Hawai‘i Preservation in Practice Training Webinar:
Preservation Planning and Historic Structures Reports

Historic Hawai‘i Foundation, in partnership with the Department of the Interior’s National Park Service, will offer a free webinar on utilizing preservation plans and historic structures reports as tools for preserving significant buildings, structures, cultural or archaeological sites.

Date: Tuesday, July 30, 2024
Time: 10:00 – 11:30 a.m. HST

Cost: Free

Virtual Webinar via ZOOM

“Preservation planning is a proactive way to provide for the protection of a community’s historic resources and character.”

~National Alliance of Preservation Commissions

The seminar provides training to members of the public, private or government sectors who own, manage, steward or are interested in preserving historic buildings, structures, objects, sites and districts.  

Preservation Planning & Historic Structures Reports
Date: Tuesday, July 30, 2024
Time: 10:00 – 11:30 a.m.

This seminar has been submitted for certificate maintenance credits through the American Planning Association (AICP) and the American Institute of Architects (AIA).

ABOUT THE COURSE

The webinar will present an introduction to preservation plans and historic structures reports as tools for preserving significant buildings, structures, cultural or archaeological sites. Presentations and case studies will illustrate use of and potential benefits when incorporating these tools into the planning process preceding design and implementation of preservation, rehabilitation, restoration, or reconstruction work.

A National Park Service historical architect will provide an overview of preservation plans and how they are related to and supplemented by historic structure reports. Weaving in local examples, he will define their purpose, contributing elements, benefits and when and how they can be used to protect and maintain historic properties.

A State Historic Preservation Division archaeologist will provide a more in depth look into the State of Hawai‘i’s approach to preservation plans and her experience working with property owners who have utilized them as a tool for site preservation.

Project examples highlighting different approaches and uses for implementation will illustrate the incorporation of preservation plans and historic structures reports into site stewardship.

Through the training attendees will:

• Receive an overview of preservation plans and historic structures reports, what are they?
• Learn how preservation plans and historic structures reports are used to preserve buildings, structures, cultural and archaeological resources;
• Learn potential benefits including long-term site stewardship;
• View examples of projects in Hawai‘i that utilized preservation planning and/or historic structures reports.

WHO SHOULD ATTEND?

• Public, private and nonprofit entities that own or manage historic and potentially historic properties in Hawai‘i;
• Government agencies and elected officials responsible for the protection of historic properties;
• Design professionals, including planners, architects, engineers, landscape architects, historians and architectural historians;
• Community organizations or individuals with stewardship responsibilities for historic properties;
• Other members of the public or organizations interested in preserving historic sites.

Further Reading & Reference Materials

Preservation Planning Standards

VIEW STANDARDS
VIEW STANDARDS

Preservation Planning Guidelines

VIEW GUIDELINES
VIEW GUIDELINES

Preservation Briefs 43: The Preparation and Use of Historic Structure Reports

VIEW BRIEF 43
VIEW BRIEF 43

Report Collection Spotlight: Historic Structure Reports

VIEW
VIEW

What is a Historic Structures Report and When Do You Need One?

VIEW
VIEW

PRESENTERS

Megan Alvarez, Archaeologist IV at the Hawaiʻi State Historic Preservation Division, conducts historic preservation reviews that include formal preservation planning to promote active site stewardship of the state’s tangible heritage, in compliance with state and federal regulations. She has 20+ years’ experience in archaeology across North America, Europe, and the Pacific. Megan received her PhD in Anthropology from the University of Chicago, MA in Archaeology from Queen’s University Belfast, and BA in Anthropology from the College of William and Mary in Virginia.

Michael Miller is the Bureau Historical Architect and Program Lead for the Historic Structures Program within the Park Programs & National Heritage Areas of the Cultural Resources, Partnerships and Science Directorate (CRPS) of the National Park Service. He has 30+ years of experience working with historic buildings, preservation planning, historic resources stewardship, campus heritage planning, and managing major capital historic preservation projects. Prior to working with the National Park Service, Miller served as Architect within the Architecture Branch of the Public Buildings Service (PBS) of the General Services Administration (GSA) within the Southeast/Sunbelt Region in Atlanta. While at GSA, he regularly applied the Secretary of the Interior’s Standards for Treatment of Historic Properties in both capital planning and in design and construction projects.

Kiersten Faulkner is the chief executive of Historic Hawai‘i Foundation and oversees all aspects of its preservation programs, strategic planning, business lines and operational matters. She holds a Master of Arts in Urban and Environmental Policy from Tufts University and is a member of the College of Fellows of the American Institute of Certified Planners (FAICP).