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UID:5446-1779390000-1779395400@dcpreservation.org
SUMMARY:Public Meeting: Housing Black Washington Multiple Property Document
DESCRIPTION:Please join the DC Historic Preservation Office\, the DC Preservation League\, and Architectural Historian Heather McMahon for this public presentation about the Housing Black Washington Multiple Property Document. This project is funded by an Underrepresented Communities Grant from the National Park Service. \nThis study looks closely at the places Black Washingtonians have called home over time. It especially explores housing considered “affordable\,” meaning it was intended for working-class residents\, since African Americans have always made up a significant portion of the District of Columbia’s working class since racial restrictions kept many in lower-wage\, blue-collar or service-sector jobs. Since the District of Columbia’s founding\, housing for African Americans had often been relegated to rear yards\, back alleys\, isolated neighborhoods\, and undesirable locations. Their homes were hidden although their work was salient: Black Washingtonians helped build the White House\, the U.S. Capitol\, Washington’s grand avenues\, and national monuments. \nThis meeting is free to attend! \nREGISTER HERE
URL:https://dcpreservation.org/event/public-meeting-housing/
LOCATION:Zoom
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UID:5451-1779994800-1779998400@dcpreservation.org
SUMMARY:Book Talk: Georgetown University: An Architectural History
DESCRIPTION:Spanning the university’s genesis in 1789 through to today\, the new book\, Georgetown University: An Architectural History\, provides the reader with a close look at over fifty campus buildings. \nThis book presentation will explore the Georgetown University campus over time with highlights of its historical and modern architecture\, from the Old North building (1795) to its twenty-first-century development. With modern photographs as well as historical images drawn from the university archives\, we will discuss the background of Georgetown’s buildings. The talk will highlight multiple periods in the university’s history including its entanglement with slavery\, the presidencies of Patrick Healy\, SJ and W. Coleman Nevils\, SJ as well as its mid-twentieth century and later university leadership. \nThe Georgetown campus includes architecture by leading historical and contemporary designers such as John Smithmeyer and Paul Pelz\, Emile Perrot\, John Carl Warnecke\, Hugh Hardy\, Hugh Newell Jacobsen\, and Robert A.M. Stern Architects. The buildings exemplify a host of architectural styles including Federal\, Romanesque and Gothic Revival\, International Style\, Brutalist and Postmodern. Changes in the university landscape and connections to broader trends in American campus development will be highlighted. Lastly\, we will also discuss the book’s curriculum connected development. \nYou can buy the book here or on Amazon. \nThis book talk is free to attend! \nREGISTER HERE\n \nStephanie Rufino is an architectural and art historian and has published on the decoration and architecture of both the Washington National Cathedral and historic American banks from the 1920s. Dr. Rufino holds a PhD in American art and architectural history from the University of Virginia and an MBA from Georgetown University’s McDonough School of Business. She graduated cum laude from Smith College and also earned a master’s degree in art history. Dr. Rufino taught architectural history at Georgetown for over a decade\, where she also served in multiple university leadership roles. She currently serves as Director of Undergraduate Design Programs and Associate Professor at Wentworth’s School of Architecture & Design in Boston.
URL:https://dcpreservation.org/event/book-talk-georgetown-university/
LOCATION:Zoom
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