A public service announcement produced by the National Trust for Historic Preservation a few years ago and distributed for use by Main Street organizations as part of a national media campaign.
Showing posts with label National Trust for Historic Preservation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Trust for Historic Preservation. Show all posts
Tuesday, June 21, 2011
Friday, July 09, 2010
Moe: "...it could be that the preservation movement isn't what you think it is."
Attorney, author, and speaker Richard Moe recently retired from the National Trust for Historic Preservation after leading the nation's premier preservation group as president for 17 years, including oversight of the Main Street program which exists as part of the Trust's Community Revitalization department. Beginning with an early battle with the Disney Company over greenfield development and manufactured history, Moe spent much of his incumbency changing the Trust's focus from one primarily concerned with individual buildings to one with a more holistic view of design, sustainability, community development, and quality of life. Though some local preservation leaders are still reticent to make it a central tenant of their advocacy, Moe plainly stated for well over a decade that the biggest challenge facing historic preservation in the United States is sprawl.
The address shared here, originally presented in Fresno in 1996, provides a solid introduction to his and the organization's thinking. With Stephanie Meeks, who spent 18 years at the The Nature Conservancy, named as his replacement, here's hoping that thinking doesn't change.
The address shared here, originally presented in Fresno in 1996, provides a solid introduction to his and the organization's thinking. With Stephanie Meeks, who spent 18 years at the The Nature Conservancy, named as his replacement, here's hoping that thinking doesn't change.
MOE: GROWING SMARTER: Fighting Sprawl and Restoring Community in America
Why is an organization like the National Trust for Historic Preservation so concerned about sprawl? If that question occurs to you, it could be that the preservation movement isn't what you think it is.
Of course we're concerned about sprawl because it devastates older cities and towns--and increasingly, older suburbs--where historic buildings and neighborhoods are concentrated. Sprawl has drained the life out of thousands of traditional downtowns and inner-city neighborhoods, and we've learned that we can't hope to revitalize these communities without doing something to control the sprawl that keeps pushing further and further out from the center.
But our concern goes beyond that, because preservation today is about more than bricks and mortar. We're convinced--and there's a growing body of grim evidence to support us--that sprawl is having a devastating effect on our quality of life, that it is corroding the very sense of community that helps bind us together as a people and as a nation. Preservation is in the business of saving special places and the quality of life they support, and sprawl destroys both.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)