| |
Buildings
from the 20th century are disappearing from the American landscape. While
older structures have long been the focus of popular appreciation and
preservation efforts, the value of properties
from the recent past has not been widely embraced. Those interested in
ensuring that 20th century places will still be available to future generations
have responded by looking anew at the properties that represent this
era and finding new ways to protect them. What
is Recent Past Architecture?
From futuristic
coffee shops and soaring airport terminals to the homes of the
postwar suburbs,
20th
century architecture embodies the aspirations, priorities, challenges
and successes of our recent history. They
include the
libraries and community centers constructed by New Deal agencies
to contend with
the Great Depression, factories where the World War II generation
assembled tanks and planes, schools built for the postwar baby
boom, and glass-walled
office parks that symbolized American business. Such properties
reflect the varied lives that unfolded within them, and contribute
to a diverse
and dynamic 20th century landscape.
The
best-known examples of architecture from the recent past are
recognized as works of art and
icons of their time. Monuments like the Chrysler
Building and the Seattle Space Needle and houses designed by Frank
Lloyd Wright have won widespread admiration that virtually guarantees
their
preservation. Buildings associated with milestones in American history
such as Martin Luther King’s Ebeneezer Baptist Church may be
enshrined as museums, encouraging their continued protection.
But
the story of the recent past cannot be told through icons alone.
Many other, less prominent, places are important to a community’s
sense of identity and memory. Local architectural firms, builders,
entrepreneurs, and artists helped shape the 20th century landscape
by adapting national and international trends to fit local needs.
The buildings and sites left behind have no assurance they will survive.
Preserving the
Architecture of the Twentieth Century Presents New Challenges…
Like clothing, cars, and hair styles, architectural trends ebb and
flow with the times. Once the height of style, many buildings constructed
in the past are now considered dated. Unfashionable structures elicit
little sympathy when abandoned or lost. Victorian buildings, for
example, were once disparaged as garish and overly ornate, and were
eagerly demolished in the name of progress or expediency. Those that
survived, however, are today valued elements of countless historic
neighborhoods. Similarly, properties from the recent past that we
preserve now will be rediscovered over time and broadly appreciated
for their historic or artistic importance.
The last century brought forth a whole new vocabulary of building
materials and technologies with unknown long-term characteristics.
From porcelain enamel to plywood, preservation professionals are
developing ways of repairing these once innovative materials. Unlike
the artisan-made buildings from earlier centuries, mass-produced
elements such as curtain walls and precast concrete pose questions
of whether the material is of inherent historic importance. Decommissioned
military bases, factory complexes and suburban subdivisions present
challenges of scale and repetition that are new to the field of preservation.
Architectural surveys are helping to identify the number and nature
of surviving 20th century buildings, while shedding light on historic
themes, designers, and events that are important to a particular
community. As more recent buildings are studied and rehabilitated,
the experience gained from working with these materials and issues
continues to grow.
…and New
Opportunities
Now is the time to reassess the marginal value currently placed on
buildings from the recent past, and to work toward their continued
use and sensitive rehabilitation. While much has been lost already,
a wealth of creative examples survive to remind us of who we were
and how we lived during the past century. The characteristics of
these buildings, the features and qualities that make them unique
to their time, are a benefit not a burden. Like 19th century main
streets, buildings and neighborhoods from the recent past that
are preserved encourage further economic development.
Historic tax credits and other incentives can assist with these efforts.
The 20th century’s distinctive places need to survive not only
for their economic potential, or beauty, or fame, but also because
they provide a continuous thread to past lives and times. These buildings,
from skyscraper to supermarket, deserve our attention.
|
|
|