Aubrey Newby Terry Parker Claude Smith Lesli Underwood
2014-15 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Chair – Heather Moore Chair-elect – Alex Morrison Honorary Chair – Jim Barfield Secretary – Max Crook Treasurer – Terry Parker, CPA Counsel – Blake Lisenby Advocacy/Public Relations – Jim Burt
Education/Cottage – Aubrey Newby Events – Betsy Griffith Friends of Rose Hill – Chris Howard Membership and Past Chair – Joy Dyer Preservation – Ryan Griffin Young Patrons – Kristi Harpts
HEATHER MOORE
Insuring Investment
Ensuring CompaMbility
Intown Historic Districts Must Play Catch-‐up with their Suburban Counterparts
Cripple Creek Countering Black Hawk Abuses With New Legislation
HISTORIC PRESERVATION LAWS ARE BAD!
Fight historic preservaMon regulaMons and oppose historic preservaMon laws. They are .
March 19, 2014 Colorado by Rick Langenberg: What a difference 20 years can make in the volaMle arena of limited stakes gambling In the early years of ringing slots, Cripple Creek and local casino developers o]en collided with state history buffs over their
and the local historic commi/ee was called the “hysterical society.” And at one point, Cripple Creek even joined Black Hawk proposed preservaMon rules and guidelines
in opposing a sweeping legislaMve measure to give the state more say over new projects.
CAMDEN POINTE, Acworth, GA
1. No basketball goals, trampolines or swingsets 2. Doghouse must conform to design of home 3. No leaves can accumulate on lawns 4. Garage doors must be color coordinated with house 5. No chain-‐link fences 6. No signs including poliMcal signs 7. Interior treatments do not require approval but all curtains must be white 8. All repainMng must be approved even if it is the same color as before 9. No flags or banners except for the US flag on appropriate holidays
If any of those might apply to you, you are not only annoying your neighbors, but you're breaking the law. See Official Code of Cobb County GA, Chapter 10, ArMcle 1 (Nuisance Animals) Nuisance animal means any animal that:
(1) Damages, soils, defiles, eliminates or defecates on private property other than its owner's property or on public property; (2) Causes unsanitary or offensive condiMons or otherwise endangers public health, welfare or safety; (3) Causes a disturbance by barking, howling or other noisemaking for a period of more than 15 minutes; (4) Chases vehicles, bicycles, or people; (5) Is in estrus and not confined in a manner which can keep it away from intact males of the same species; or (6) Causes serious annoyance to a neighboring residence and interferes with the reasonable use and enjoyment of that property.
CompaMble Infill
Sense of Place (through history or by design)
(by covenant or regulaMon)
Investment Protected
Tout Ensemble: New Orleans Vieux Carre District
How to determine compatibility for new structures in a relatively (visually) consistent historic district by Pratt Cassity
FRESH...Infill should be FRESH!
F - Footprint and Foundation. The footprint and foundation of the new structure should be similar to the ones surrounding the new structure.
R - Roof shape.
The new roof should match existing roofs in pitch, complexity and orientation.
E – Envelope.
If you shrink wrapped a building and removed everything but the shrink wrap, what’s left is the envelope. The new structure should match the existing in projections, height, bulk, relationships between height and width, etc.
S – Skin. What is the envelope clad in?
What is the surface material and its characteristics? New structures should be clad in a visually and physically similar material.
H – Holes.
Where are the doors, windows, attic vents, etc.? How are the divided and segmented? Is it an asymmetrical arrangement or is it more symmetrical? The rhythm of those holes should be repeated. And for a French touch to FRESH. Try: Lé FRESH
Lé – Landscape elements. Driveways, sidewalks, fences, tree canopy, retaining walls, foundation plantings (or not), appurtenant structures (garages, tool sheds, garden pavilions), lighting, formality. Note: This mnemonic trick helps make buildings fit in...it does not help them be great architecture. Note:There is no mention of style, date or other information that normally describes the building for other historic preservation programs.
FOOTPRINT
ROOF SHAPE
ENVELOPE
SKIN
HOLES
RelaMonship Between Solids and Voids
2014 ANNUAL PRESERVATION AWARDS
Residential
Commercial, Institutional, or Municipal
2014 MEMB ERS’ CHOIC E
Revitalization
Preservation Stewardship
Maryel Ramsay Battin Award
President Bill Underwood
Jenny Thurston Award
Bette-Lou Brown
Thad E. Murphey Award
College Hill Alliance