MASTER OF PRESERVATION STUDIES FALL 2015
ANNUAL PROGRAM UPDATE LETTER FROM THE DIRECTOR Formal education in architectural preservation, including engagement in real and meaningful preservation activities in the New Orleans region, has always been a hallmark of the MPS program and new ground was broken this past semester especially. The director of Children’s Hospital asked MPS faculty and students to document and offer preservation recommendations for Children’s Hospital’s expansion into the historically significant Maritime Hospital on Tchoupitoulas Street. This offered a perfect opportunity for the MPS Studio II: Urban Conservation to participate in one of the City’s largest preservation projects. The class of 15 students worked in coordination with Eskew+Dumez+Ripple, architects for the hospital, and focused on the two oldest structures on the campus. Professor Beth Jacob’s description of the project in this newsletter says more. The spring field trip to Panama as part of the International Practice course was especially successful in large part due to the enthusiastic help given us by MPS alumni Daniel Young-Torquemada and Malena Rojas. The superb site visits and presentations were given by an array of impressive local professionals, many with Tulane ties. Student Nathan Lott’s insightful reflections on the trip, included later in this update, speak to the merits of getting out there and experiencing preservation practice in other countries first-hand. As always, it was a special pleasure seeing the MPS class of 2015 graduate and begin to enter the profession. Most have already reported that they are engaged in interesting new career pursuits. The essay by recent graduate Erin Guerra testifies to the amazing voyage of intellectual discovery one can undertake in completing the capstone Thesis experience. There will be several changes to courses and staffing planned for the coming year. Laura Blokker will be teaching History of North
American Architecture, while conservator and digital documentation expert Michael Shoriak will be taking over Studio I: Building Conservation. We will miss Professors Daniel Hammer and Eugene Cizek in those roles but salute the new steps they are taking in their careers, including Daniel’s rise to the position of Deputy Director of the Historic New Orleans Collection and Gene’s completion of a book on preserving Faubourg Marigny. Both will continue as occasional lecturers and resources for the program. In addition, Marie Chinappi’s role as assistant to the Director is being assumed by Margot Ferster (MPS ’15) who won the Outstanding Service to the MPS Program Award at graduation in May. In entering my fifth year as director of the MPS program, it has been especially satisfying to see so many positive changes to the program come to fruition. Updates to the content and rigor of the program and some operational changes to the department have occurred through hard work and the cooperation of many, and I especially thank Dean Kenneth Schwartz and Associate Dean for Academics Wendy Redfield for their support. The Tulane MPS experience is operating at an all-time high with the entire faculty focused on providing the best quality education of is kind in architectural heritage management. Onward we go! John Stubbs Director and Favrot Senior Professor of Practice
This MPS Program Update features news as well as essays from faculty and students on some of the key aspects of the program:
INTERNATIONAL FOCUS, NEW ORLEANS FOCUS, COMMUNITY SERVICE, AND STUDENT TRAVEL