Center for Architecture and Building Science Research at NJIT Historic Preservation, Center for Architecture and Building Science

Research

Historic Preservation

Kate Burns Ottavino
Director

Mary Delano
Research Associate

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Delano@njit.edu

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Historic Preservation Research Project

High School for the Preservation Arts Project

The Need

The concept for a High School for the Preservation Arts is the result of The World Monuments Fund's (WMF) 1993 symposium, Employment Strategies for the Restoration Arts: Craft Training in the Service of Historic Preservation. The symposium highlighted: the absence of nationwide standards for the craft skills used in historic preservation; the limited number of existing U.S. programs to train people in these highly specialized skills needed to maintain our rich architectural legacy; the fact that historic preservation revitalizes communities; the increasing success of the preservation movement leading to greater numbers of designated historic districts; and the resulting need for skilled preservation artisans.

According to a recent survey by the New York City Landmarks Preservation Commission, there are more than 1107 individual landmarks, 83 historic districts and 23,056 landmarked structures in New York City. Many of these will need restoring in the future with few skilled crafts people to fill the anticipated need.

With this in mind, New York City former Council Member Ken Fisher envisioned the establishment of a high school curriculum dedicated to preservation training that would significantly benefit many New York inner city youth and at the same time provide an important resource for preserving our cultural heritage. Graduates of the Preservation Arts and Technology High School program will provide an educated work force in great demand locally, nationally, and internationally, and they can expect to earn a good starting salary with excellent earning potential.

Partnerships

The 1993 symposium findings suggested that: preservationists should join forces with existing training programs; there is a need to strengthen the socioeconomic rationale in support of historic preservation; there is a need to raise awareness about the value of historic preservation. WMF enlisted Kate Burns Ottavino, Director of Preservation Technology for NJIT's Center for Architecture and Building Science Research (NJIT/CABSR), to design an infrastructure that could support restoration arts training in a sustainable manner. In addition, Ms. Ottavino is a conservator and partner in the A. Ottavino Corporation, a 91-year-old stoneworks located in Ozone Park, Queens, New York.

The symposium also found that while there have been numerous programs to train preservation artisans, most failed because the sponsoring organization was unable to incorporate the requisite academic education for a complete understanding, appreciation and acquisition of artisan skills. To give this program that essential foundation, the New York City Department of Education committed its resources to the development of a preservation-based curriculum. With NJIT/CABSR as the project leader, teacher preparation took place at the pilot school, the High School for Arts and Business in Corona, Queens, NY. In the spring of 1999, the Department of Education designated the Brooklyn High School of the Arts (BHSA), formerly Sarah J. Hale High School, as the school for the four-year development of the curriculum. NJIT/CABSR has worked with the Brooklyn High School of the Arts/Region 8 since then to create and test this curriculum. Through a grant from the WMF, NJIT/CABSR developed 9th and 10th grades Historic Preservation courses. These include the Brooklyn Hunterfly Road Historic Houses District of Weeksville as the benchmark for the 9th grade and Green-Wood Cemetery as the 10th grade benchmark. The NJIT/CABSR also developed a multi-disciplinary preservation-based 9th through 12th grade academic curriculum and the Preservation and Arts and Technology curriculum for the 11th and 12th grades. This Career Technical Education (CTE) is enhanced by the internship program designed by NJIT/CABSR. BHSA graduated its first class in June 2004 and the first Ezra Ehrenkrantz (founding Chair of the NJIT/CABSR) Preservation Arts Award for Excellence in Preservation Arts was given to an outstanding graduate in the Preservation Arts program.

A Brief History

The High School for the Preservation Arts project was launched in the summer of 1997 with a Preservation Internship Program followed in the spring of 1998 by a Preservation Week program, and internships programs in the summers of 1998 through 2004.


1997 - Preservation Internship Program

The 1997 internship program was designed by NJIT/CABSR and arranged by Youth Employment Services of New York City through WMF, and was sponsored by the Times Square Business Improvement Fund. Under the direction of Kate Burns Ottavino, with the host artisan sponsor A. Ottavino Corporation, three students from the New York City High School of Graphic Arts participated in the restoration of statuary in the Times Square area. The project focused students' efforts on the hands-on restoration work of the statuary while including the relevant academic components.

1998 - Preservation Week and Preservation Internship Program

After this first successful effort, the Board of Education then designated the High School for Arts and Business in Corona, Queens, NY, as the pilot school for the next phase of the project. In the spring of 1998, NJIT and the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training, conducted Preservation Week - three days of activities for 30 specially selected high school students. The program included presentations by guest lecturers from leading preservation organizations and preservation-enriched interdisciplinary lessons prepared by four teachers in art, English, history, and science. Prior to Preservation Week, the teachers had participated in intensive teacher development sessions to gain an understanding of the curriculum goals and to provide them with the necessary architecture and preservation information and related resources.

Preservation Week was followed by an internship program. Through the summer, two student interns worked with the A. Ottavino Corporation, this time at the Peristyle in Prospect Park, Brooklyn, NY, designed by Stanford White in 1904. The program included a teacher development component where the four teachers regularly went on-site to experience an actual restoration project as part of their developing integrated vocational and academic preservation-enriched lesson plans in their discipline.

Another dimension of the 1998 internship program was a French-American Teacher Exchange Program sponsored by WMF that provided opportunities for NJIT representatives to visit craft training centers in France. In turn, a representative from the Fondation de Coubertin in France observed the student interns at the Brooklyn site. The French-American Teacher Exchange Program was funded by a multi-year grant from The Florence Gould Foundation.

The lesson plans developed by the four teachers as part of the 1998 internship program were taught at the pilot school in the fall of 1999 through the support of the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training. The classes were videotaped and evaluated by the Board of Education, NJIT, and curriculum assessment specialists to serve as models for further curriculum development.

1999 through 2004 Internship Program

The 1999 internship program consisted of a student working at the A. Ottavino Corporation stone works in Ozone Park, Queens, NY and at Chatham Square in Lower Manhattan, NY where A. Ottavino Corporation restored several statues in the Asian-American community; and with WMF at the St. Ann's Center for the Arts in Brooklyn. The program also included a teacher-training component enabling teachers to experience an artisan's atelier and an actual restoration project in order for them to incorporate aspects of these experiences into their lesson plans. As part of the vocational curriculum design, the French-American Teacher Exchange Program sponsored by WMF, allowed representatives to observe and assist in the creation of a student internship curriculum for the high school.

The 2001 Internship program grew to 11 students with nine site sponsors including government, not-for-profit and private business concerns all focusing on historic preservation. Through the efforts of Councilmember Ken Fisher, the Mayors Office for Youth Employment partnered with the high school to sponsor 11 interns. NJIT/CABSR designed an internship template through the auspices of the New York Community Trust in 2002 that included the components to sustain the student internship curriculum for the high school. The 2002 Summer Internship program had 21 interns and 18 site-sponsors, and the Summer of 2003 there were 24 interns and 20 site sponsors as the program expanded from three to four New York City boroughs. In summer 2004 there were 19 sites with 27 students in all five boroughs. The Teacher Development component included six teachers from the BHSA who visited several internship sites with NJIT/CABSR so as to be able to use this first hand knowledge to develop interdisciplinary preservation-based lessons in their discipline for teaching in Fall 2004.

Academic Launch

In 2000, the NYC Department of Education drafted a memorandum creating the Brooklyn High School for the Arts featuring Preservation Arts and preservation as the overarching academic theme, the first model program of its kind in the nation. As developed, the core academic and Preservation Arts and Technology (CTE) curriculum are being field-tested in the classroom and evaluated for approval and certification of the Preservation Arts and Technology program by the New York City Department of Education and the New York State Regents.

The foundation for the curriculum is the New York City Board of Education's New Performance Standards and the New York State Learning Standards. Students are being prepared to meet the high standards of the New York State Regents examinations, and in addition preservation arts and technology majors will earn an industry endorsed Career Technical Education (CTE) diploma. The graduates of this program may either pursue a post-secondary education or enter the work force with demonstrable skills in the preservation arts.

Students who complete all four years of Preservation Arts course work at BHSA are eligible for a new college degree program specifically designed for them by the Fashion Institute of Technology (FIT). This two-year Associates Degree can lead to a Bachelor of Fine Arts in Objects Conservation and FIT is raising scholarship funds to target the BHSA students who enter the program.
Preservation Arts Curriculum Model

The curriculum has been constructed to allow students to view traditional subjects through the lens of historic preservation by focusing on a specific historic structure or artifact through which to study the elements of its creation, preservation, and interpretation. These structures or artifacts serve as the benchmark for the study of all aspects of a particular period and place. Using this model, teachers can work together using a common architectural theme as an expression of the period under study through which they can integrate their respective disciplines.

In developing this model, educators are generating a methodology for organizing a consistent body of knowledge using a comprehensive approach to learning that will help students become aware of how different academic disciplines are integral to one another and how they are incorporated into workplace activities.

Next Steps

The NJIT/CABSR is seeking funds through government, foundations and private sources to bring the Preservation Arts High School program to other cities in New York and throughout the nation.

Summation

Students who graduate from the preservation arts program may contribute to the support of the preservation community in a variety of ways. Some may pursue post-secondary education and become architects, contractors, preservationists, civil engineers, or have other preservation-related careers. Others may pursue professional careers in completely different areas while maintaining an appreciation and interest in preservation for themselves and their community. Some may become preservation crafts people who find there is a great demand for skilled preservation artisans in the building and construction industry.

The preservation arts program benefits society in several ways: many students who might otherwise be marginalized in a high-tech world are educated academically and through artisan skills training and internships into the growing field of the preservation arts; training artisans creates a work force that allows the building industry to renew and preserve the infrastructure of our communities and regions; students who meet the academic requirements may choose to pursue post-secondary education; and the quality of life within our community will improve by the increased citizen awareness of the social and economic value of preserving the world we share.

 

"Generating new knowledge to improve the built environment and enhance quality of life"


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