The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation and Town Green

PRESS RELEASE

The Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation and TownGreen/2025 present a
Community symposium called ā€˜HISTORIC PRESERVATION & ARCHITECTURAL SUSTAINABILITY?ā€™ at the Meetinghouse, Saturday, November 11, 2:00-6:00pm

BRIEF DESCRIPTION: The event will explore whether preserving our older homes and buildings is compatible the goal of becoming ā€œgreenā€ through presentations, responses from a distinguished panel, and ample time for audience Q&A.

MORE INFO: Cape Ann is actively pursuing two goals that are sometimes viewed as separate or opposed. One is for the preservation of our historic buildings and homes, especially as Gloucesterā€™s 400th anniversary approaches in 2023. The other is to seek alternate sources and minimize energy consumption, reducing our overall carbon footprint to counter the global forces of climate change.

We ask the question of whether preservation and sustainability can be complementary rather than competitive goals. The Symposium is designed to provide a friendly and informative forum in which residents may interact with professionals to see how these two worthy goals may go together.

The mission of TownGreen/2025, an initiative under the GMF and working with the Gloucester Clean Energy Commission, is to help Gloucester become less reliant upon fossil fuels and approach being carbon neutral in a decade.

More information is available at http://www.gloucestermeetinghouse.org

LOCATION: The historic (1806) Gloucester Meetinghouse, home of the Gloucester Unitarian Universalist Church, on the green at the corner of Church & Middle Street. Parking is available on the green, next door at St. Johnā€™s Church, and at the Sawyer Free Library. Side entrance with an elevator is at 10 Church St.

ADMISSION: Free (offerings gratefully accepted), refreshments available

MORE INFORMATION (not for publication)
EVENT CONTACT: Charles Nazarian, president, Gloucester Meetinghouse Foundation at c.nazarian@gloucestermeetinghouse.org or 978-821-5291

November 11th 2017, Symposium

Historic Preservation & Architectural Sustainability

Draft Sequence (revised 10-30-17)

2:00pm Welcome & Statement of Purpose Charles Nazarian
2:10 Greeting from the Mayor Sefatia R-Theken
2:15 Review of Terms/Definitions Maureen Aylward
2:25 Vision of Carbon-Neutral: TG/2025 Susan Hogue
2:40 Q&A panel
2:50 Break
3:00 Historic Preservation Guidelines Prudence Fish
3:15 Example: City Hall Maggie Rosa
3:30 Conserve, Fix or Replaceā€¦greener? Action, Inc.
3:40 Q&A panel
3:50 Break
4:00 Building Products & LEED Measures Peter Nobile
4:30 One Builderā€™s Perspective Carl Thomsen
4:40 Q&A panel
5:00 Solar Sharing Program Isaac Baker
5:15 Carbon Sequestration, RTT Dick P.
5:30 Example: AirKrete Dana Nute
5:40 Q&A panel
5:55 Closing Charles N.
6:00 Sortie

Panel:
Paul McGeary Former City Council President, Member CEC
Bill Remsen Preservation & Restoration Architect
Walter Beebe-Center Owner, Essex Restoration (TBD)

BirdsEye Parcel Symposium 4/24

At 9 AM on Saturday April 24 Mac Bellā€™s BirdsEye team will present its second informational session at the Kyrouz Auditorium in Gloucesterā€™s City Hall.

Bell, whose familyā€™s ties in the Fort neighborhood stretch back to the early 1900s, purchased the historic BirdsEye property on Commercial St. in July 2009. In keeping with his commitment to a project that will benefit the city as a whole, he has been working intensively with neighborhood groups, architects, city planners, and state and local officials to develop concepts for the best and highest use of the site.

Saturdayā€™s event will report on the progress of those efforts.

Since last August, Bellā€™s team has been surveying local opinion and conducting focus groups and neighborhood meetings. M.J. Boylan will discuss the teamā€™s findings, and she and Gregor Gibson will put this information in the larger context of Gloucesterā€™s history and future ā€“ specifically the damaging detour that city fathers took in the 60s and 70s, down the road of monolithic use and restrictive Urban Renewal-era zoning that resulted in dead ends like the infamous I-4, C-2 parcel on Rogers St.

Overwhelmingly, the consensus of the prior information gathering sessions has pointed away from such thinking toward a mixed use that allows for waterfront access, public space with an art or educational component, and a blend of commercial, residential and retail uses. There were suggestions of all kinds, but the common thread was a hearkening back to the vitality and energy of Gloucester in its healthiest days, and a strong desire to return to that kind of urban lifestyle. The consensus was for increased tax dollars, more jobs, and a revitalized downtown, and nearly everyone thought that a diversity of uses would be a better way to accomplish this than a single, sprawling hotel or mall.

Presentations by architects and planners Richard Griffin, Craig Herrmann and David McCarley will explore the real-world possibilities for making ā€œwish listā€ concepts come true in challenging economic times. They will portray an extremely fluid situation in which the ultimate development of the property depends on a regulatory framework that allows for mixed use without the endless hoop-jumping that has squashed many waterfront projects in the past. Because of its unique status of being zoned for density and diversity (prior to BirdsEye, many hundreds of people lived and worked there), the BirdsEye parcel is potentially open to residential/commercial/industrial use not seen on that site since Gloucesterā€™s heyday.

The session will close with a summary and overview by Mac Bell.

The final plan, he says, is going to be driven by a combination of regulatory and economic factors that are not yet fully known. ā€œWe have three acres of amazing downtown, harbor front property to work with. What we build there depends on what weā€™ll be allowed do on the site.ā€

Bell is adamant that the entire property be deed restricted ā€œso as to only allow investors, tenants and residents who acknowledge and accept the ā€˜charmā€™ of the neighborhoodā€™s mixed use nature. People who find that aspect attractive are the only customers I know who will want to be part of the project.ā€

And, he insists, any development will embody the creativity, vitality and diversity that are the heart and soul of Gloucester. ā€œWe want to provide the opportunity for varied, synergistic uses, balanced within our ability to meet needs for parking, public access, views, and utilities. It is our hope that people interested in ownership, rental or tenancy will, together, make BirdsEye a ā€˜Living Districtā€™ where people can live, work and play.ā€