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Preservation 2030
Pre-conference lecture series
Thursday, February 28, 2008
Pre-Conference Lecture #1
6:30pm, Parish Hall, St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, 131 East 10th
Street at 2nd Avenue, Manhattan This program is co-sponsored
by Pratt Institute’s Graduate Historic Preservation Program.
There are many areas of New York City
that possess unique amenities but do not meet the criteria defined
in the Landmarks Law for designation. Because of decisions made
during the 1961 revision of the New York City Zoning Resolution,
planning practice here largely does not deal with or regulate the
aesthetics of place – the color, scale or type of building
materials, which so affect the visual feel of a neighborhood. Arguably,
the time has come to craft a different model, in which aesthetic
concerns are central to neighborhood planning efforts. What framework
for neighborhood planning can be devised to focus attention on the
built environment as inevitable changes take hold within the public
realm?
The panel discussion, moderated by Carol Clark, Adjunct Associate
Professor, Columbia University’s Graduate School of Architecture,
Planning and Preservation, will feature Sarah Kelly, Executive Director,
Boston Preservation Alliance; Christopher J. Ise, Principal Planner,
Providence, R.I.; Mark Ginsberg, FAIA, Partner, Curtis & Ginsberg
Architects LLP; Julia Vitullo-Martin, Senior Fellow, Manhattan Institute;
and Eric Allison, Coordinator of the Historic Preservation Graduate
Program at Pratt Institute.
Thursday, March 6, 2008
Pre-Conference Lecture #2
6:30pm, Parish Hall, St. Mark's Church in-the-Bowery, 131 East 10th
Street at 2nd Avenue, Manhattan
According to PlaNYC 2030, New York
City’s population is expected to grow by one million people
within the next 25 years. However significant, this is not the first
population boom our city will have endured. Since it first was established
as a center of the Dutch fur trade New York has been no stranger
to growing populations and the commensurate physical growing pains.
This lecture will examine two eras that saw sudden influxes of new
residents, the factors that motivated these large-scale migrations,
and the city’s attempts to accommodate these new arrivals.
Noted architectural historian and New York Sun columnist Francis
Morrone will discuss the turn of the 20th century, a period during
which New York City gained more than two million new residents in
approximately twenty years. Dr. Jeffrey Kroessler, author of New
York, Year by Year, will examine the post-WWII expansion in urban
areas throughout the five boroughs.
*These events are free and open to
the public. For reservations, please call the Historic Districts
Council at (212) 614-9107 or email kmorith@hdc.org.
Register
for the Conference
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