Winter 2010 GHPA Newsletter

Page 1

For Preservation the newsletter of

Volume 20, No. 1

www.ghpa.org

n

greater houston preservation alliance

Houston’s local partner of the National Trust for Historic Preservation

Winter 2010

the 2010 good brick awards

Core House project: Rice Building Workshop and Project Row Houses created a prototype for affordable historic renovations.

courtesy jan smulcer

courtesy chad loucks

courtesy charles stava

1001 Lubbock St.: Ann and Salvador Guercio rescued the 1887 Tajan House, a classic Victorian cottage in the Old Sixth Ward.

2315 Looscan Lane: Jan and Ron Smulcer are being honored for their sensitive rehabilitation of the 1937 Jacques P. Adoue House.

Awards mark best in local preservation About the Cornerstone Dinner Greater Houston Preservation Alliance will present the 2010 Good Brick Awards during the Cornerstone Dinner at 7 p.m. Friday, February 5, at River Oaks Country Club, 1600 River Oaks Boulevard. Bob Fretz, Jr. is the honorary chair along with the gentlemen of GHPA’s Board of Directors. Tickets start at $200. Courtesy 1940 Air Terminal Museum

When Greater Houston Preservation Alliance presents the 2010 Good Brick Awards on Friday, February 5, the award-winning projects will run the gamut from a modest West End bungalow to a gracious Courtlandt Place home and include the volunteer effort to preserve one of Houston’s aviation landmarks. The annual awards showcase outstanding historic preservation efforts and the people who make them happen. This year, 13 projects were chosen to receive awards from the 32 project nominated. A jury of design and preservation professionals, former Good Brick Award winners and community leaders selected the recipients. GHPA board member and former Houston Chronicle home design editor Madeleine McDermott Hamm chaired this year’s jury. “The majority of this year’s nominations were for the preservation of private homes,” said Madeleine Hamm. “The quality of the residential projects reflects the high level of pride and personal commitment found

Municipal Air Terminal: The Houston Aeronautical Heritage Society will receive the Stewart Title Award for preserving and restoring the 1940 Air Terminal Museum.

among homeowners in Houston’s historic neighborhoods.” In addition to the juried awards, GHPA will present its 2010 President’s Award to the Heritage Society for more than 50 years of preserva-

tion and heritage education programs in Houston and Harris County. The Heritage Society is best known for preserving the historic structures at Sam Houston Park downtown. “When the Heritage Society was

Changes in GHPA board

david bush

Immanuel Lutheran update Members of Immanuel Lutheran Church have voted to delay demolition of their historic Gothic Revival sanctuary until May. GHPA representatives continue to meet with church and community leaders to find a new use for the building on Cortlandt and E. 15th Street in the Heights. The church was dedicated in 1932 and is a contributing building in the Houston Heights Historic District (East).

For reservations and information, call 713-216-5000. To make a reservation online, visit www.ghpa.org/awards. Proceeds benefit the programs and projects of Greater Houston Preservation Alliance. Since 1978, GHPA has promoted the preservation and appreciation of Houston’s historic architectural and cultural resources. founded in 1954, it pioneered the historic preservation movement in Houston,” said GHPA Executive Director Ramona Davis. “We’re very Please see Good Bricks, Page 3

museum of houston

Exhibit to focus on local legal legends

A line of thunderstorms kept attendance down, but did not dampen the spirit of GHPA’s 2009 Annual Meeting on October 29 at the 1940 Air Terminal Museum. During the meeting, Larry E. Whaley succeeded Tony Abyad as President of the Board of Directors, GHPA’s highest volunteer office. “I am honored that the Board of Directors of GHPA have entrusted me with the presidency this year,” said Whaley. “I look forward to working with our exceptional staff, board, volunteers and supporters.” “Over the years we have made steady progress in establishing a preservation ethic in Houston. Larry E. Whaley We do make a difference. I am excited about where we are, and where we can go to further the preservation of our historic treasures,” he said. Whaley has served on the Board since 2004 and joined the Executive Committee as treasurer in 2006. He is the president and founding partner of HaynesWhaley Associates, Inc., structural engi-

The Museum of Houston, GHPA’s innovative online archive and exhibit project, is continuing to move forward thanks to a $150,000 grant from Houston Endowment Inc. The grant allows the museum to continue developing its digital repository, which features items contributed by Houston’s leading libraries, archives, museums and universities. The Center for Digital Scholarship at Rice University, a project partner, is creating a search system that will allow visitors to the MoH Web site to more easily access the repository’s historic documents, photographs, maps and architectural drawings. Another grant from the Brown Foundation is funding the museum’s newest online exhibit, in which some of Houston’s most recognizable legal figures, including Richard “Racehorse” Haynes, Dick and Mike DeGuerin and Diana Marshall, will discuss their storied careers. The exhibit is based on a series of video in-

Please see Board, Page 2

Please see Museum, Page 2


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.