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EVENTS ARCHIVE
Click here to register for this Zoom webinar. Explore the beautifully restored, circa-1912 home of Ryan Bordenave, who bought the Mid-City house in 2005 and renovated it, doing much of the work himself and with the help of his brother-in-law and his father. THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Click here to register for this Zoom webinar. Explore the beautifully restored, circa-1912 home of Ryan Bordenave, who bought the Mid-City house in 2005 and renovated it, doing much of the work himself and with the help of his brother-in-law and his father. THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 WE'RE HIRING: DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANT The PRC is looking to hire a Development Consultant to aid the Development Director and Executive Director in strategizing and improving the Preservation Resource Center’s major gifts program, including the annual fund, planned giving, event and program sponsorships, and capital campaigns. Analysis will include all donor outreach and appreciation activities, and all fundraising endeavors. JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The boom breathed new life into the institution of slavery. After the United States banned the international slave trade in 1808, a rigorous domestic trade ensued, and over the next half-century, nearly a million African Americans would be sold out of the upper South, where tobacco had depleted the soils and manufacturing began to eclipse agriculture, for transport either overland or SHOTGUN HOUSE MONTH HEADQUARTERS Click here to see the schedule of live Shotgun House Month virtual events. Scroll down to access the 3D Home Tours, showing detailed floor plans and information about the paint colors, materials and products used on the featured houses.. Home of Bryan Block & JeffKeller
HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 REVOLVING FUNDS: SAVING THOSE "PROBLEM" PROPERTIES The PRC’s revolving fund, Operation Comeback, recently rehabilitated 1423 N. Claiborne Ave. – the last remaining building associated with Straight University, one of the first African-American universities in the state of Louisiana.. Revolving fund properties are sold with preservation easements (also known as covenants or conservationservitudes).
SMART RENOVATIONS TRANSFORM HISTORIC SHOTGUN HOUSES INTO New Orleans’ shotgun houses are known for their historic charm and famous lack of privacy, with one-room-after-another floor plans. But architects and builders today are finding clever new ways to transform these long, narrow houses into adaptable family homes filled with the latest modern amenities. Chris Kornman, co-owner of Entablature Design+ Build, Read More
PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. This news brief appeared in the February issue of PRC’s Preservation in Print magazine.Interested in getting more preservation stories like this delivered to your door nine times a year? Become a member of the PRC for a subscription!. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 HOLIDAY HOME TOUR: 1236 FIRST STREET November 28, 2016. Holiday Home Tour. When Erin and Lawrence Hjersted purchased 1236 First St. in 2013, the couple fulfilled a longstanding promise to return to the city where they had met and begun their courtship over a decade before. Erin, who had lived in New Orleans as a child and attended law school at Loyola University, had long hopedto
PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 HOLIDAY HOME TOUR: 1236 FIRST STREET November 28, 2016. Holiday Home Tour. When Erin and Lawrence Hjersted purchased 1236 First St. in 2013, the couple fulfilled a longstanding promise to return to the city where they had met and begun their courtship over a decade before. Erin, who had lived in New Orleans as a child and attended law school at Loyola University, had long hopedto
JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. WE'RE HIRING: DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANT The PRC is looking to hire a Development Consultant to aid the Development Director and Executive Director in strategizing and improving the Preservation Resource Center’s major gifts program, including the annual fund, planned giving, event and program sponsorships, and capital campaigns. Analysis will include all donor outreach and appreciation activities, and all fundraising endeavors. SHOTGUN HOUSE MONTH HEADQUARTERS Click here to see the schedule of live Shotgun House Month virtual events. Scroll down to access the 3D Home Tours, showing detailed floor plans and information about the paint colors, materials and products used on the featured houses.. Home of Bryan Block & JeffKeller
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964. The building known as the New Orleans Cotton Exchange (constructed in 1921) on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier streets marks what was once among the most influential spots in the South, an area called “the cotton district,” or “the Wall Street of New Orleans.”. HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
WHAT REALLY HAPPENED AT THE LALAURIE HOUSE? On April 10, 1834, a fire destroyed the house and revealed the horrific treatment of their slaves by the Lalauries. The cook started the fire, and what the fire did not destroy, New Orleanians did when they saw the evidence of inhumane treatment of the slaves. In 1838, the house was described in Retrospect of Western Travel as “in itsruined
TOURO ROW, THE CANAL STREET CATALYST OF THE 1850S That was the happy fate of Judah Touro’s “other” row, a line of circa-1850s storehouses recently restored on 301-313 St. Charles Ave. Touro Row in November 2018. Photo by Liz Jurey. Richard Campanella is a geographer with the Tulane School of Architecture and the author of “Cityscapes of New Orleans,” “Bourbon Street: A History HISTORIC LOEW'S THEATRE THREATENED BY OUT-OF-SCALE On November 1, the New Orleans City Council will consider a preliminary design for the redevelopment of the historic Loew’s State Palace Theatre on Canal Street. See the latest proposal here. The developers have submitted a series of proposals to convert the 92-year-old theater into a hotel accommodating up to 250 rooms through a large tower atop the historic building. PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 HOW THE HISTORIC NEW ORLEANS COLLECTION’S SEIGNOURET Before & After: A spiral staircase made with heavy cypress timbers was carefully restored. Before photo by Will Crocker, after photo by Jeff Goldberg, courtesy of Waggonner & Ball. Advertisement “It was the energy efficiency in the new construction that really drove the LEED certification, but there are a lot of really cool features in this historic building that are sustainable,” Hammer said. URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
PRCNO PROGRAMS
All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. SHOTGUN HOUSE MONTH HEADQUARTERS Click here to see the schedule of live Shotgun House Month virtual events. Scroll down to access the 3D Home Tours, showing detailed floor plans and information about the paint colors, materials and products used on the featured houses.. Home of Bryan Block & JeffKeller
WE'RE HIRING: DEVELOPMENT CONSULTANT The PRC is looking to hire a Development Consultant to aid the Development Director and Executive Director in strategizing and improving the Preservation Resource Center’s major gifts program, including the annual fund, planned giving, event and program sponsorships, and capital campaigns. Analysis will include all donor outreach and appreciation activities, and all fundraising endeavors. NEW ORLEANS VERNACULAR New Orleans is a city filled with architectural treasures, from ornate mansions to humble shotgun houses. Our city’s high-style architecture is breathtaking, but the simpler, ever-present vernacular structures help to form the rich architectural fabric of our city.Vernacular architecture is exactly that: the ordinary buildings and spaces that distinguish a place and help you know exactly A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 BEFORE I-10, THE NEW BASIN CANAL FLOWED THROUGH NEW All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 WHAT LED TO THE FOUNDING OF NEW ORLEANS IN 1718 EARLY SPRING 1718: In late March or early April, Bienville’s expedition anchors off today’s upper French Quarter to begin work on New Orleans. “Bienville cut the first cane,” recalled one colonist of that undated moment. Afterwards, 30 workers, all convicts, proceeded to clear the “dense canebrake” probably aroundpresent-day 500
PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODS Pending demolition permits affect historic neighborhoods. This October, while many houses are festooned with cobwebs and skeletons, others have one foot in the grave. The City of New Orleans is poised to consider complete demolition requests for the following buildings located in historic neighborhoods. Information on the permit requestscan be
THE MULTIPLE NARRATIVES OF THE BELLE CHASSE PLANTATION This story appeared in the December issue of the PRC’s Preservation in Print magazine. Interested in getting more preservation stories like this delivered to your door monthly? Become a member of the PRC for a subscription! Among the many regional antebellum plantation houses, the story of Belle Chasse stands alone for its sundry characters and narratives, Read More BUDDY BOLDEN, THE FATHER OF JAZZ, LEFT NO KNOWN RECORDED All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. ACQUIRING BLIGHTED PROPERTY All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. THIS CREOLE COTTAGE IS A SHOWCASE FOR BOLD COLORS, RICH All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964. The building known as the New Orleans Cotton Exchange (constructed in 1921) on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier streets marks what was once among the most influential spots in the South, an area called “the cotton district,” or “the Wall Street of New Orleans.”. HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
8TH NATIONAL FORUM ON HISTORIC PRESERVATION POLICY: A Event registration has closed Sponsored by Historic Preservation at the Tulane School of Architecture; Advisory Council on Historic Preservation; with support from the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans and the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training, U.S. National Park Service. The 8th National Forum on Historic Preservation Policy will focus on integrating better DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
HISTORIC LOEW'S THEATRE THREATENED BY OUT-OF-SCALE On November 1, the New Orleans City Council will consider a preliminary design for the redevelopment of the historic Loew’s State Palace Theatre on Canal Street. See the latest proposal here. The developers have submitted a series of proposals to convert the 92-year-old theater into a hotel accommodating up to 250 rooms through a large tower atop the historic building. PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. ACQUIRING BLIGHTED PROPERTY All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. THIS CREOLE COTTAGE IS A SHOWCASE FOR BOLD COLORS, RICH All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964. The building known as the New Orleans Cotton Exchange (constructed in 1921) on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier streets marks what was once among the most influential spots in the South, an area called “the cotton district,” or “the Wall Street of New Orleans.”. HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
8TH NATIONAL FORUM ON HISTORIC PRESERVATION POLICY: A Event registration has closed Sponsored by Historic Preservation at the Tulane School of Architecture; Advisory Council on Historic Preservation; with support from the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans and the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training, U.S. National Park Service. The 8th National Forum on Historic Preservation Policy will focus on integrating better DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
HISTORIC LOEW'S THEATRE THREATENED BY OUT-OF-SCALE On November 1, the New Orleans City Council will consider a preliminary design for the redevelopment of the historic Loew’s State Palace Theatre on Canal Street. See the latest proposal here. The developers have submitted a series of proposals to convert the 92-year-old theater into a hotel accommodating up to 250 rooms through a large tower atop the historic building. PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. FOR MCDONOGH 11: IT’S TIME FOR LSU TO DO THE RIGHT THING All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 ACQUIRING BLIGHTED PROPERTY All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. THIS CREOLE COTTAGE IS A SHOWCASE FOR BOLD COLORS, RICH All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964. The building known as the New Orleans Cotton Exchange (constructed in 1921) on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier streets marks what was once among the most influential spots in the South, an area called “the cotton district,” or “the Wall Street of New Orleans.”. DESPITE YEARS OF DECAY, THESE LONG-BLIGHTED BUILDINGS ARE One block away, construction is underway on the 29-story Odeon at South Market, the tallest building to rise in New Orleans in more than three decades. For now, thousands of commuters daily pass the strange juxtaposition of the new high-rise and Plaza HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF NEW ORLEANSABOUT USPROGRAMSGET INVOLVEDSHOPEVENTSRESOURCES All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857.EVENTS ARCHIVE
Katrina Horning, head guide and founder of New Orleans Architecture Tours, will virtually bring you through New Orleans neighborhoods, re-introducing you to the shotgun house with its unique history, styles and forms. This event is free to attend. Suggested donation of $25. For more details about all of the homes featured on the PRC’s2021
FIVE GENERATIONS HAVE LEFT THEIR MARK ON THIS 181-YEAR-OLD All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 URBANISM AT ITS BEST: A HISTORICAL GEOGRAPHY OF MAGAZINE 1: Ninth Street Market, 3138 Magazine St. Photo courtesy of the Charles L. Franck Studio Collection at The Historic New Orleans Collection, Acc. No. 1979.325.3981. 2: The building now houses multiple businesses including a jewelry store, an exercise studio, a bakery and an art gallery. Photo by Liz Jurey. By then, a number of plantation owners farther upriver “jumped the gun” and had their A GLANCE AT ONGOING AND UPCOMING CANAL STREET All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 A GLIMMER OF HOPE FOR ALGIERS' TOURO SHAKESPEARE HOME A Glimmer of Hope for Algiers’ Touro Shakespeare Home. The incredible but dilapidated Touro-Shakespeare Home, built in 1927 on New Orleans’ West Bank, has been vacant since incurring damage during Hurricane Katrina. A new shot at FEMA funding may see the building restored in coming years, however. The first iteration ofwhat became the
THE DRAMA OF NEW ORLEANS' MUNICIPAL AUDITORIUM The Drama of New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium. Danielle Del Sol. March 28, 2017. In The News, March 2017, Preservation in Print. It may officially be unoccupied, but New Orleans’ Municipal Auditorium is hardly quiet. The circa 1930 building, a handsome structure with a storied past located inside of Tremé’s Armstrong Park, has sat PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. PENDING DEMOLITION PERMITS AFFECT HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODSSEE MORE ONPRCNO.ORG
SARAH MARTZOLF, AUTHOR AT PRESERVATION RESOURCE CENTER OF All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 JAMES CARVILLE AND MARY MATALIN'S NEW ORLEANS HOME Take a virtual tour of this home, and five other stunning New Orleans residences, at PRC’s 45th annual Holiday Home Tour presented by McEnery Residential on December 12 & 13.. Click here for tickets and more tour details. In 2008, when James Carville and Mary Matalin purchased their grand Colonial Revival home Uptown, Matalin let the house tell her how it should be decorated. FOR MCDONOGH 11: IT’S TIME FOR LSU TO DO THE RIGHT THING All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 ACQUIRING BLIGHTED PROPERTY All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72-0760857. THIS CREOLE COTTAGE IS A SHOWCASE FOR BOLD COLORS, RICH All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 PLANS UNVEILED FOR OLD K&B SITE ON ST. CHARLES AVE. Built for a K&B drug store, the single-story, mid-20th-century building at the corner of St. Charles and Louisiana avenues has been vacant since 2018. The Bestoff family retains ownership of the property at 3401 St. Charles Ave. and has announced plans to redevelop the site with a series of multistory, mixed-use buildings. THE NEW ORLEANS COTTON EXCHANGE, 1871-1964 The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964. The building known as the New Orleans Cotton Exchange (constructed in 1921) on the corner of Carondelet and Gravier streets marks what was once among the most influential spots in the South, an area called “the cotton district,” or “the Wall Street of New Orleans.”. DESPITE YEARS OF DECAY, THESE LONG-BLIGHTED BUILDINGS ARE One block away, construction is underway on the 29-story Odeon at South Market, the tallest building to rise in New Orleans in more than three decades. For now, thousands of commuters daily pass the strange juxtaposition of the new high-rise and Plaza HOW DID THE CAMELBACK HOUSE COME ABOUT? NEW ORLEANS TRUTHS All content ©2021 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number 72 NEW RESEARCH EXPLORES HOW FREE PEOPLE OF COLOR BUILT This story first appeared in the October issue of our Preservation in Print magazine. Become a member of the PRC to get an issue delivered to your door each month!. During the first half of the 19th century, the Dollioles and Souliés — two gens de couleur libres families —amassed great wealth by building, owning and managing real estatein New Orleans.
DEB SHRIVER'S HISTORIC TOWNHOME IS AN ELEGANT, CREATIVE According to the Vieux Carré survey, Shriver’s home is “a two-and-a-half story masonry townhouse (that) is one in a row of three,” built circa 1859 as “simply detailed Greek Revival buildings.”. Her home is separated from its right-side neighbor by “a narrow pedestrian passageway in the Creole tradition,” thesurvey says, and
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HOW NEW ORLEANS HANDLED AN OUTBREAK OF BUBONIC PLAGUE IN 1914 * __Richard Campanella* __March 13, 2020
* __ April 2020
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Preservation in Print* __ Read More
UPCOMING EVENTS
-------------------------Event Calendar__
8TH NATIONAL FORUM ON HISTORIC PRESERVATION POLICY: A CRITICAL EXAMINATION OF PRESERVATION AND THE 21ST CENTURY CITY * __October 9 — October 10, 2020* __
Bowers Auditorium, Tulane University Downtown Offices1555 Poydras Street
New Orleans, LA 70112United States
* __ More Info
* __ Get Tickets $125 – $250 ONLINE CLASS: STATE OF THE NEW ORLEANS HOUSING MARKET* __April 3, 2020
* __2:00pm — 3:00pm * __ Organizer: Preservation Resource Center* __ More Info
ONLINE CLASS: HOW TO REPAIR, RESTORE AND REGLAZE YOUR WOOD WINDOWS* __April 6, 2020
* __2:00pm — 3:00pm * __ Organizer: Preservation Resource Center* __ More Info
EASEMENTS
ADVOCACY
OPERATION COMEBACK
PRESERVATION IN PRINTEDUCATION +OUTREACH
EXPLORE HISTORIC NEIGHBORHOODS PRESERVATION IN PRINT -------------------------Magazine Archive__
MARCH 2020
*
A CENTURY OF FRENCH FLAVOR AT BROUSSARD'S The French Quarter restaurant marks its centennial by honoring its past and celebrating its future*
SAVING THE SANCTUARY 'Sacred Places' grant helps St. Charles Avenue Baptist Church restore its historic building*
SHOTGUN HOUSE TOUR
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Search over 40 years of magazine archives: Search magazine archives for:__Search Published nine times a year since 1975 in partnership with the Louisiana State Historic Preservation Office, Preservation in Print is the exclusive publication covering architectural preservation and neighborhood revitalization in Louisiana. All content ©2020 Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans. Replication not permitted without express consent. The Preservation Alliance of New Orleans, Inc., d.b.a. Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans is classified as a tax-exempt public charity under sections 509(a)(1), 170(b)(1)(A)(vi), and 501(c)(3) of the Internal Revenue Code, Federal Tax Identification Number72-0760857.
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