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Subject:
From:
George Kramer <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
BP - His DNA is this long.
Date:
Tue, 4 Aug 1998 12:11:22 -0700
Content-Type:
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At 01:56 PM 8/4/98 -0400, Pam wrote:

So, here's my question, which I see as an offshoot to discussing why we
>preserve.  Why do we feel it's necessary for our children to grow up in the
>same house their entire lives, whether it be a weathered old Victorian
>mansion or a pre-fab that looks like every other cookie cutter house on the
>block?
>
I think the key to this question is the way we define "we"....WE (meaning
those of us crazy enough to be involved in preservation to the degree that
we've actually subscribed to a listserv like this one) find some sort of
value in staying in the "same house" or a weathered old Victorian or
whatever, or we wouldn't do what we do (and even encourage others to do the
same)  My initial query on this thread, asking why don't WE (meaning the
American public in general) preserve was essentially a lament that we
(meaning you and I) ain't exactly in the main stream and wondering about
how that came to be or could be changed....

It seems when I lecture to folks about the value of preservation that my
training and the political climate dictates that I stick to marketing
issues, sound bottomlines and, lately, environmental responsibility.  What
I REALLY want to talk about is pride and sense of community and a
value-based response to the past that doesn't normally play well in public
forums... or at least isn't what we "supposed" to talk about lest we get
branded sentimental and lacking a connection to the "real world."
(Parenthetically I'd point out that  it is easy to attack preservation as
being out of touch with reality because what we all too often define as the
acceptable brand of "good" preservation, at least for my money is)  If
there is in fact a value problem here I'd lay the blame at our own
doorstep, not the media or the corporations or at some intrinsic deficit in
the average American property owner.

My answer then, to Pam, is that WE don't like cookie cutter houses 'cause
there is something in us that recognizes an inherent value in old places, a
sense that I believe is sadly underdeveloped in the larger WE of America.
And as a result I think that we ought be concentrating our collective
professional efforts to a larger degree in developing that sense if we
don't want to spend the rest our careers swimming upstream and fighting the
same old philosophical battles with the vinyl-siders again and again and
again.......

Not meaning to sound despondent (If I do)......cuz I'm not, actually.  I
just think preservation folk have a greater appreciation of place, a
commitment to a community, and tend to recognize the value of continuity in
quality of life more than most folks.  I think those values get lip-service
from many others, as they're busy packing the u-haul to move their fourth
home of the decade (but interest rates are so low right now and this one is
in a BRAND new neighborhood where each home actually has a neo-traditional
front porch!...we're going to stay here at least 'til the youngest is
through with middle school)

George Kramer, M.S.
Historic Preservation Consultant
Ashland, Oregon

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