Tulane Preservation Alumni Group Tulane Master of Preservation Studies Alumni Newsletter • Fall/Winter 2014
MPS wins state grant amidst busy fall semester The Tulane Master of Preservation Studies program had a busy fall semester as 15 new fulltime students, several double majors, certificate and part-time students began their studies and as a grant from the Louisiana State Historic Preservation Office was awarded to MPS Director John Stubbs to pursue Phase II of the New Orleans Preservation Timeline Project. The New Orleans Preservation Timeline, a web-based tool that lists significant events, people, organizations and places in the history of New Orleans’ preservation movement, debuted in April 2014 at the Preservation Matters III conference, which was hosted by the Tulane School of Architecture and the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. The generous grant will allow for the expansion of the Timeline from 35 to 100 entries, as well as other site upgrades. The incoming first year students, all but one of whom came to the program from outside of New Orleans, had a rigorous Fall course load. New technology seminars were led by Cypress Building Conservation partner Michael Shoriak, a young and dynamic expert in digital documentation and building conservation techniques, and in a course called U.S. Field Studies and Advocacy, led by Danielle Del Sol, students visited a different preservation organization each week to experience the different ways that preservation practice plays out in the “real world.” The course culminated with a group trip to the National Trust for Historic Preservation conference in Savannah, Ga., where students attended a variety of sessions, from lectures to hands-on crafts workshops. The students traveled to plantations along River Road and to Natchitoches, La. and Natchez, Miss. with professors Gene Cizek and Cynthia Steward as part of Studio I: Building Conservation. Steward will also be busy with students come Spring semester as she leads a new course, the Economics and Practice of Preservation. MPS faculty have seen successes of past student project sites reap the benefits of increased awareness this fall. The Treme Market Branch building and St. Maurice Church, sites of Studio II student projects in 2012 and 2013, respectively, were both locations for P.3 (Prospect 3) art installations. And the Dew Drop Inn, the famed but long-neglected jazz site in Central City that program director John Stubbs examined with students in 2012, is now in the midst of revitalization with the help of Tulane City Center thanks in Current MPS students (left to right) Elizabeth large part to the attention the MPS students brought to the site. The new year is already shaping up to be robust, with an impressive number of Schultz, Carol Knight, Fallin Steffen and Trudy interested applicants vying for spot by the end of December for next Fall. The Andrzejewski pose with preservation economics MPS faculty wish all alumni a wonderful and prosperous new year, with yet more guru Donovan Rypkema at this year’s National Trust conference in Savannah, Ga. accomplishments in architectural heritage conservation.
Since katrina: mps student carol knight returns to finish her degree
“I’ll eventually go back and finish it.” I must have said that to myself a hundred times in the eight years that had passed since I watched New Orleans disappear into the rearview mirror of my Uhaul as I began my trek back to Maryland. I first came to New Orleans and the Tulane School of Architecture in 2003 with the intent of completing both a Master of Architecture as well as a Master of Preservation Studies. As I geared up for the Fall semester of 2005, news of a tropical depression began filtering through the headlines. Having been in New Orleans a few years, I had learned to tune out the hurricane doomsayers. The depression gained strength and was dubbed ‘Katrina’ as it bore down on Florida. Having watched the projected paths wobble between Texas and the panhandle, I ignored the chatter and enjoyed my daily commute bouncing down the streetcar line into the French Quarter. I had been dead set on staying in New Orleans, having experienced tortuous evacuations in years past. But, with unrelenting doubt hanging in the back of my mind, I pulled out of my driveway and headed towards the interstate in the darkness of the early Sunday morning hours. continued page 2