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NCPTT’s Architecture & Engineering program encourages research and partnerships with organizations and institutions working to advance preservation technology for buildings and other structures. The program has taken part in numerous projects with significant potential impact on the architecture and engineering fields:

Professional Development Program for Engineers in Historic Preservation

Architecture and Engineering Summer Institute 2006 participants in front of Africa House at Melrose Plantation.

NCPTT continues working to improve preservation training opportunities for engineers. As part of the 2006 Summer Institute, Architecture and Engineering offered Historic Materials and Building Pathology (June 6-10) and Diagnostics Methodology & Treatment Strategies (June 12-16).

The Architectural Engineering Institute of the American Society of Civil Engineers and the American Institute of Architects Historic Resources Committee (AIA/HRC) provided continuing education units. Additional partners once again included the Association for Preservation Technology International, Northwestern State University, Cane River Creole National Historical Park, Cane River National Heritage Area and the Association for the Preservation of Historic Natchitoches.

In addition to preservation engineering training, the 2006 Summer Institute featured training in archeological prospection by David Morgan and cemetery monument conservation by Mary Striegel.

APTI Annual Conference

Andy Ferrell participated in a one day NCPTT sponsored colloquium on Disaster Response and Preparedness at the Association for Preservation Technology International conference in Atlanta, Ga. Ferrell presented information about NCPTT’s response to Hurricanes Katrina and Rita. Kirk
Cordell also presented at the symposium on the hurricanes’ impacts on the Gulf Coast states.

NCPTT Hurricane Response presentation screen shot.

Sustainable Historic Preservation

Architecture and Engineering continues researching sustainable practices for historic preservation towards collecting a body of knowledge on this emerging topic. The initial phase of the sustainability initiative has involved attending conferences and facilitating informal conversations with professionals on green topics and sustainable practices as related to historic preservation. Ferrell chaired a session on sustainable preservation at the 2006 Rethinking Sustainable Construction: Next Generation Green Buildings International Conference in Sarasota, Fla.

Screenshot of sustainability presentation.
 

A&E Assistant

Sarah Jackson joined the program in a permanent position as an architectural conservator on Oct. 1, 2006. Jackson came to NCPTT in June 2005 as a graduate intern to continue the testing for the study on the durability of traditional and modified limewash recipes. In Nov. 2005 she was hired as conservation research assistant for the Materials Research Program. Along with completing the testing for the limewash study she assisted in planning for the Advanced Cemetery Workshop held in July 2006. Before coming to NCPTT she worked as a graduate intern for the City of Savannah, Department of Cemeteries while pursuing her M.A. in Historic Preservation from the Savannah College of Art and Design. Her interest lies in preservation of historic structures and ways to utilize them in today’s society.

MAHR Interns

A&E is overseeing the work of interns J.C. Rivers and Rebecca Zarling, graduate students in the Master of Arts in Heritage Resources (MAHR) program at NSU. Rivers and Zarling are using global positioning technology to prepare an architectural survey to collect data related to the development of the City of Natchitoches for the Cane River GIS, a Geographic Information system developed by the Cane River National Heritage Area (CRNHA). A partnership between NSU and the NCPTT created assistantships for Rivers and Zarling to perform the survey work.

Summer Interns

A&E hosted three interns this summer: J.C. Rivers, a joint intern with CRNHA; Alec Bennett, a Presidential Management Fellow and historian for the National Cemetery Administration; and Nic Clark, a history undergrad from Centenery College. Bennett and Clark participated in and supported the summer engineering training and researched sustainable preservation and preservation field schools, respectively. Rivers began the architectural survey of Natchitoches detailed previously.

LSMSA Student Worker

Andrew Moore, a high school student at the Louisiana School for Math, Science and the Arts (LSMSA), is gathering web resources about sustainable design and smart growth issues related to historic preservation. These resources, including websites, PDF documents and PowerPoint presentations will be gathered online as part of the A&E website. Moore has worked with Ferrell to investigate emerging green products, techniques and services, including innovative insulation products and applications. LSMSA students are required to undertake community service hours every semester and NCPTT has benefited greatly by hosting a number of these students.

Preserve America Summit

Ferrell is a member of the panel formed to discuss Dealing with the Unexpected at the Preserve America Summit in New Orleans, Oct. 19-20. He met with fellow panelists in D.C. in August of this year for a preliminary discussion and to make recommendations that will be discussed further at the summit in New Orleans. Mrs. Laura Bush, First Lady of the United States and Honorary Chair of the Preserve America initiative, in cooperation with the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, will lead a national Preserve America Summit to mark the 40th anniversary of the passage of the National Historic Preservation Act. Summit participants will review the major components of the national historic preservation program and present their considerations designed to advance historic preservation programs and policy. In addition, Summit participants will generate unique and innovative ideas for assisting communities throughout the United States in developing the tools and processes necessary for advancing historic preservation on a local scale.

Lee H. Nelson Hall Landscape Plan

NCPTT continues working with Steve Noel of Jeffrey Carbo Landscape Architects & Site Planners in Alexandria, La, to implement a design for the grounds of Nelson Hall. The proposed landscape plan combines an understanding of the site’s historical development and aims to satisfy contemporary needs. Kirk Cordell, Kevin Ammons and Andy Ferrell have worked closely with Steve Noel. The design will be installed in 2006 after consultation with the Louisiana SHPO.

Lee Nelson Hall landscape plan.

Nelson Hall Improvements

Lee Nelson Hall accessibility ramp.In an effort to meet its strategic goal of developing a world-class training facility, NCPTT has undertaken several improvements to its headquarters at Lee Nelson Hall. The NCPTT kitchen was reconfigured to facilitate catering and better address staff needs and a new ADA compliant ramp was completed on the northeast corner of the building. The ramp increases accessibility, improves access to the elevator, and permits closure of the offices during off-hours events. Kevin Ammons and Andy Ferrell coordinated efforts to implement these projects, including consultation with the Louisiana SHPO on compliance issues.

Cooperative Agreements

Through a Fiscal Year 2006 cooperative agreement with the New Jersey Institute of Technology, A&E will support the development of a two week training program for the implementation of a four year preservation high school curriculum. The training focuses on teaching teachers and education administrators how to implement the preservation high school curriculum. The training program will be presented in individual cities across the nation.

In another Fiscal Year 2006 cooperative agreement, Tulane School of Architecture and NCPTT will produce, edit and publish a substantial body of information pertaining to the frontline preservation work of Tarps New Orleans to tarp historic structures in New Orleans immediately after Hurricanes Katrina and Rita A&E is currently working on additional cooperative agreements for Fiscal Year 2007 with US/ICOMOS for student exchanges and research, the Association for Preservation Technology International for increased cooperation on preservation technology research and training projects, and Louisiana State University School of Architecture for the use of emerging technologies for the efficient documentation of historic buildings and landscapes.

Preservation and Affordable Housing Program

A&E is continuing to explore the development of a program that would involve the rehabilitation of small vernacular structures as affordable and sustainable housing. The focus of the program would be to provide real world preservation experience using existing and emerging technologies to research, document and rehabilitate these resources. A number of professors from a variety of schools have expressed interest and it would be useful to have a summit to further develop this idea.

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Phone: (318) 356-7444  ·  Fax: (318) 356-9119

NCPTT - National Center for Preservation Technology and Training
645 University Parkway
Natchitoches, LA 71457

Updated: Thursday, April 19, 2007
Published: Sunday, January 11, 2009


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