Call for Nominations: 2025 Excellence Awards

The Preservation League of NYS has officially opened nominations for their 2025 Excellence in Historic Preservation Awards. The League's annual Excellence Awards program shines a light on the people who are using historic preservation to make our world better — through exemplary restoration projects, indispensable publications, individual action, and organizational distinction. New in 2025: The Preservation Trades Award, honoring individuals or teams that demonstrate exceptional skill, commitment, and creativity in traditional trades practices.

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HDC Annual Conference: Challenges and Opportunities for Historic Affordable Housing

On Saturday, March 29, League President Jay DiLorenzo took part in Historic District Council’s 2025 conference, “Challenges and Opportunities for Historic Affordable Housing.” Jay spoke as part of the panel exploring Challenges and Opportunities for Historic Affordable Housing, alongside Mark Ginsberg, Founding Partner of Curtis + Ginsberg Architects, Jenna Breines, Director of Real Estate Development at West Side Federation for Senior and Supportive Housing, Inc (WSFSSH), and panel moderator Mariana Mogilevich, Editor-in-Chief of Urban Omnibus at the Architectural League of New York.

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Announcing the 2025 Preservation Opportunity Fund Grantees

"The League's Preservation Opportunity Fund provides crucial capital funding for urgent preservation projects," said Caitlin Meives, Director of Preservation at the Preservation League of NYS. "We are thrilled to be able to support the hands-on preservation work each of our grantees are undertaking, ensuring these historic places can continue to serve their communities for many years to come."

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2025 Advocacy Week Recap

Preservation Advocacy Week is a chance for preservationists from across the country to meet face to face with their Congressional representatives, educate them about the benefits of historic preservation, and ask for their support for critical preservation programs. This year, the New York delegation joined over 200 other advocates, representing 45 states and territories.

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Seven to Save: 2025-2026 Edition

The Preservation League of NYS is thrilled to announce its biennial listing of the most at-risk historic sites around the state. The 2025-2026 Seven to Save list includes buildings and landscapes, represents communities both urban and rural, and showcases many eras of our state’s history. The listings themselves are both singular and representative — illustrating pervasive issues impacting not just these sites, but sites like them across the state and beyond.

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New York State Historic Preservation Organizations Speak Out Against the Rewriting of Our History

The Preservation League of NYS drafted a statement decrying recent actions by the federal government to rewrite and censor history, notably by removing all mention of Transgender and Queer people from the Stonewall National Monument website. We aim to show a united front by joining our voice with our colleagues to condemn this erasure — and historic erasure of any kind.

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Language City: Author Talk with Ross Perlin

“…in whatever way in your life, in your work, kind of add the lens of language to how you're seeing environments and situations… we live in still a fundamentally multilingual world, very much a multilingual city and state, and of course it can seem like it's a challenge but also it's a huge opportunity — something to kind of embrace and value and wonder at. So I I hope some sense of wonder also kind of emerges through Language City.

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Read, Watch, and Experience Black History This Month — And All Year

Since Black History Month falls in February, and since it is cold and snowy in New York, we thought in addition to rounding up a few places to experience Black history, we’d also pair those places with a book or a documentary for anyone less inclined to brave the elements. It’s also a good reminder that Black history exists all the time — so check out some books from your local library and support your local PBS station this winter, and then make sure to visit the places that are promoting this history through the year. There are countless places around New York State doing incredible work to preserve and celebrate Black history and it is always a good time to support them.

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Join Us in Honoring Roberta Brandes Gratz at the 2025 Pillar of New York Awards Gala

The Preservation League of New York State is excited to announce that the 2025 Pillar of New York Awards Gala will take place on Monday, May 19, at the iconic Rainbow Room in New York City. This prestigious gathering will shine a spotlight on the incredible contributions of Roberta Brandes Gratz, a passionate advocate for historic preservation and urban revitalization. Gratz has demonstrated unparalleled commitment to advancing historic preservation efforts, making her an ideal recipient of this statewide recognition. 

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Trade Stories

There is no preservation without folks who are skilled in traditional trades. The people who do the physical work of preserving and restoring historic buildings and structures are essential — and this skilled workforce is dwindling. In an effort to shine a light on what a career in the preservation trades looks like, we’ve launched a video series to highlight individual tradespeople who represent a small snapshot of the future of this workforce. Funded through a grant from the Historic Preservation Education Foundation with additional support from the Peggy N. & Roger G. Gerry Charitable Trust., Trade Stories features six individuals who have all traveled their own paths to a career in the trades.

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Technical Assistance Grants - 2024

ue of New York State and their program partners at the New York State Council on the Arts are thrilled to announce the recipients of their 2024 Technical Assistance Grants. During this grant cycle, 20 projects representing 13 counties across the state have been selected by an independent panel of preservation professionals. A total of $75,290 was awarded.

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The Slip: Author Talk with Prudence Peiffer

The Slip: The New York City Street That Changed American Art Forever details the story of an obscure little street at the lower tip of Manhattan and the remarkable artists who got their start there. An ambitious and singular account of a time, a place, and a group of extraordinary people, The Slip investigates the importance of community, and makes an argument for how we are shaped by it, and how it in turns shapes our work. In this webinar we were joined by author Prudence Peiffer who discussed her research and highlights from the book.

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Spiritualism's Place: Author Talk with Averill Earls & Elizabeth Masarik

In Spiritualism's Place, four friends and scholars who produce the acclaimed Dig: A History Podcast, share their curiosity and enthusiasm for uncovering stories from the past as they explore the history of Lily Dale. Located in western New York State, the world's largest center for Spiritualism was founded in 1879. Lily Dale has been a home for Spiritualists attempting to make contact with the dead, as well as a gathering place for reformers, a refuge for seekers looking for alternatives to established paths of knowledge, and a target for skeptics. In this webinar, two of the book’s authors, Averill Earls and Elizabeth Garner Masarik, give an overview of their research and how the book came together.

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Seemingly Lost Causes, Spectacular Comebacks

By the time some historic places end up on the Seven to Save list they have suffered from years of vacancy and/or significant disrepair. Our final theme in this year's anniversary retrospective will highlight three such listings that have since gone on to have incredible transformations: the former Eastman Dental Dispensary in Rochester, the former TWA Flight Center in Queens, and Bent’s Opera House in Medina.

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Main Streets across New York

Main Streets serve as the physical, economic, and cultural center of a community, home to municipal offices, banks, local businesses, and community gathering spaces. They can be one block long or ten (or more!); rural, suburban, or urban; with simple single story wood frame buildings or high style multi-story masonry buildings, and everything in between. Over the past 25 years, many Main Streets across the state have landed on our Seven to Save list – from Downtown State Street in Schenectady back in 2000 to the listing of Downtown Oneonta’s Historic District just last year

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