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colorful-mailboxBy Christine Olson, APG President

The days are getting noticeably shorter, but the weather is still plenty toasty – it must be fall again! Alhambra Preservation Group’s annual fall membership campaign is now underway, and I hope that I can count upon you to support our work of preserving one of Alhambra’s most important cultural assets – its architectural heritage – to ensure its future vitality and liveability.

Of all the elements that go into planning and managing a community’s growth and development, historic preservation is probably one of the most misunderstood, even joked about. I’m sure you recognize the many stereotypes that exist of preservation zealots: the gray-haired lady who places her body in the path of the oncoming bulldozer; the guy who tells everyone who’ll listen that there’s really only one historically-appropriate palette of colors for that Craftsman bungalow; and the “not in my backyard” folks who reflexively oppose any change or economic development opportunity. This limited – and inaccurate – view of historic preservation mischaracterizes and discredits our movement.

My recent visit to one of the homes that is to be honored with this year’s APG Heritage Home Award offered a perfect example of the inaccuracy of the stereotypical view of historic preservation and its proponents. This very well-preserved 107-year-old residence displays nothing so much as flexibility and vitality – and a very modern view of environmental sustainability. Solar panels on the roof of a Victorian bungalow and an electric vehicle charging station installed along its driveway speak to the fact that the home’s owner is focused on the future at least as much as she appreciates the refinements of the past.

In fact, the most common issue faced by preservation advocates across the country is not how to prevent change, but how to manage it more effectively. As we move forward into the 21st Century, that issue only becomes more critical. An increasing population, combined with diminishing natural resources and a precarious energy future demand that we employ new development strategies in communities like Alhambra. We advocate for the preservation and rehabilitation of historic buildings, not simply because they are beautiful and well-built, or because important people once lived in them; but because they have the power to generate local tax assets, stimulate investment, minimize construction debris and decrease environmental costs. They also provide a tangible connection to our shared history.

These are connections that people of all cultures value. Most of us, if we are lucky, have items that we cherish and protect because someone we care about – an ancestor, mentor, family member or friend – gave them to us. Just as a ring or a painting or a precious family heirloom that is treasured and passed down from one generation to the next gives meaning to our individual lives, so does the preservation of historic buildings and local landmarks help to maintain our collective ties to our shared cultural past. More than preserving the outward appearance of a community, historic preservation is about protecting and cherishing the places that give our community life meaning and context.

Union.Station.Exterior.TowerWith your annual membership contribution to Alhambra Preservation Group, you will be investing in the future of our community; and your investment will pay both immediate and long-term benefits. As an APG member, you will be invited to participate in many events, activities and learning opportunities throughout the year. Our popular fall field trip, for example, is scheduled for Saturday morning, November 8, and is open only to members of APG. In celebration of the 75th birthday of Los Angeles Union Station, our members will enjoy a special 2-hour walking tour of the art and architecture of this National Historic Landmark, conducted by docents from our sister organization, the Los Angeles Conservancy. Our fall field trip always fills up fast, because it is offered free of charge to members. Give us a call at (626) 755-3467 or send us an email at info@alhambrapreservation.org so that we can reserve space for you.

I volunteer my time to do this work because I believe strongly that Alhambra’s past is one worth saving – and celebrating. By contributing to APG’s annual fall membership campaign, you’ll be joining me and our Board of Directors in helping to preserve a priceless cultural heritage that, once lost, cannot be reclaimed. Please don’t delay. Visit us online and give as generously as you can. In return for your support, we promise you a full calendar of fun and educational activities, opportunities to meet some of your Alhambra neighbors, perhaps to make some new friends and, most importantly, to make a lasting difference by helping to preserve Alhambra’s past for its future.

Photos courtesy of stackedbooks.org and Los Angeles Union Station.

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Magnifying.Q3With yesterday’s question, we discovered how to use the Alhambra Preservation Group website to learn about an APG program that is educating residents about Alhambra’s rich architectural history. If you haven’t answered Question One or Question Two yet, it’s not too late to go back and participate!

Now, for the last riddle of our Preservation Virtual Scavenger Hunt! Can you tell us (1) the name of the builder/owner of Alhambra’s last remaining castle and (2) where in the world, he derived his inspiration? We know you can!

In the early 20th century Alhambra featured
A pair of majestic homes
Castles named Tiree and Pyrenees
From far away lands their builders had roamed

Traveling from an isle and Europe’s continent
Both men found their way to our town
To live and build magnificent abodes
Worthy of those wearing a crown

The Pyrenees Castle only remains today
Perched high on a hill with a grandiose view
Though now hidden by trees and a tall wall
Its details and storied past still intrigue more than a few

For homes like this, APG’s working hard
For future generations, our town’s unique past
And architectural gems like these are worth preserving
Alhambra’s Then and Now, to forever last.

If you’re having a difficult time with this one, we’ll post an additional clue on our Facebook page this afternoon.

Note: When you submit your answer on this last riddle, you’re welcome to let us know your prize preference in the comments section. We can’t guarantee that the three winners will receive their preferred prize package, but it may help them receive the prizes that best suit them. If you need to refresh your memory on the prizes, check them out here! Thanks!

 

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Magnifying.Q2You all did great with Question 1 of the Preservation Virtual Scavenger Hunt! We hope you liked learning more about Alhambra Preservation Group and its history! If you haven’t answered question one yet, it’s not too late to go back and participate!

You’ll have to search a little deeper to find the answer to our second riddle. Telling us (1) the architectural style of the house and (2) the name of the APG award its homeowners won means you’ve solved this one! Remember, the answers can be found on APG’s new website. Put your best sleuthing skills to the test!

Every year when leaves fall
APG highlights Alhambra’s best
Who have toiled with love and sweat
Restoring their homes without rest

In 2011 APG featured a home
With a decidedly English style
Located in Alhambra’s Orange Blossom Manor tract
Where oranges once grew for miles

This home with its steep roof
Gables and beautiful half-timbering
Caught APG’s attention
And received an award worth remembering

These awards celebrate Alhambra’s heritage
A few homes at a time
And calls attention to our city’s legacy
Of architectural gems so very fine

If you’re having a difficult time with this one, we’ll post an additional clue on our Facebook page this afternoon at 3 p.m.

 

 

 

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Water.FaucetBy Christine Olson, President, Alhambra Preservation Group

There is a growing awareness on the part of urban planners throughout the U.S. that historic preservation is closely tied to the conservation of natural resources.  In fact, some have referred to it as “the ultimate recycling strategy.”

Now that Governor Brown has formally declared a drought emergency in California, it’s time for us to flex our environmental muscles and do what we can to reduce our water usage.  Our target is a 20% reduction; together we can make a difference.  While not all of us can afford to spend money on landscape redesign, rain harvesting systems, tankless water heaters, or replacing our washing machines with newer high-efficiency models, we can all make simple adjustments that collectively will have a big impact.

Yesterday I placed a bucket in the shower, to collect the water that would otherwise go down the drain while it warms up.  That’s at least a half-gallon saved every day, which now goes to water my vegetable garden.  I challenge you to find your own water-saving strategies and share them here with us, to help inspire our friends and neighbors.

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1824Sixth.currentIn a recent award ceremony, Alhambra Preservation Group honored the homeowner of a classic 1912 Swiss Chalet Craftsman Bungalow with its 2013 Heritage Home Award. Located in Alhambra’s historic Ramona Park area, this home is one of many houses built by the Ramona Park Building Company just after the turn of the 20th century. “It is Alhambra Preservation Group’s great pleasure to present this award in recognition of the investment this homeowner has made in the preservation of Alhambra’s architectural history,” stated APG president, Christine Olson, in presenting the annual award.

This home, located on the western edge of Ramona Park, features many of the design elements for which the Ramona Park Building Company was known. The company’s principles, John and Daniel Althouse, were contemporaries of the Pasadena-based Greene brothers and had a solid reputation for high-class, high-quality work. Two front-facing low-pitched gables and the influence of the Swiss Chalet style can be seen in the arrow-patterned gable vents.  The wraparound porch is offset to the north, supported by columns and is enclosed by a distinctive stickwork railing.  Two broad fixed windows flank the front door, with its leaded glass window.  Shingles sheathe the structure down to the windowsills, where a flared skirt of shiplap siding wraps the building.

Arlow and Georgia Watson had this home custom built in 1912. The Watsons came to Southern California from St. Paul, Minnesota in 1909 with their two-year old daughter, Dorothy.  Their son, Arlo, was born in Alhambra. The Watson family lived here for more than thirty years, until Arlow’s death in 1943.

More than 40 years later, the current homeowner was in the market to purchase a “well-built home with real character” in Alhambra. In an interesting twist, the homeowner’s realtor talked about the home in which he had been raised – this very home. The home needed a lot of work! Most of the Douglas fir woodwork had multiple coats of paint and the green shag carpeting throughout.  The ceilings had been texture-coated and all of the original light fixtures were gone. In the kitchen, a suspended ceiling was installed over fluorescent lights.

Despite its challenges, the homeowner could tell that the home had “good bones and was very solidly built.” It featured a beautiful built-in buffet in the dining room that had somehow managed to survive unpainted.  Most importantly though, the home’s essential character was still there – although barely distinguishable under all the paint and carpeting – and the homeowner could see its potential.

Today that potential has been realized!  The front porch, which was enclosed as a separate room when the homeowner purchased the house, has been removed, and its original use restored with its wooden bead board ceiling painstakingly stripped and stained. The fireplace and chimney have been repaired and restored. In the kitchen, the fluorescent lights and suspended ceiling have been removed and the original straight-pine floor restored. The ugly carpeting has been torn out, revealing the original quarter-sawn oak floors.  And along the way, there have been a few surprises. The basement contained a box of beveled glass pieces that the homeowner learned belonged in the home’s front door, which have now been reinstalled. In another section of the basement, the frame and hardware for the folding Murphy bed that was original to the home’s front parlor was found.  Its re-installation is a project yet to be tackled.

Now, this Craftsman gem welcomes friends and family, restored to its original splendor by a homeowner who looked past a neglected and forgotten old house and saw the beauty and quality that is unique to this home. Thanks to the care and stewardship demonstrated by this homeowner, this home is ready to shine for another century in Alhambra’s historic Ramona Park.

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212.S.CordovaOn October 17, at a standing-room-only event at the Civic Center Library, Alhambra Preservation Group honored four Alhambra homes with its annual Heritage Home Awards.  Among the awardees was an elegant 1926 Spanish Colonial Revival home located in the city’s original Alhambra Tract.  In a departure from its historic practice, APG chose, this year, to recognize the extraordinary care taken by a team of property developers to preserve this Alhambra landmark while also developing the adjacent property.  In presenting the award to the principals of Arroyo Garden, LLC, APG President Christine Olson stated, “It is a very rare thing for any developer to go to the lengths that this team has to preserve a unique example of local history – especially without benefit of valuable preservation incentives like tax credits.  We are proud to honor their efforts with our 2013 Heritage Home Award.”

The two-story Spanish Colonial Revival home was built on the banks of the Arroyo del Molino in 1926 by Alhambra builder Holly Charlton for Carl M. Cooper and his wife Hattie May McKay Cooper.  Cooper was employed as the Vice President and General Manager of the San Gabriel Mission Playhouse Corporation.  From his bedroom on the second floor, he could easily supervise the ongoing construction of the new Mission Playhouse designed by famed architect Arthur Burnett Benton, and located just a short distance across the arroyo.

The Cooper home is a classic example of Spanish Colonial Revival architecture of the 1920s.  A large two-story stucco residence, with terra cotta tile roof, clay vent pipes at the front gable, decorative wooden shutters flanking double-hung windows on the second story, and two balconies – one with decorative ironwork, and the second featuring a shed roof with wooden balustrade.  The restrained design of the home is given a romantic focal point in the deeply inset paneled door, framed by a scalloped arch.  A newly-landscaped front yard features mature agaves, palms and roses.

The Cooper house and its adjacent lot were purchased in 2012 by a team of real estate investors and developers who saw an opportunity to restore the home’s faded elegance while, simultaneously, dividing the large property into smaller parcels for the construction of additional homes.  From the beginning, the Arroyo Garden team focused on preserving the essential, character-defining features of the Cooper house while adding modern amenities desired by 21st Century families.  New copper plumbing, new electrical service, refinished hardwood floors, new heating and air conditioning systems and completely remodeled kitchen and bathrooms are just a few of these enhancements.  Newly refurbished and restored to its former elegance, the Cooper house will continue into its second century.

The Cooper house is now on the market.  For information, please contact Mark Paulson at Venti Realtors (626) 282-6121.  

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Mailboxes.taylor.aIn your mailbox last week, you probably noticed a letter from Alhambra Preservation Group (APG) containing information about our 2014 membership campaign.

If you haven’t done so already, we invite you to take a moment, read the letter and consider joining Alhambra Preservation Group. Established in 2003 and incorporated as an independent nonprofit organization in 2006, APG is uniting a growing number of Alhambra households, business and community leaders in a forward-thinking mission of protecting and celebrating Alhambra’s historical, architectural and cultural resources.

Alhambra Preservation Group offers membership opportunities at three levels, each with its own associated benefits. We invite your participation and welcome your support.  In exchange, we can promise you a full calendar of fun and educational activities, opportunities to meet neighbors, discover new friendships and, most importantly, to deepen and “grow” your investment in Alhambra—our shared “home town.”

If you didn’t receive our membership information, please give us a call at (626) 755-3467 or send us an e-mail at info@alhambrapreservation.org!

Photo courtesy of taylor.a via flickr.com.

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By now, everyone is aware that November 6th is Election Day!  Here in Alhambra, we have one City Council seat in contention.  Elizabeth Salinas and Steve Placido are running against one another, each seeking to represent District 4 on the Council over the next four years.

We at Alhambra Preservation Group wanted to engage with the candidates to learn about, and to inform Alhambra voters of, their positions on historic preservation.  In this spirit, we invited Dr. Placido and Ms. Salinas to sit down with us a few weeks ago for a brief interview to share their views on issues related to our own mission.

We videotaped both interviews, which consisted of their individual responses to five questions posed by APG members and have made them available to the public on our YouTube channel.

We hope that you’ll check them out and get to know our 2012 City Council candidates just a little bit better!

APG’s goal for this project was to add to the availability of reliable and accurate information on the candidates’ positions that will help all of us to make an informed decision at the ballot box.  We believe that we have been successful in this and we’re grateful to both of our City Council candidates for taking the time to participate and to share their positions with the voters.

Most importantly, don’t forget to vote on November 6th!  Every vote matters!

Photo courtesy of creativedc.

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Make the most of your APG membership!  Every year in the Fall, Alhambra Preservation Group hosts a special “members-only” activity — a free guided tour of a Southern California architectural treasure.

This year we have a real treat in store for our members — a two-hour walking tour of the Caltech campus in Pasadena, scheduled for Friday morning, November 9th from 10 a.m. to noon.  If you’re not already a member of APG, you can join today and request to have your name added to our list of tour-goers.  A maximum of 30 participants can be accommodated on our private “behind the scenes” tour of the campus, but there are still spots available.

After a brief visit to the Caltech faculty club, the renowned Athenaeum designed in 1931 by Gordon Kaufmann, the tour will explore several original buildings on campus, some of which date to 1910.  Participants will see how architect and master planner Bertram Goodhue, using “shaded portals, sheltering walls and Persian pools,” set the tone for a campus of great beauty — so that the scientists and engineers working and studying here could become more aware of the aesthetic values of life.

Our tour guide will be Romy Wyllie, author of the foremost reference work on the history of the Institute, Caltechs Architectural Heritage, from Spanish Tile to Modern Stone, published in 2000.  A certified interior designer and member of the International Interior Design Association, Wyllie has taught architectural history and interior design.  She is co-founder and chairman of the Caltech Architectural Tour Service.

The Caltech tour is a fairly strenuous walk, covering a distance of about 1.3 miles, and it includes flights of stairs.  Comfortable walking shoes are recommended.  We regret that strollers, walkers and wheelchairs cannot be accommodated on this tour.

The deadline for registration is Wednesday, October 31.  Call today to learn more, or to get your name on the list of tour-goers:  (626) 755-3467.

Photos courtesy of Caltech.

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