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Issue No 126 September 28, 2008
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FEATURE STORIES:
8. Speaker of Legislature Objects to Tower Proposal
IN THIS ISSUE: EVENTS submit an event
1. Beaver Tales: Canadian Art and Design
NEWS | ACTION submit a news or action item
8. Speaker of Legislature Objects to Tower Proposal
LINKS submit a link
11. Globe and Mail: Preserving Don Mills
SUPPORT 33. Support Built Heritage News
CONTACT
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| EVENTS : Issue No 126 September 28, 2008 | |||||||||||
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1. Beaver Tales: Canadian Art and Design
Editor's Note: This will be a must see exhibition, unfortunately I got the notice too late to post in time for the opening | ||||||||||
2. Elizabeth's Story
Orphaned at 2, an heiress at 16, married at 19, and the mother of 8, Elizabeth Fisher Stong led a fascinating 19th century life. Watch as storyteller, Pauline Grondin, brings Elizabeth to life and learn the story behind the original settlers on the land of Black Creek Pioneer Village. As the tale unfolds enjoy warm apple cider and a fall harvest treat in the cozy lamplit historic Half Way House. | |||||||||||
3. Industrial Strength
The places associated with Canada's industrial past were once a neglected corner of the heritage movement. Today the conservation and rehabilitation of these places of extraction, production and process represent some of the most innovative and exciting examples of heritage site development, adaptive reuse and urban revitalization. The three day conference will explore directions for the future. There will also be time to visit some nearby sites that have made this area an industrial heartland since the early 19th century. Sponsored by Parks Canada and by the City of Hamilton in celebration of the 150th Anniversary of Drinking Water in Hamilton. | |||||||||||
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The first public tours of the NOWhouse, retrofitted wartime bungalow, renovations reduce emmissions by 5.4 tonnes per year and reduced energy use to near zero. | ||||||||||
The Trent Hills Heritage Committee will be hosting a walking tour to celebrate the launch of the newly published architectural brochure entitled "Details" | |||||||||||
6. William Kilbourn Lecture, John Campbell
The 34th Annual Heritage Toronto Awards and 12th Annual William Kilbourn Memorial Lecture. During the evening’s festivities, Mr. John Campbell, CEO, Waterfront Toronto will deliver the William Kilbourn Memorial Lecture, “A Shore Thing: The Future of Toronto’s Waterfront”. | |||||||||||
Fort York is holding two weekends of touring their grounds after dark. Great fun for the family, but not too scary for the younger crowd. Hot chocolate and snacks included. | |||||||||||
| NEWS | ACTION : Issue No 126 September 28, 2008 | |||||||||||
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8. Speaker of Legislature Objects to Tower Proposal
The neighbours are mad. Over 300 people attended the public meeting on the proposed "twin towers" at 21 Avenue Road. The towers at 44 and 48 stories will be higher than anything around them. | ||||||||||
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9. Sharon Temple Context Threatened by Development
More in next issue, but late breaking news from Sharon Temple Museum Society secretary, John Sewell is that the Temple Society is objecting to a proposed Official Plan amendment to allow development adjacent to the Sharon Temple grounds. | ||||||||||
10. Neptis: Shaping the Toronto Region, Past, Present, and Future The Neptis Foundation is pleased to announce the release of a new study entitled Shaping the Toronto Region, Past, Present, and Future: An exploration of the potential effectiveness of changes to planning policies governing greenfield development in the Greater Golden Horseshoe, written by Zack Taylor with John van Nostrand. | |||||||||||
| LINKS : Issue No 126 September 28, 2008 | |||||||||||
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11. Globe and Mail: Preserving Don Mills
The monsters are feasting in Don Mills McMansions are slowly erasing the Don Mills that made history as one of Canada's first postwar planned communities | ||||||||||
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12. Death of Author Patricia McHugh Remembering Patricia McHugh The staff of MAS lost a beloved colleague this week. Patricia “Pat” McHugh was chief librarian and archivist of the MAS Reference Library, incorporating the Greenacre Reference Resource. Although Pat volunteered her time to the MAS, she took her job as seriously as a full-time member of the staff, bringing to it tremendous creativity, energy and dedication. She was also ambitious. Three years ago, she initiated a project to catalog all MAS records of the past 30 years – a long-range initiative to preserve the scores of projects, achievements, and milestones of our organization’s history. She also managed a group of six volunteers who have been assisting with this effort. | ||||||||||
13. Ottawa Citizen: A 1960s bungalow was an unusual flashpoint between heritage advocates and a developer
Home on Stanley Avenue in New Edinburgh is not a heritage building in itself, but has been saved because it is part of one of 16 designated heritage districts in the city. Last December, when a developer announced plans to demolish a bungalow on Stanley Avenue in New Edinburgh and replace it with six townhouses, neighbours leapt into action. For eight months, they fought against a project they believed was too big for the neighbourhood, disruptive and out of character. Along the way, many came to believe that the system supposed to protect historic places is inadequate and that intensification trumps heritage. That's why the New Edinburgh Community Association is holding a public forum tonight. The collision between heritage and intensification; how neighbourhoods can organize; and how to influence city policies and practices will be the agenda. | |||||||||||
14. Waterloo Record: West Montrose may get historic protection
The famous covered bridge over the rippling waters of the Grand River is at the heart of a proposed cultural heritage landscape. The designation would help protect the rural landscape and historic buildings around the West Montrose landmark known locally as "The Kissing Bridge." "If this isn't a candidate, then what else is? It is iconic," said Robert Shipley, head of the University of Waterloo Heritage Resources Centre. | |||||||||||
15. The Independent Online (Brighton): Arson charges laid in fire
After the fire marshal conducted its investigation on the blaze at the heritage home, the matter was turned over to Northumberland OPP. Two men have been arrested in connection with a fire that ravaged a piece of Brighton history.Gerry Golloher, 44, owner of the house, at 2 Ontario St., and Joseph Kidman, 34, of Trent Hills, were charged with arson. Both are scheduled to appear at Brighton court on Nov. 5. It took 22 firefighters-14 from Brighton, eight from Cramahe - almost three hours to extinguish the blaze on the afternoon of Aug. 31 at the Georgian-style home. | |||||||||||
16. Hamilton Mountain News: Mountain Historical Society eyes former hospital buildings
The Hamilton Mountain Historical Society is asking the city's Heritage Committee to designate part of the former Hamilton Psychiatric Hospital as heritage sites. In a letter dated June 15, the society requested that the Gate House, Hickory House and Grove Hall be designated under the Ontario Heritage Act. The letter, which was presented to the Heritage Committee at its September meeting last week, stated it has "concerns" about the "endangered" status of the buildings because of "the current tenant's redevelopment plans." Pat Saunders, president of the Hamilton Mountain Heritage Society, said the society approved a motion to ask for the designation at its March meeting. "The vote wasn't unanimous,"she said. ";But a majority of (the members) wanted to designate them.' | |||||||||||
17. Windsor Star: City council meddling prompts heritage boss to resign
The long-time chairman of the city's heritage committee has resigned, saying he's angry over how the Olde Sandwich Towne heritage study is being used as a weapon in council's fight to stop the Ambasador Bridge from building a twin span. "I have a grave concern about potential political influences tainting the outcome of this study which may jeopardize the heritage welfare of Sandwich," said Greg Heil in his resignation letter. "I'm also concerned about the likely vigourous litigious fallout to which I could find myself personally exposed if I participate." The committee did give approval to the study's final report this week - which included homes on the east side of Indian Road within the study's designated boundaries. The bridge company owns a majority of the homes on Indian and wants to rip them down to make way for its twin span. | |||||||||||
18. Windsor Star: SOS Eglise gets "A building for a buck"
Diocese abandons plan to demolish St. Joachim church LAKESHORE -- Save Our Sanctuaries, the tenacious citizens' group that waged a seven-year battle to save historic St. Joachim Church from demolition, is celebrating a major victory that will be cheered by similar groups across Canada. Editor's Note: Also, late breaking news is that Annociation in Pointe-aux-Roches is also included for another dollar. Representatives of SOS Eglise were at Heritage Canada conference, and needless to say overjoyed at this turn of events. | |||||||||||
19. TheRecord.com / Waterloo Record: Heritage sites can boost tourism, city told
CAMBRIDGE - Treat the city's history as fuel for your economy, not a roadblock to the future, city council heard this week.Council unanimously endorsed a $100,000 heritage master plan Monday, but held off considering money to implement it until 2010."This is about opportunity," said Kathryn McGarry, a member of the city committee that helped create the master plan. She's also president of Heritage Cambridge.Celebrating old buildings and encouraging developers to reuse them makes the city more attractive to visitors with money to spend, she said. | |||||||||||
20. TheRecord.com / Waterloo Record: Cambridge leads in its heritage plan
For too many years, the grand heritage buildings of Waterloo Region have been sitting targets for bulldozer drivers and wrecking ball operators. For too long, the area's proud past has been a disposable commodity. But fortunately that reckless attitude itself is becoming a relic of the past. The latest evidence for this trend came in Cambridge this week when city politicians voted to make their city, after Toronto and Niagara Falls, just the third in Ontario to adopt a heritage master plan. What this means is that Cambridge will, in the near future, do an inventory of its historic buildings. Then it can determine what in the entire community is most in need of preserving while planning how the city can grow and change yet conserve its past. | |||||||||||
21. St. Catherine's Standard: Councillor aims to preserve history
It's the ultimate form of recycling. Take a factory, a house or a church that no one wants anymore, and make it useful again. It's an idea that's endorsed by the province, makes attractive neighbourhoods and gives communities a sense of place. It saves resources and cuts down on the amount of junk going to the landfill. Problem is, St. Catharines isn't very good at it. Whole books have been written about the built heritage that St. Catharines has lost, St. Patrick's Coun. Heather Foss said. | |||||||||||
22. St. Catherine's Standard: Seniors' residence 'a real blessing' - 32-unit affordable housing project opens on Page Street
All of the units in the 1895-era building have been rented out Like many seniors struggling to make ends meet, widow Lorraine Aleo was faced with tough choices when her rent was due. "I was in a real mess. My pension was $1,000 a month and I was paying 700- something in rent plus hydro," she said Friday, adding that didn't include phone and cable bills. "I had nothing left to live on." | |||||||||||
23. Sault Star: Baptists work to keep crumbling 103-year-old church together
First pastor was a former slave Centennial Baptist Church sits silently on a downtown street, its doors locked and window panes so clouded light has trouble getting in. The roof is sagging and some shingles are missing. The foundation has started to crack. A National Historic Landmark, the church was built by a black architect and was pastored by Rev. Elias Camp Morris, president from 1895 to 1922 of the National Baptist Convention USA, Inc., the largest historically African-American Baptist denomination in the country. Today, the original pews and the church pipe organ serve no heavenly purpose, and neither will get any use until the 103-year-old building itself can be restored and possibly turned into a cultural centre. Pigeons have replaced Protestants in the sanctuary. "It is on its last leg," says Henrietta Williams of Little Rock, president of the E. C. Morris Foundation and a former church member. "If we don't go on and move, it's going to continue to deteriorate. So we're at a crucial point." About $450,000 in private and state funds have been spent just to keep the building stable, and a restoration architect is working with the Morris Foundation. The federal government granted the project $300,000 in late 2006 toward renovating the exterior. But the grant was conditional upon the foundation getting matching funds. So far that has not happened. | |||||||||||
24. Children's museum in Philadelphia world's fair landmark
PHILADELPHIA -; Memorial Hall, one of the jewels of the Centennial Exposition of 1876, had lost its lustre many years ago. Rain poured inside through the magnificent but neglected glass dome, soaking elaborate plasterwork and pooling on the marble floors where buckets failed to catch the water. The granite facade was damaged and covered with grime. The east gallery was turned into an indoor swimming pool and basketball courts were installed. A police station complete with jail cells took up residence. After decades of deterioration, the breathtaking Beaux Arts building is regaining its lustre in anticipation of a new role as home of the popular Please Touch Museum. | |||||||||||
25. GUELPH MERCURY: When Guelph's old city hall was new
One hundred and 52 years ago today, on Sept. 18, 1856, citizens of Guelph gathered at a vacant site at the corner of market square to lay the cornerstone of the present city hall. | |||||||||||
26. Owen Sound Times: St. Mary's to CRB Hearing
St. Mary's designation hearing in the works Pre-hearing to find if objectors, city have common ground A provincial hearing about the proposed historical designation of the 1891 section of St. Mary's High School is to begin within two | |||||||||||
27. HALIFAX CHRONICLE HERALD: Towers threaten Halifax Heritage
Halifax heavies clash over heritage - Council meeting dominated by debate over office tower proposal "This is facade-ism," said Peter Delefes of Heritage Canada. "It A public hearing for a new downtown office development atop a block of historic buildings brought the big guns to Halifax city hall Tuesday night. The list of the 35 people who spoke -another 30 will speak next Tuesday because council's three-hour time slot couldn't accommodate everyone - read like a who's who in the world of heritage versus development. Members of Nova Scotia Business Inc., the Greater Halifax Partnership, Downtown Halifax Business Commission and Fusion Halifax lined up on the pro side of the project while members of the Heritage Trust of Nova Scotia, Heritage Canada Foundation and Tourism Industry Association of Nova Scotia were on the opposite side. The chairman of the Armour Group told council that his proposal, which would link existing buildings on the corner of Duke, Hollis and Lower Water streets with a six-storey glass tower above, is necessary to make the buildings viable. | |||||||||||
28. New York Magazine: The Glass Stampede
As this last great building boom winds down, our architecture critic asks: Does the new see-through city look better or worse than the one it replaced? A building-by-building survey.
Our city is molting. Bricks flake away. So do brittle fire escapes, terra-cotta encrustations, old paint, cracked stoops, faded awnings, sash windows, and stone laurels fashioned a century ago by Sicilian carvers. New York is shucking off its aging walk-ups, its small and mildewed structures, its drafty warehouses, cramped stores, and idle factories. In their place, the city is sprouting a hard, glistening new shell of glass and steel. Bright, seamless towers with fast elevators and provisional views spring up over a street-level layer of banks and drugstores. In some cities, a building retains the right to exist until it's proved irredeemable. Here, colossal towers are merely placeholders, temporary arrangements of future debris. New York lives by a philosophy of creative destruction. The only thing permanent about real estate is a measured patch of earth and the column of air above it. The rest is disposable. And the metamorphosis has sped up. In the past fifteen fat years, more than 76,000 new buildings have gone up, more than 44,000 were razed, another 83,000 were radically renovated—a rate of change that evokes those time-lapse nature films in which flowers spring up and wither in a matter of seconds. For more than a decade, we have awakened to jackhammers and threaded our way around orange plastic netting, calculating that, since our last haircut, workers have added six more stories to that high-rise down the block. Now that metamorphosis is slowing as the economy drags. Buildings are still going up, but the boom is winding down. Before the next one begins is a good time to ask, has this ferment improved New York or eaten away at the city's soul? Editor's Note: This is a very long article but well worth the time to read. The scenarios discussed and questions posed are little different from those described in editions of BHN | |||||||||||
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29. Lifewithoutbuildings:ROM addition in New York?
New TV Series Fringe Lifted a Libeskind Last night saw the official premiere of J.J. Abrams’ new series, Fringe (which was completely awesome by the way), but any architectural savvy television viewers who saw a “sneak peak” —authorized or otherwise—may have been surprised to see the work of a very familiar architect displaced from Toronto to New York City. The mysterious uber-corporation in Fringe, Massive Dynamic, had apparently built their headquarters right down the street from the Empire State Building in a structure that, as originally included in the pilot episode, can’t be mistaken for anything other than a Daniel Libeskind-inspired design. But it’s more than just inspired! It’s an exact replica of Libeskind’s Royal Ontario Museum. The fake-company has also used the building in their fake-website logo. Editor's Note: Fun | ||||||||||
30. New York Times: Recycling House Parts
This Old Recyclable Hous 1. THE WORST PART OF THE WHOLE PROJECT | |||||||||||
31. The Guardian: The neglect of our heritage is shameful - to be told it by outsiders doubly so
How, and why, did we get to the point where bureaucrats in Paris have to come to the rescue of British public design? British public design was once the finest in Europe. It is now unworthy of a banana republic. That is the message of Unesco's final warning this week as it ponders moving seven of Britain's 27 world heritage sites to "endangered" status. To those who resent being told how to guard their patrimony by an unelected foreign quango this is humiliation enough. Worse, the rebuke is merited. World heritage status, enjoyed by 885 sites on the planet, means absolutely nothing. The list, which includes everything from St Petersburg to the Great Barrier Reef, is the result of some parlour game by Paris bureaucrats, who sit around a table awarding medals to the creations of nature and mankind. It shines a spotlight on a selection of world monuments in the hope that this might shame owners and public authorities into protecting them. There are certainly worse parlour games than that. | |||||||||||
32. CBC TORONTO: U.N. agency condemns British failure to protect heritage sites UNESCO, the cultural arm of the United Nations, has threatened to put the Tower of London on a list of endangered world heritage sites unless British authorities act immediately to protect seven sites. Britain has failed to protect several major historical locales including Stonehenge, the neolithic ruins at Skara Brae, Orkney, as well as the old centres of Edinburgh and Bath, United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization officials say. | |||||||||||
| SUPPORT : Issue No 126 September 28, 2008 | |||||||||||
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| CONTACT : Issue No 126 September 28, 2008 | |||||||||||