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2004 Grant
Recipients
A Grant Program of the Preservation League of New York State and the New York State Council on the Arts
At
its August meeting, the Preserve New York Grant Program panel
selected 10 projects in eight counties for support totaling
$78,600. Preserve New York is a partnership grant program of
the Preservation League of New York State and the New York
State Council on the Arts.
To date, the program has provided
nearly $942,000 to 160 not-for-profit groups and municipalities
in support of their important local initiatives.
The municipalities
and organizations receiving grant awards in 2004 are: |
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BRONX COUNTY
Historic House Trust – Van
Cortlandt House, Bronx
contact: Sarah Landreth, Development Director,
212-360-8204
Grant of $5,000 toward the cost of preparing an historic
structure report for the Van Cortlandt House, constructed in 1748 for
Frederick Van Cortlandt. Now located in Van Cortlandt Park in the Bronx,
the house was once part of a 2000-acre estate which included a mill,
brewery and farmlands. The report will establish a construction
chronology for the house and compare the architectural evidence to
archival resources and other documentation on the property and the
Van Cortlandt family. The results will be used to guide restoration
of the mansion and development of the museum’s interpretation.
The
New York Botanical Garden, Bronx
contact: Gregory Long, President
and CEO, 718-817-8722
Grant of $7,500 toward
the cost of completing a cultural landscape report for the New York
Botanical Garden, acclaimed as one of the largest and most significant
of the botanical gardens in the United States and a National Historic
Landmark. The Garden’s historic landscape, buildings and gardens
are the work of some of the leaders of architectural, landscape and
garden design including Frederick Law Olmsted, Calvert Vaux, the Olmsted
Brothers, Beatrix Farrand and Marian Cruger Coffin. The report will
be prepared by Heritage Landscapes, Preservation Landscape Architects
and Planners, of Connecticut and Vermont, and will address the stewardship
of the Garden’s 250 acres which include 48 designed gardens and
collections.
CAYUGA COUNTY
City of Auburn,
Historic Resources Review Board
contact: Michael Long, Capital Improvement
Program Manager, 315-255-4115
Grant of $8,500 toward the cost of completing
a cultural resources survey of properties associated with Abolitionism
and African American life between 1820 and 1870 in Cayuga County. The
survey will identify the homes, churches, businesses and other sites
significant to the lives of freedom seekers and their sympathizers
throughout the City of Auburn and Cayuga County. Auburn, the home of
underground railroad leader Harriet Tubman and her supporters William
H. and Frances Seward, was especially active in the national Abolition
movement. The survey will be completed by Judith Wellman, Historical
New York Research Association of Fulton, and its results will be used
for planning, heritage tourism activities and landmark designations.
CHAUTAUQUA
COUNTY
Jamestown Urban Renewal
Agency, Jamestown
contact: Steve Centi, Executive Secretary, Jamestown
Urban Renewal Agency, 716-483-7541
Grant of $9,000 toward the cost
of completing an historic structure report for the Erie-Lackawanna
Railroad Station. This former passenger and freight station was built
in 1931 and continued service until 1970. Since then, the station languished
to the point that it was included as a threatened building in the League’s
2002 Seven to Save list. Thanks to new attention and funding, the station
is now the focus of downtown renewal efforts. The report will be prepared
by Clinton Brown Company Architecture of Buffalo and will be used to
guide structural repairs and mixed-use rehabilitation plans for this
Art Deco style landmark.
GREENE COUNTY
Lexington
Center for the Arts (Ensemble Studio Theatre), Lexington
contact: Jamie
Richards, Director, Lexington Center for the Arts, 212-247-4982
Grant
of $9,000 toward production of an historic structure report for the
1883 Lexington House, one of the last remaining Catskill hotels. The
building is now part of a complex of the Lexington Center for the Arts,
owned and operated by the Ensemble Studio Theatre which is based in
New York City. The Lexington House site also includes the former ice
house, carriage house and bowling alley. Lexington Center for the Arts
offers artist residencies, workshops and conferences to foster the
development of new works in theater, dance and music. There are also
public programs, exhibits and performances presented on the site. The
Center will work with preservation architect Marilyn Kaplan of Albany
to produce the report which will guide the rehabilitation of the Italianate
style building.
MONROE COUNTY
Town
of Gates, Gates
contact: Ralph Esposito, Town Supervisor, 585-247-6100
Grant of $8,000
toward the cost of completing an historic structure report for the
Hinchey House. This Italianate style residence was built between 1874
and 1880 and is remarkably intact. Facing an uncertain future, the
Town and the Gates Historical Society collaborated to acquire the property
and plan for its use as a museum. The report will be prepared by Bero
Architecture of Rochester and its results will be used to guide restoration
and interpretation of this local and National Register landmark.
NASSAU
COUNTY
Sea
Cliff Landmarks Preservation Commission,
Village of Sea Cliff
contact: Naomi
Curtis, Chair, Landmarks Preservation Commission, 516-676-1566
Grant
of $10,000 toward the cost of a cultural resources survey for the village.
Originally the site of a Methodist camp, the Village of Sea Cliff is
located on Oyster Bay and retains the street patterns and late 19th-century
architecture common to camp communities. The survey will be conducted
by Nora Lucas, a consultant based in Mamaroneck, and will guide designations
of landmarks and historic districts at the local, state and national
levels. It will also serve as an important planning tool for the commission
which works closely with the local planning, zoning and architectural
review boards to guide development in the community.
NEW
YORK COUNTY
Hamilton Heights/West Harlem
Community Preservation Organization, New York City
contact: Yuien
Chin, Executive Director, 201-583-6730
Grant of $9,600 toward the cost
of a cultural resource survey of the Manhattanville neighborhood in
West Harlem, originally a separate village settled in 1806. Eric Washington,
a New York City author and historian, will produce the survey and a
nomination to the State and National Registers of Historic Places. The
survey area is located between 125th and 133rd Streets from the Hudson
River to Broadway, and is characterized by structures relating to transportation,
industry and dairy processing. These include the 1900 Riverside Drive
Viaduct, the 1904 Broadway IRT subway viaduct, the 1923 Studebaker
Building, and the 1907 Prentis Hall.
Historic
Districts Council, New York City
contact: Simeon Bankoff, Executive
Director, 212-614-9107
Grant of $7,000 toward the cost of preparing
a nomination to the State and National Registers of Historic Places
for the proposed John Street/Maiden Lane historic district. The Lower
Manhattan area has an especially rich and intact collection of early
skyscrapers and office buildings constructed between the 1880s and
1920s, some designed by prominent New York architects. However, post-9/11
development plans threaten the integrity of the area and it was included
in the League’s 2003 Seven to Save listing. The nomination of
approximately 60 buildings will be prepared by Andrew Dolkart of New
York City and will be used for community education, advocacy and landmark
designation purposes.
SULLIVAN COUNTY
Village
of Liberty, Liberty
contact: Allan Berube, Village Trustee, 914-866-0994
Grant of $5,000
toward the cost of preparing a nomination to the State and National
Registers of Historic Places for the proposed downtown historic district
in the Village of Liberty. The project will expand the current two-block
historic district to one that includes most of Main Street, an intact
commercial area of approximately 125 buildings. The nomination will
be prepared by Neil Larson and Associates of Woodstock and supports
the village’s strong revitalization program.
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For more information or to discuss your proposal,
please contact the Leagues’s regional directors of Technical
and Grant Programs:
Eastern New York, including NYC and
Long Island - Erin
Tobin - 518-462-5658 x12
Central and Western
New York, including Southern Tier - Tania
Werbizky - 607-272-6510 (Ithaca) |
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