As this current international pandemic has changed the everyday ways that we interact with each other and our communities, it’s clear that our environment has important physical and psychological effects on us all. Preservation addresses the physical material of our built environment – and those materials’ potential positive or negative health impacts – so too, does preservation address an emotional connection to a time and place in history.
This five-part special podcast series, Healthy, Hip & Historic on PreserveCast will feature five preservation visionaries that will place our preservation work in a broader context, identify challenges, and illuminate solutions for linking historic preservation and healthy communities.
Preservation Maryland brought Storm Cunningham, an author whose work is leading the way for partnerships between preservationists and environmentalists, to our annual statewide conference held in 2016 in Frederick, Maryland. Storm Cunningham is the publisher of Revitalization News online, and the author of "The Restoration Economy," "reWealth," and the forthcoming "Planetary Renewal: A Strategy To Reverse Our Decline."
As a regional partnership planner, he has facilitated comprehensive revitalization processes, not just a vision, project or plan which help places enhance their economy, boost the quality of life and increase climate resilience by repurposing, renewing and reconnecting their natural built and socioeconomic assets.
Storm joined our group of preservationists, planners and heritage tourism and museum professionals to show the group how they can think differently about who they partner with and what benefit comes from those partnerships. If we want to make the world a better and more sustainable place, we need to breakdown the silos each discipline has wedge themselves.
One example Storm will share was a potential relationship between “water people” and “solar people.” Instead of saying “we have nothing in common,” think about your goals and how they overlap. “Solar People” want solar panels to make clean energy and “water people” want to get safe and clean water long distances. Water evaporates unless it is covered, so why not cover the water channels with solar panels? This is a win-win. More energy and less water loss.
Talking Pretzel History with Tim Snyder of Julius Sturgis Pretzels
Balancing Contemporary Sustainability Standards with Historic Structures with Daniela Holt Voith
Leading the Maryland Park Service with Angela Crenshaw
Historic Charleston Foundation with Winslow Hastie
Historic Shoemaking with Andrew Rowand
Building Futures: Apprenticeship Insights with Jennifer Dewees
The Tenement Museum with Annie Polland
Researching a Historic Property with Christiana Limniatis and Maggie Pelta-Pauls
Historic Trades Apprenticeship with Natalie Henshaw
A Salem Witch: The Trial, Execution, and Exoneration of Rebecca Nurse with Daniel A. Gagnon
Overground Railroad: The Green Book and the Roots of Black Travel in America with Candacy Taylor
Sacred Places with Bob Jaeger
The Goodall Fellowship: South Bend TradeWorks with Elicia Garske
Revolutionary Blacks: Discovering the Frank Brothers, Freeborn Men of Color, Soldiers of Independence with Dr. Shirley L. Green
Preservation Trades Specialist Training Program at NRF with Alyssa Lozupone & Kris Turgeon
*Special Release* The History of Santa Claus
Time Will Not Dim with Mary Cleary & Michael Knapp
Trades Takeover with Héctor J. Berdecía-Hernández of the Centro de Conservación y Restauración de Puerto Rico (CENCOR)
Exploring Presidential Gravesites with Christiana Limniatis
How to Tell a Complete Battlefield Story: Falling Waters with Scott Vierick
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