US/ICOMOS Newsletter 2007 No. 1

Transcription

US/ICOMOS Newsletter 2007 No. 1
US/ICOMOS
newsletter
1st quarter 2007
(January—March
2006 US/ICOMOS ANNUAL REPORT
US/ICOMOS was founded in 1965 as the United States
committee of the International Council on Monuments and
Sites (ICOMOS), which itself was created earlier that year in
Krakow, Poland under the aegis of the United Nations
Educational, Cultural and Scientific Organization
(UNESCO).
The founding Chair of US/ICOMOS was Robert Garvey.
Since that time there have been ten other Chairs: Edward P
Alexander, John O Brew, Ernest Allen Connally, W Brown
Morton III, Terry B Morton, Elliott Carroll, FAIA, John
Fowler, Ann Webster Smith, Robert Wilburn, and a second
term for John Fowler.
The mission of US/ICOMOS is to foster heritage
conservation and historic preservation at the national and
international levels through education and training,
international exchanges of people and information, technical
assistance, documentation, advocacy and other activities
consistent with the goals of ICOMOS and through
collaboration with other organizations.
US/ICOMOS is a non-governmental, not-for-profit
membership organization registered in the District of
Columbia. Its members include professionals, practitioners,
supporters and organizations committed to the protection,
conservation, and management of the world’s culturally
significant built environment. (continued on page 2)
US/ICOMOS Chair John Fowler (right) during the Board of Trustees planning meeting in
Newport
In this issue
2006 US/ICOMOS Annual Report
US/ICOMOS Membership - 2
US/ICOMOS Board of Trustees - 2
US/ICOMOS and ICOMOS - 4
US/ICOMOS Representation Abroad - 6
US/ICOMOS and International Cultural Conventions - 9
US/ICOMOS and the Preserve America Summit - 10
9th US/ICOMOS International Symposium - 11
US/ICOMOS Cooperation with the National Trust - 12
US/ICOMOS International Exchange Program - 12
In Memoriam: Ann Webster Smith - 13
Financial Support for US/ICOMOS - 13
2006 US/ICOMOS Supporters - 14
2006 US/ICOMOS Institutional Members - 15
2006 US/ICOMOS Members - 16
Visit us on the web at HTTP://WWW.ICOMOS.ORG/USICOMOS
2 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
US/ICOMOS Membership
US/ICOMOS membership falls into four categories:
individuals can join as international members, national
affiliates, or students, and institutional memberships are
available to organizations, universities, private firms,
governmental agencies, etc. In 2006, US/ICOMOS had a
total of 688 members, including 514 International members,
122 National Affiliates, 52 Student members, and 59
Institutional members (Institutional members are listed on
page 15 and individual members are listed on page 16).
2006 Board Officers
John Fowler, Chair
Stephen Farneth, Vice Chair
Erica Avrami, Secretary
Gina Haney, Treasurer
New Board members
(elected at the 2006 annual meeting )
US/ICOMOS Board of Trustees
Nan Gutterman, Pennsylvania
David W Look, California
Jon Smith of Washington, DC
Leadership and stewardship for US/ICOMOS is provided
by a 21-member, nationally representative Board of Trustees
who are elected to three-year terms by the general
membership at the Annual Meeting held each Spring (see
box at right). In addition, US/ICOMOS invites key
agencies/organizations to attend US/ICOMOS Board
meetings in a non-voting (Ex-Officio) capacity.
(elected to a second three-year term and
will serve through 2009)
The Board meets four times a year. In 2006, it met in
January in Washington, DC, in April in Newport, Rhode
Island, in conjunction with the US/ICOMOS Annual
Meeting and International Symposium; in July in San
Francisco, California; and in October in Washington, DC.
Standing Committees
The US/ICOMOS Board enables increased involvement
and equitable responsibility of its members through its
standing Committees. The Standing Committees and their
chairs are:
Program Commmittee (Pamela Jerome)
Resources Committee (Katherine Slick)
Nominating Committee (Carol Shull)
Audit Committee (Katherine Slick)
Executive Committee
The Executive Committee meets every month, usually by
teleconference, and includes the four officers plus the chairs
of the Program and Resources committees. The immediate
past Chair (Robert Wilburn) and the Executive Director
(Gustavo F Araoz, AIA) are both non-voting ex-officio
members of the Executive Committee. Other Board
members may be invited to participate as well.
Re-elected Board members
Pamela Jerome, New York
James K Reap, Georgia
Carol Shull, Virginia
Other voting Board members
Jan C K Anderson, New York
Kathryn H Barth, Colorado
Douglas Comer, Maryland
Michael Devonshire, New York
Ronald Lee Fleming, Massachusetts
Darwina Neal, Washington, DC
George Skarmeas, Pennsylvania
Katherine Slick, New Mexico
Jannelle Warren-Findley, Arizona
Immediate Past Chair
(also serves as a non-voting member)
Robert Wilburn, Pennsylvania
Expired terms
Jeanne Marie Teutonico, California
(completed her maximum two 3-year terms
after contributing significantly to the
betterment of the organization)
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 3
Ex-Officio Representatives
In response to the important role that US/ICOMOS plays
as a bridge between the heritage community of the United
States and the international world of preservation, the Board
invites key agencies and organizations involved in
preservation at the national level to designate one
representative each as non-voting members of the Board,
commonly referred to as the Ex-Officio members. The
purpose here is dual: to add to the international projection
of all these organizations and to promote cooperative
international work among all. The 18 organizations/
agencies represented are listed in the box at right.
US/ICOMOS Fellows
US/ICOMOS honors its members for sustained
outstanding achievements in international preservation and
for their service to the organization specifically and more
generally to the international heritage conservation
community by naming them Fellows of US/ICOMOS.
In 2006, Samuel Stokes of Washington, DC and James K
Reap of Georgia were elected Fellows of US/ICOMOS for
their extraordinary service to US/ICOMOS for more than
two decades. Both were inducted by US/ICOMOS Chair
John Fowler at the Annual Meeting in Newport. They are
the 34th and 35th distinguished American preservationists to
be honored since the establishment of the program in 1982.
US/ICOMOS Specialized
Committees & Interest Groups
US/ICOMOS Specialized Committees and interest groups
serve two purposes: to provide a venue for members to
focus narrower concerns of heritage preservation within the
specific confines of various heritage categories and activities;
and to provide a vehicle for input from the United States
into the programs of the International Scientific Committees
of ICOMOS. Stephen Farneth (Vice Chairman of US/
ICOMOS) provides oversight and coordination of the
Specialized Committees on behalf of the Board.
The Committees and working groups are open to all
members and rely on their volunteer work to expand
knowledge by advancing each committee’s agenda. (The
Specialized Committees and working groups are listed in the
box at right.) Most Committees and working groups met
during the Annual Meeting in Newport to map out their
Ex-Officio Representatives
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
American Association of Museums/ICOM
American Institute of Architects
American Planning Association
American Society of Civil Engineers
American Society of Landscape Architects
Archaeological Institute of America
Association for Preservation
Technology International
National Building Museum
National Park Service
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Preservation Action
Smithsonian Institution
Society for American Archaeology
Society for Historical Archaeology
Society of Architectural Historians
US Department of State
US/ICOMOS Specialized Committees
Archaeological Heritage Management
(Douglas C Comer, Maryland)
Cultural Tourism
(Tordis Ilg Isselhardt, Vermont)
Documentation
(Christopher Gray, California)
Earthen Architecture
(Anthony Crosby, New Mexico)
Fortifications and Military Heritage
(Paul Hawk, Maryland)
Historic Gardens and Cultural Landscapes
(Patricia O’Donnell, Vermont
Historic Towns
(Ronald Lee Fleming, Massachusetts
Interpretation & Presentation of Heritage
Sites
(James Jameson, Florida)
Preservation Law
(James K Reap, Georgia)
Training
(Roy E Graham, FAIA,, Florida, and
Philip Cryan Marshall, Rhode Island)
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
4 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
annual agenda. Others met during major national
conferences or the annual meeting of affinity organizations.
US/ICOMOS and ICOMOS
ICOMOS is the only global non-governmental organization
that brings together all professional disciplines and
supporters of historic preservation throughout the world in
order to enhance heritage protection in every country and to
foster international cooperation and the exchange of
information. More than 10,000 members affiliated through
125 National Committees make up one part of the global
network of ICOMOS.
ICOMOS Secretariat
ICOMOS Secretariat headquarters are in Paris, France. The
organization is governed internationally by a Bureau, an
Executive Committee, and an Advisory Committee. The 8member Bureau and a 12-member Executive Committee are
elected by delegates from National Committees in good
standing at the ICOMOS General Assembly, which is held
every three years.
In order to achieve full regional representation, the elected
Committee co-opts five additional members from under
represented areas of the world. The Advisory Committee is
made up of the Presidents of all National Committees and
International Scientific Committees. The Bureau meets three
times a year: once by itself and twice in conjunction with the
Executive Committee. The Advisory Committee meets once
a year.
International Scientific Committees (ISCs)
In addition to the governing bodies, the ICOMOS network
consists of International Scientific Committees (ISCs) that
address specialized concerns of the various fields of heritage
protections and whose membership cuts across all National
Committees. The 28 ISCs are regulated by the Eger-Xi’an
Principles adopted in 2005 at the General Assembly in
China. Each ISC must be hosted by a National Committee
that serves as the ISC’s Secretariat.
To provide further guidance for the ISCs, the General
Assembly resolved in 2005 to establish a Scientific Council
composed of the Chairs of all International Scientific
Committees. The goal of the Scientific Council is to
promote inter-disciplinary cooperation among the ISCs
Members of the Bureau
Elected at the 2005 General Assembly in
China, and will serve through the 2008
General Assembly in Canada
President
Michael Petzet, Germany
Secretary General
Dinu Bumbaru, Canada
Treasurer General
Giora Solar, Israel
Vice Presidents
Gustavo F Araoz, United States
Kristal Buckley, Australia
Tamás Fejerdy, Hungary
Carlos Pernaut, Argentina
Guo Zhan, China
Executive Committee
Elected members
Ray Bondin, Malta
Andrew Hall, South Africa
Axel Mykleby, Norway
Gilles Nourissier, France
Yasuyoshi Okada, Japan
Hae Un Rii, Korea
Angela Rojas, Cuba
Bénédicte Selfslagh, Belgium
Hristina Staneva, Bulgaria
Lazar Sumanov, Macedonia
Javier Villalobos, Mexico
Boguslaw Szmygin, Poland
Co-opted members of the
Executive Committee
Philippe de Lalouvière, Mauritius
Britta Rudolf, Bahrain
Natalia Tarekuluva, Kazakhstan
Rassoul Vatandoust, Iran
The President of the Advisory Committee
is also an ex-officio member of the
Executive. John Hurd of the United
Kingdom (elected to a three-year term in
2006).
Scientific Council
Michal Firestone, Israel
Pamela Jerome, United States
Sofia Avgerinou Kolonias, Greece
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US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 5
through joint programs that address the needs of ICOMOS
and the needs of the preservation community in all regions
of the world.
International Scientific
Committees and Host
Secretariats
To better serve our members, the framework and structure
of the ICOMOS ISCs has been extensively revised. ISCs
have abandoned the policy of one voting member per
National Committee, replacing it with a new category of
unlimited numbers of Expert Members. While any member
of ICOMOS may apply for expert membership in as many
ISCs as she/he wishes, certain criteria must be met to gain
this recognition. (All ISCs have adopted or are in the
process of developing their own specific criteria, which will
be made public as soon as all are formally adopted and
approved.)
Archaeological Heritage Management
(ICAHM) - Australia
Worldwide Membership and Activist Network
The worldwide professional and activist network of
ICOMOS members is the greatest asset of the organization.
It brings together more than 10,000 committed
preservationists that include the most distinguished and
experienced practitioners, academics, theorists, advocates
and supporters of heritage conservation. ICOMOS draws
from this intellectual wealth to provide unquestioned
leadership in developing a sound doctrinal foundation for
the ethical management of the world’s heritage, as well as
effective guidance in the managerial and technical aspects of
preserving fabric and meaning in historic sites.
To this end, ICOMOS periodically adopts charters,
principles and guidelines at its triennial general assemblies.
Currently, two charters, one on Cultural Itineraries and
another one on the Interpretation of the Built Heritage, are
undergoing universal review by the entire membership in
preparation for adoption at the 2008 General Assembly in
Quebec, Canada.
US/ICOMOS and
International Initiatives of ICOMOS
In addition to providing direct leadership in various
professional and administrative aspects, US/ICOMOS
supports the various programs of ICOMOS, either directly
or through the work of other preservation organizations in
the United States.
Analysis and Restoration of Structures
(ISCARSAH) - Spain
Cultural Routes (CIIC) - Spain
Cultural Tourism - Australia
Documentation (CIPA)- Canada
Earthen Architecture
United States and United Kingdom
Economics of Conservation - Italy
Fortifications and Military Heritage
(ICOFort) - Poland
Historic Gardens and Cultural Landscapes
Italy
Historic Villages and Towns (CIVVIH)
Malta
Intangible Aspects of the Built Heritage
South Africa
Interpretation and Presentation of Heritage
Sites - Belgium
Legal-Administrative-Financial Issues
(ICLAFI) - United States
Mural Painting - Sri Lanka
Polar Heritage - Norway
Risk Preparedness - Australia
Rock Art - Sweden
Shared Heritage and Architecture
Netherlands
Stained Glass - Switzerland
Stone - France
Theories of Conservation - Hungary
Training - Italy and the Netherlands
Twentieth Century Heritage
Australia and France
Underwater Heritage Management
Canada
Vernacular Architecture - Canada
Wood - United Kingdom and Italy
Works of Art in Historic Buildings
Greece
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
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Through our national network of members, US/ICOMOS
is participating in two important Internet discussions guided
by the ICOMOS Scientific Council: the effects of global
warming on cultural heritage and the implications of reclassifying historic cities as historic urban landscapes.
Another example of support is the world-wide
Heritage@Risk program launched in 2001 by ICOMOS
President Michael Petzet. Under this annual initiative, every
ICOMOS National Committee submits a report on the risks
facing its national inventory of heritage sites. The
contribution of US/ICOMOS to the program is the report
issued by the National Trust for Historic Preservation on
the Eleven Most Endangered Sites in the United States.
US/ICOMOS Representation Abroad
Representation by the United States in international
preservation events and activities is a major goal of US/
ICOMOS. Both general members and members of the
Board are urged to attend and contribute to international
initiatives and events, and, to that end, the generosity of
individuals and institutions help make that participation
possible, most notably that of the Samuel H Kress
Foundation in New York.
A principal overseas representation of US/ICOMOS is
carried out by US/ICOMOS members who hold
international office in ICOMOS. Currently there are four
such members: John Fowler, Gustavo Araoz, James Reap,
and Pamela Jerome. As US/ICOMOS Liaison to the Latin
American Region, Jan Anderson also acts as official
representative of the organization.
US/ICOMOS Board members Pamela
Jerome and John Fowler (chair) at an
Advisory Committee meeting
Advisory Council
As Chairman of the US National Committee, John Fowler is
an ex-officio member of the Advisory Committee, which
meets once a year. In 2006, the Advisory Committee met in
Edinburgh, Scotland. Breaking with tradition, Mr Fowler led
a delegation of US/ICOMOS Board members to participate
in the Edinburgh meetings to ensure a broader contribution
to ICOMOS by the United States. In addition to Mr Fowler,
the US/ICOMOS delegation included US/ICOMOS Board
members Jan Anderson, Pamela Jerome, James Reap and
Katherine Slick.
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 7
ICOMOS Vice President
Gustavo Araoz, Executive Director of US/ICOMOS, is also
one of five International Vice Presidents and a member of
the Bureau, the highest governing body of ICOMOS. In
2003 he was charged by ICOMOS President Petzet with the
International Scientific Committees, a responsibility that led
to the establishment of the ICOMOS Scientific Council in
2005. In 2006, President Petzet enlarged his charge to
include the National Committees, a responsibility that he
began with a worldwide survey of all National Committees.
In 2006 Mr Araoz attended meetings of the Bureau,
Executive Committee, and Scientific Council in Paris, Rome,
and Edinburgh, respectively.
As with all ICOMOS Vice Presidents, Mr Araoz is an exofficio member of the ICOMOS committee that annually
evaluates all cultural sites nominations to the UNESCO
World Heritage List. Mr Araoz also participated as a guest
observer in the annual meetings of the Historic Towns
Committee held in Patras, Greece and a meeting on Cultural
Routes in Madrid and Almaden, Spain. At the request of
UNESCO Director-General Matsuura, Mr Araoz serves on
the Advisory Committee for the Conservation of Old
Jerusalem and, in that capacity, participated in the second
meeting of the committee, held at UNESCO headquarters
in Paris. Mr Araoz also participated in the international
workshop on New Approaches to Urban Conservation
convened by the World Heritage Centre in Jerusalem.
Gustavo Araoz, AIA,
US/ICOMOS Executive Director and
ICOMOS Vice President
ISC President
Legal, Administrative, and Financial Issues
As President of the International Committee on Legal,
Administrative and Financial Issues, James K Reap
represented US/ICOMOS and presided over the
committee’s annual meeting and scientific symposium in
Japan, which dealt with the legal protection afforded World
Heritage sites’ buffer zones.
Vice President - ISCEAH
International Scientific Committee on Earthen
Architectural Heritage
US/ICOMOS Board Member
Pamela Jerome with US/ICOMOS Member
Bayard Whitmore
As Vice President of the International Committee on
Earthen Architectural Heritage (ISCEAH), Pamela Jerome
attended Edinburgh meeting of the Scientific Council,
where she was also elected as one of its three coordinators,
whose duties include oversight over the multi-disciplinary
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
8 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
cooperation of the International Scientific Committees on a
variety of research areas. Current Council programs include
worldwide forums on Historic Urban Landscapes and
Effects of Global Warming on Heritage Sites.
Representation on Other ISCs as Voting Members
US/ICOMOS is represented in many International
Scientific Committees of ICOMOS through at least one
voting member appointed by the US/ICOMOS Board,
which are listed in the box at right.
Other US/ICOMOS Activities Abroad
In 2006, US/ICOMOS received special funding for an
American internship in Ghana and expanded the mission to
include two volunteer Board members, Gina Haney and
James Reap. The objective was to monitor in situ the longterm sustainability of the US/ICOMOS project on cultural
tourism development in the Cape Coast region, completed
in 2001. The welcome findings revealed that the US/
ICOMOS Project has indeed had lasting effect, and the
presence of our delegation in Ghana helped revitalize
aspects of the project that had become dormant.
In addition to the above, US/ICOMOS members
represented the organization at the following international
events, representation made possible largely through the
generous support of the Samuel H Kress Foundation:
Jan C K Anderson of New York, as US/ICOMOS liaison to
the Committees of the Western Hemisphere, represented
US/ICOMOS at the Meetings of Presidents of National
Committees of ICOMOS in the Americas Region, held in
Zacatecas, Mexico.
Stephen J Kelley of Illinois presented a paper on “The
Challenges of Structural Stabilization following the
Hurricane Katrina Disaster” at the annual conference of the
International Committee on Structural Analysis of Historical
Constructions in New Delhi, India.
Kyle Normandin of New York presented two papers at the
same conference: “An Internet-Accessible Multilingual
Glossary on Stone Deterioration” and “Stone Conservation
Using Lime-based Mortars: Compatibility and factors
Affecting Performance.”
US/ICOMOS Voting Members
of International Scientific
Committees
Archaeological Heritage Management
Douglas C Comer (Maryland)
Documentation-CIPA
E Blaine Cliver (Virginia) and
Christopher Gray (California)
Architectural Structures
Stephen J Kelley, AIA (Illinois)
Cultural Corridors
Michael R Taylor (New Mexico)
Economics of Conservation
Donovan Rypkema (Washington, DC) and
Marta de la Torre (Florida)
Historic Gardens and Cultural Landscapes
Patricia O’Donnell, FASLA (Vermont) and
Darwina Neal (Washington, DC)
Historic Towns and Villages
Ronald Lee Fleming (Massachusetts)
Legal Issues
James Reap (Georgia)
Military Heritage and Fortifications
David Hansen (Washington) and
Milagros Flores (North Carolina)
Polar Heritage
Glenn Sheehan (Arkansas)
Rock Art
David Whitley (California)
Stone
Stefan Simon (California)
Training
Roy Graham, FAIA (Florida) and
Philip Cryan Marshall (Rhode Island)
US representations to International
Committees on Intangible Heritage, Shared
Colonial Heritage, Risk Preparedness,
Stained Glass, Heritage Objects in
Monuments, Theories of Conservation, and
Underwater Cultural Heritage are currently
vacant.
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US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 9
Michael Taylor of New Mexico presented a paper
“Mining and Industrial heritage and its Impact on
Camino Real de Tierra Adentro in New Mexico” at
annual conference of the International Committee
Cultural Routes in Madrid, Spain.
on
the
the
on
James K Reap of Georgia presented a paper “The Protective
Use of the World Heritage Concept of Buffer Zones” at the
annual conference of the International Committee on Legal,
Administrative and Financial Affairs in Hiroshima, Japan.
Svetlana Popovic of Maryland presented a paper on
“Dividing the Invisible: The Monastery Space - Secular and
Sacred” at the 21st International Congress on Byzantine
Studies in London, England.
Eric Deloney of New Mexico attended the XIII
International Congress on Industrial Heritage in Rome,
Italy, where he chaired the session on Recent Scholarship
and Best Practices on Historic Bridges. While in Rome, Mr
Deloney also organized a new international working group
dedicated to the protection of historic bridges.
US/ICOMOS as International Gateway
to Preservation in the United States
Recognized as a major preservation organization in the
United States, US/ICOMOS endeavors to keep the world
informed about major preservation trends in our country.
Part of that function is achieved through publications,
conferences and the Internet, but another major portion of
this responsibility is meeting and hosting foreign visitors
who come to learn about heritage conservation in the
United States. In 2005, US/ICOMOS received and/or met
with the numerous foreign delegations and/or
representatives (see box at right).
US/ICOMOS Meetings
with Foreign Delegations
Peru
A delegation from Peru consisting of
Bernarda Delgado, Director of the Museum
of Tucume, and Carmen Gamarra, in
charge of conservation and Registry in the
El Brujo Project in San Isidro
Japan
Professor Ito of Japan, former Vice
President of ICOMOS, visited in July
China
Gustavo Araoz met with ICOMOS Vice
President Guo Xhan, who headed a
delegation from China at the invitation of
the American Planning Association
Spain
Maria Rosa Suárez-Inclán, President of
ICOMOS Spain, visited the United States
and met with Gustavo Araoz to explore
venues for closer cooperation
India
Rajesh Agrawal, Executive Director for
Heritage in the Indian Ministry of Railways
in New Delhi, visited US/ICOMOS to
explore and discuss US-India cooperation
Ireland
John Strang of Huguenot Heritage worked
with US/ICOMOS to foster the protection of
Huguenot historic sites in Ireland
US/ICOMOS and
International Cultural Conventions
The official designation by the World Heritage Convention
of ICOMOS as a permanent advisor on cultural issues has
brought about a global network of all its committees
working on behalf of World Heritage throughout the world.
As part of this network, US/ICOMOS is always attentive to
a greater participation by the United States in the
Convention, as well as the best representation of the
heritage of our country in the World Heritage List.
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
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US Tentative List for World Heritage
In 2006 the National Park Service Office of International
Affairs (NPS/OIA) launched a national process to revise the
U.S. Tentative List of sites to be nominated to the World
Heritage List over the next 10 to 15 years. US/ICOMOS
welcomed this approach and, replicating the advisory role of
ICOMOS and UNESCO, has been ready to advise NPS/
OIA on the compilation of this important list.
Simultaneously, US/ICOMOS has offered its advice and
perspective to groups throughout the country who have
shown interest in submitting sites with apparent outstanding
universal value for consideration for inclusion in the
Tentative List. Such assistance included participation at the
Mexico-US meeting on the Camino Real held in Socorro,
New Mexico, and in the coordinating meeting convened by
the Frank Lloyd Wright Conservancy in Falling Water,
Pennsylvania.
US/ICOMOS Board members on a tour of
Newport’s planned World Heritage Nomination
Hague Convention
Over the years, US/ICOMOS also has been an advocate for
US ratification of the Hague Convention of 1954 for the
protection of cultural property in the vent of armed
conflicts. Given the rise in our military activity over the past
few years, in August US/ICOMOS convened a meeting of
all major cultural institutions in the country with interested
federal agencies to explore the likelihood of ratification in
the coming years. Out of that meeting came a determination
by the private organizations that ratification should be
actively pursued and, at the same time, that preservation and
heritage organizations should assist the Department of
Defense in developing more effective training to sensitize
our military forces in all aspects of heritage identification
and protection.
US/ICOMOS and the
Preserve America Summit
Recognizing the significance of the 40th anniversary of the
National Historic Preservation Act and the achievements it
made possible over four decades, First Lady Laura Bush
convened the Preserve America Summit to develop a vision
for preserving our nation’s heritage over the next 40 years.
The event was held in New Orleans in October.
Preserve America Summit
Recommendations for
“Participating in the Global
Preservation Community”
Establishing a central clearing house that
would summarize all international heritage
activities on the part of the public and
private sectors
Enlarging government programs for
international cultural cooperation,
especially those of the National Park
Service
Providing greater support to private
organizations engaged in international
heritage cooperation
Focusing a greater part of our international
development assistance on cultural and
heritage activities
To coordinate and guide the preparation for the meeting,
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US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 11
Mrs Bush secured the support of John Nau, Chairman of
the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation. Mr Nau and
the staff at the Advisory Council established a planning
structure of eleven issue areas, each to be co-chaired by a
federal agency and a private sector institution.
The issue area dealing with international work,
“Participating in the Global Preservation Community,” was
co-chaired by US/ICOMOS and the US Department of
Agriculture. Each group initiated a process of seeking public
comments and ideas and presided over a month-long
discussion by a designated panel of distinguished experts.
Each panel convened at the Preserve America Summit in
New Orleans in October, hosted a final round of
discussions over panel recommendations, then submitted
those recommendations to the Summit organizations for
presentation to all Summit attendees. Following the
Summit, each panel produced a final report that was
submitted to the Advisory Council.
The “Participating the Global Preservation Community”
panel consisted of Erica Avrami, Lowell Baier, Bonnie
Burnham, Marta de la Torre, Frank Hodsoll, Susan Kane,
Stephen Kelley, Nora J Mitchell and Jonathan Tourtelot.
9th US/ICOMOS International Symposium
In April, US/ICOMOS celebrated its 9th International
Symposium in Newport, Rhode Island, under the honorary
patronage of Senator Lincoln Chafee and hosted and
organized by the Newport World Heritage Committee. The
US/ICOMOS Symposium is the only regularly-held
preservation event in the United States that focuses on the
international exchange of ideas and experiences.
The theme for 2006—From World Heritage to Your Heritage—
was selected to help launch and educate our national process
of re-drafting the U.S. Tentative List of Sites available to be
nominated to the World Heritage List over the next ten
years, an initiative led by the National Park Service Office of
International Affairs. Eric Hertfelder served as Symposium
Chair and Herb Stovel served as General Rapporteur. (The
structure of the program along with the speakers and topics
is listed in the box at right.) To guarantee universal
accessibility to knowledge, proceedings for the Symposium
are scheduled to be posted in the US/CIOMOS website.
9th US/ICOMOS
International Symposium
Panel Discussion
Where in the World is U.S. Heritage?
Paul Hoffman, Asst Sec of Interior for Fish,
Wilsdliefe and Parks, and head of the US
World Heritage delegation
Francesco Bandarin, Director of the
UNESCO World Heritage Centre
Denis Ricard, Director of the Organization
of World Heritage Cities
James K Reap, Chair of the ICOMOS ISC
Legal, Administrative and Financial Affairs
Different Perspectives on Historic Cities
and Sites: Consequences for Protection
and Management
“Historic Buenos Aires as a World Heritage
Historic Urban Landscape” by Maria de las
Nieves Arias Incolla, Argentina
“Which Images for Genoa as a World
Heritage Site?” by Luisa de Marco, Italy
“Cultural Landscapes as World Heritage
Sites” by Nupur Prothi-Khanna, India
Lessons Learned from World Heritage
Cities and Sites: Broader Strategies for
Sustainable Development
“Preserving the Meaning of the Gulag” by
Victor Shmyrov, Russia
“Rehabilitation of the Tsunami-Devastated
City of Gale” by Ashley De Vos, Sri Lanka
“Historic Cities: the Role of Heritage in their
Economic Vitality” by Anne Harris, USA
“Complexity of the Camino de Santiago” by
Alberto Martorell, Spain
Examples of World Heritage Sites in
Building Public Awareness and Support
Viewshed Protection at Monticello” by Kat
Imhoff, USA
“Social Appropriation of Heritage in the
Historic Center of Lima” by Elena Molina,
Peru
Russian Orthodox Monasteries in the Holy
Land” by Ira Gorodskoy, Canada
“World Heritage Sites: natural vs. mise-enscene” by Aysil Yavuz, Turkey
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
12 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
US/ICOMOS Cooperation with the
National Trust for Historic Preservation
As is traditional, US/ICOMOS sponsored the US/
ICOMOS International Breakfast Meeting at the annual
meeting of the National Trust for Historic Preservation in
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The Breakfast gives members of
US/ICOMOS an opportunity to share their international
experience and become more informed about heritage
initiatives undertaken by other members. Gustavo Araoz,
US/ICOMOS Executive Director, hosted the event and
spoke at length about the current work of US/ICOMOS.
US/ICOMOS International Exchange Program
Since the US/ICOMOS International Exchange Program
began 24 years ago, nearly 600 preservation professionals
and over 70 countries have participated. The aim of the
program is to promote an understanding of international
preservation policies, methods and techniques, and to enable
interns to make professional contacts and to form personal
friendships that will ensure a continuing dialogue between
countries.
The program began with a one-time exchange between US/
ICOMOS and ICOMOS United Kingdom. It since has
expended to involve between 20 and 30 young preservation
professionals and numerous countries around the globe each
year. The program is made possible through generous
grants from U.S. foundations, non-profit preservation
organizations, government agencies, individual contributors,
and other ICOMOS National Committees.
The 2006 intern program included interns from and
internships in Belgium, Bulgaria, France, India, Italy,
Lithuania, Romania, Turkey, United Kingdom, and the
United States. US/ICOMOS is pleased that ICOMOS
Lithuania, working with Lithuanian Monuments, reinstated
the bilateral exchange after an absence of several years.
While the Samuel H. Kress Foundation annually provides
significant support for the program and overseas internships
for U.S. participants, in 2006 the Kress Foundation also
awarded US/ICOMOS a separate grant to conduct a shortterm internship to Ghana during the fall. In addition, Hillier
Architecture with offices in Philadelphia and elsewhere
hosted two international interns this season for the first
time.
Interns and Host
Organizations
Abbid Khan (India)
Historic Charleston Foundation, South
Carolina
Zsofia Hlavathy (Romania)
Cornestones Community Partnerships,
Santa Fe (pictured above)
Jabeen Manzoor (India)
Hillier Architecture, Philadelphia
Jovita Stakionyte (Lithuania)
Hillier Architecture, Philadelphia
Aleksandra Vadinska (Bulgaria)
The Presidio Trust, San Francisco
Serra Akboy (Turkey)
NPS HABS/HAER, Lubbock, TX and New
York City
Anna Latoch (Poland)
NPS Cultural Landscape Survey,
Washington, DC
Suzanne Copping (USA)
Ename Center, Oudenaarde, Belgium
Meghan Boyce (USA)
ICOMOS Secretariat, Paris, France
Marcelle Boudreaux (USA)
INTACH, New Delhi, India
Susan Reynolds (USA)
ICCROM, Rome, Italy
Emma Colon (USA)
The National Trust, United Kingdom
Anne Kidd (USA)
Lithuania Monuments, Vilnius, Lithuania
Theresa Coolahan (USA)
Various organizations, Ghana
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 13
New security requirements imposed by the Federal
government on federal agencies this spring severely limited
the number of internships in the United States this season.
Despite these restrictions, the National Park Services’
Heritage Documentation Services was able to host two
interns, one in Texas and New York and the other in
Washington, DC, and the Presidio Trust hosted an intern in
San Francisco. As they have in the past, Cornerstones
Community Partnerships (Sante Fe) and the Historic
Charleston Foundation (SC) also hosted interns. All 2006
interns and host organizations are listed in the box at right.
In Memoriam: Ann Webster Smith
The 2006 US/ICOMOS Annual Report cannot be complete
without marking the passing of Ann Webster Smith, Chair
Emerita. Fittingly, her extraordinary contributions to both
US/ICOMOS and ICOMOS were listed in the 2005 Annual
Report upon her being honored as the recipient of the Piero
Gazzola Prize at the 14th ICOMOS General Assembly in
China. Her work in US/ICOMOS has given us permanent
legacy that will last for decades to come and will always be a
motive for celebration.
Financial Support for US/ICOMOS
Ann Webster Smith
US/ICOMOS Chair Emerita
d. April 20, 2006 in Washington DC
As a not-for-profit organization, the operations of US/
ICOMOS are sustained by a combination of membership
dues, grants, and generous donations from individuals and
institutions. Our gratitude is expressed by recognizing all in
this annual report. It is important, however, to single out
two entities that over the years have given repeated and
extraordinary support to US/ICOMOS: the Samuel H Kress
Foundation and the U.S. National Park Service.
The year 2006 also marked the highest donation ever
received from individuals, Alexandra and Peter Harrison of
Albuquerque, New Mexico. Through their donation, these
donors express their belief in the mission of US/ICOMOS
as well as their trust in our ability to carry it out. We hope
that this report proves that US/ICOMOS has not let them
down.
The finances of US/ICOMOS are audited annually by the
independent certified public accounting firm of DeLeon &
Stang, of Gaithersburg, Maryland. Financial records of US/
ICOMOS and copies of the audits are available for
inspection at the office of US/ICOMOS.
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
14 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
2006 US/ICOMOS Supporters
$50,000 to $100,000
$500 to $999
Up to $100 (cont’d)
Department of Interior, National Park
Service
Samuel H Kress Foundation
Peter and Alexandra Harrison
Hillier Architecture
Gustavo Araoz
Erica Avrami
Ronald Lee Fleming
Fleming Charitable Trust
Nan Guterman
Frederick Hertz
Frank Hodsoll
David Look
Sally Oldham
$10,000 to $19,999
$100 to $499
Pamela Hawkes
Charles John
Mary Kay Judy
Amy Kasper
Evan Kopelson
Alice-Ann Krishiane
Sara Lardinois
Charles Leider
Violet McAuliffef
Kelly Moody
Svetlana Popovic
Julia Poppeliers
Bruce Potter
John Powell
Maria Sanchez-Carlo
Eduard Sekler
Richard Shieldhouse
Amy Speckart
Rosalind Streeter
CW Sun
$20,000 to $49,999
Marpat Foundation
AltusWork
Malcolm Bell
Dorothy Carroll
$5,000 to $9,999
Charles Smith Real Estate
Janice Connally
Cornerstones Community Partnerships
Crystal Spring Water
Heritage Landscapes
Hiroshi Daifuku
Historic Charleston Foundation
Lou Dakin
Newport Restoration Foundation
Tara Delaney
Perspective Communications
Marta de la Torre
The Presidio Trust
Françoise Descamps
Preservation Society of Newport County
Susan Jane Fink
Prince Charitable Trusts
Thomas Frank
Royal Oak Foundation
Sarah Gilchrist
Spencer Leineweber
Greenvale Vineyards
Alison Hoagland
Pamela Jerome
$1,000 to $4,999
Russell Keune
Grachel and Minda Kubaitis
Jan C K Anderson
Jim Mc Connell
BankNewport
Hugh Miller
Bryan Cave LLP
Newport Vineyards
Joe and Carol Shull
Alvin Rosenbaum
Kathryn H Barth
Mitchell Schear
Mary B Diercikx
David Staruss
John Fowler
Steve Thayer
Robert and Winnie Galkin
Troy Thompson
Goody Clancy
Keepers Preservation Education Fund
Margaret Mac Lean
Up to $100
Philip Cryan Marshall
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Nathan Altshuller
Darwina Neal
Carolina Casatellanos Avila
Saidee Newell
Paul Cloyd and Joan Bolduc
Robins Kaplan Miller & Ciresi LLP
Martin Convisser
Robinson and Associates
Steade Craigo
Roger Williams University
Hester Davis
Salve Regina University
Eugenio de Anzorena
Katherine Slick
Nancy Farrell
George Skarmeas
Christopher Forbes
Tennessee Civil War Nat’l Heritage Area
Chawu-Ching Fu
WASA
Marylinda Govaars
White House Historical Society
James Hare
Robert Wilburn
Note: the above list includes those
individuals, organizations, and agencies
who contributed funds to US/ICOMOS
for various programs and activities in
addition to their annual membership dues.
It does not include organizations
overseas who hosted US/ICOMOS
interns and provided assistance such as
an intern stipend, subsidized or free
housing, or other in-kind support, as
they were not recorded by US/ICOMOS
as charitable contributions.
A list of all 2006 US/ICOMOS
Institutional and individual members is
presented in the following pages.
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 15
2006 SUPPORTING INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS ($850 per year)
Architectural Resources Group, San Francisco
Jan Hird Pokorny Associates, New York
2006 INSTITUTIONAL MEMBERS ($425 per year)
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, Washington, DC
AltusWorks, Inc, Chicago, Illinois
American Society of Landscape Architects, Washington, DC
Archaeological Institute of America, Boston, Massachusetts
Arizona State University, Graduate Program in Public History, Tempe, Arizona
Atlanta Landmarks, Inc, (Fox Theatre), Atlanta, Georgia
Bermuda Maritime Museum, Mangrove Bay, Bermuda
California State Parks – San Luis Obispo Coast District, San Simeon, California
Clemson University Program in Historic Preservation, Charleston, South Carolina
College of Charleston, Program in Historic Preservation and Community Planning, South Carolina
Columbia University, Graduate School of Architectural Planning and Preservation, New York
Cornerstones Community Partnerships, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Crocker LTD, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Cultural Site Research and Management, Baltimore, Maryland
Dayton Society of Natural History, Dayton, Ohio
Degenkolb Engineers, San Francisco, California
Eastern State Penitentiary Historic Site, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
Global Heritage Fund, Palo, Alto, California
Historic Boston, Inc, Boston, Massachusetts
Historic Bethlehem Partnership, Bethlehem, Pennsylvania
Historic Charleston Foundation, South Carolina
Historic New Harmony, Indiana
ICON Architecture, Boston, Massachusetts
Instituto de Cultural Puertorriqueña, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Jablonski Berkowitz Conservation, Inc, New York
Landmarks Preservation Council of Illinois, Chicago, Illinois
LORD Cultural Resources, Toronto, Canada and Washington DC
Lord, Aeck, Sargent Architects, Atlanta, Georgia
Madison Spencer Architects, Charlottesville, Virginia
National Conference of State Historic Preservation Officers, DC
National Museum of Prehistory, Taiwan
National Park Service, Historic Preservation Training Center, Frederick, Maryland
National Park Service, National Center for Preservation Training and Technology, Natchitoches, Louisiana
National Park Service, Conservation Study Institute – Marsh Billings National Historic Park, Woodstock, Vermont
National Park Service, Olmsted Center for Landscape Preservation, Boston, Massachusetts
National Trust for Historic Preservation, Washington, DC
New Mexico State Historic Preservation Office, Santa Fe, New Mexico
Puerto Rico State Historic Preservation Office, San Juan, Puerto Rico
Rockefeller Brothers Fund, Tarrytown, New York
Roger Williams University, School of Architecture, Art, and Historic Preservation, Bristol, Rhode Island
San Antonio Conservation Society, San Antonio, Texas
Savannah College of Art & Design Historic Preservation Program, Savannah, Georgia
School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Historic Preservation Program, Chicago, Illinois
Stanford University Planning Office, California
Texas A&M University College of Architecture, College Station
The Presidio Trust, San Francisco, California
U.S. Army Heritage and Education Center, Carlisle, Pennsylvania
University of Arkansas, King Fahd Center for Middle East & Islamic Studies, Fayetteville
University of Colorado at Denver, College of Architecture and Planning, Colorado
University of Florida, College of Design, Construction, and Planning, Gainesville, Florida
University of Georgia, College of Environment and Design, Athens, Georgia
University of Maryland, Graduate Program in Historic Preservation, College Park
University of Minnesota College of Design, Minneapolis
University of Pennsylvania, Graduate Program in Historic Preservation, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
University of Texas, School of Architecture, Austin, Texas
Vertical Access LLC, Ithaca, New York
Walter P. Moore, Houston, Texas
Wiss Janney Elstner Associates, Inc, Chicago, Illinois
World Monuments Fund, New York, New York
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
16 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
2006 US/ICOMOS MEMBERS
Alaska
International
Glenn W. Sheehan, Barrow
Arizona
International
Rita Hallows, Tempe
Noel J. Stowe, Tempe
Jannelle Warren-Findley, Tempe
Jacquie McNulty, Tucson
National Affiliate
A. Rogge, Phoenix
Jeffrey Altschul, Tucson
George Cattanach, Jr., Tucson
R. Brooks Jeffery, Tucson
Alan S. Downer, Window Rock
Student
Karen Louise Robinson, Chandler
Lisa Baldwin, Flagstaff
Taraneh Ahouraiyan, Scottsdale
Arkansas
International
Jesse Casana, Fayetteville
Fiona M. Davidson, Fayetteville
Hester Davis, Fayetteville
Thomas R. Paradise, Fayetteville
Jerome C. Rose, Fayetteville
National Affiliate
W. Fredrick Limp, Fayetteville
California
International
David Lowenthal, Berkeley
Barry A. Price, Fresno
Roy Tolles, Lafayette
Neville Agnew, Los Angeles
Jonathan Bell, Los Angeles
Claudia Cancino, Los Angeles
Albert Chen, Los Angeles
Martha Demas, Los Angeles
Francoise Marie Descamps, Los Angeles
Rand Eppich, Los Angeles
Kecia L. Fong, Los Angeles
Mary Hardy, Los Angeles
Librarian, Los Angeles
Rosa Lowinger, Los Angeles
David Myers, Los Angeles
Thomas Roby, Los Angeles
Jeanne Marie Teutonico, Los Angeles
Timothy Whalen, Los Angeles
Antoine Wilmering, Los Angeles
Fred A. Webster, Menlo Park
Frederick Hertz, Oakland
R. Randolph Langenbach, Oakland
Holly Razzano, Oakland
Jeff Morgan, Palo Alto
Stefan Poortman, Palo Alto
Terry Quan, Palo Alto
Josie Thompson, Palo Alto
Ann Scheid, Pasadena
Nancy Farrell, Paso Robles
Noël Vernon, ASLA, Pomona
Margaret Purser, Rohnert Park
Steade Craigo, FAIA, Sacramento
Michelle C. Messinger, Sacramento
Daniel Visnich, Sacramento
Robert Bruce Anderson, San Francisco
Eric Blind, San Francisco
Ric Borjes, San Francisco
Andrew P. Bridges, San Francisco
Liz Clevenger, San Francisco
Craig Cole, San Francisco
Jennifer Costa, San Francisco
Tara Delaney, San Francisco
Stephen J. Farneth, San Francisco
James Earl Jewell, San Francisco
Bruce D. Judd, FAIA, San Francisco
Sara A. Lardinois, San Francisco
Sannie Osborn, San Francisco
Katherine Petrin, San Francisco
Carolyn Searls, San Francisco
Mary E. Slater, San Francisco
Hisashi Sugaya, San Francisco
Kim Sykes, San Francisco
Sven Thomasen, San Francisco
Eleanor (Suzi) Thomasen, San Francisco
Kitty Vieth, San Francisco
David Wessel, San Francisco
Loring Wyllie, San Francisco
Hoyt Fields, San Simeon
Nicholas Franco, San Simeon
Ed Redig, San Simeon
Elise Wheeler, San Simeon
Kaitlin Drisko, Santa Monica
Sue Doherty, Santa Rosa
John M. Woodbridge, Sonoma
Laura Jones, Stanford
David Lenox, Stanford
Sapna Marfatia, Stanford
Karin Moriarty, Stanford
Judy Irvin, AIA, Vallejo
Elizabeth Pidgeon, AIA, Vallejo
Leslie H. Rainer, Venice
Ann Huston, Ventura
Faisal Ali Jasper, Walnut
Frank Preusser, West Hills
David Felton, West Sacramento
Brian Grogan, Yosemite
National Affiliate
Nancy Becker, Berkeley
Molly Lambert, Berkeley
Elizabeth Alexandra Lee, Berkeley
Mick Calarco, Carlsbad
Alonzo C. Addison, El Cerrito
Peyton Hall, FAIA, Hollywood
Mark Hulbert, Oakland
Eli L. Adam, Playa del Rey
Mark Mudge, San Francisco
Robert Vessely, San Luis Obispo
Nels Roselund, South San Gabriel
Melvyn Green, Torrance
Student
Leslie Ann Friedman, Los Angeles
Jay Rehor, Oakland
Allison Kirby Vanderslice, Oakland
Kelly Hai Wong, San Francisco
Colorado
International
Kathryn Howes Barth, Boulder
Estella Cole, Boulder
John Feinberg, Boulder
Robert L. Hohlfelder, Boulder
Kathryn Kaminsky, Boulder
Sam Kaminsky, Boulder
Michael Schuller, Boulder
Joan Bolduc, Denver
Paul Cloyd, Denver
Anthony Crosby, Denver
Michael Holleran, Denver
Ann Komara, Denver
Hans Morgenthaler, Denver
Bonita Mueller, Denver
Tom Noel, Denver
Linda Purcell, Denver
Ekaterina Vlahos, Denver
Mary Humstone, Fort Collins
Christopher Koziol, PhD, AIA, AICP,
Fort Collins
Nan Anderson, Golden
Suzanne Bott, Steamboat Springs
National Affiliate
Judith Broeker, Boulder
Nore Winter, Boulder
David A. Singer, Silverton
Student
Marlise Fratinardo, Denver
Shu-Yi Yang, Denver
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 17
International
René Shoemaker, Athens
John Waters, Athens
Jeffery Bain, Atlanta
Molly Fortune, Atlanta
Richard Laub, Atlanta
Thomas Little, AIA, Atlanta
Ali Miri, Atlanta
Rosina Negron Menicucci, Atlanta
Jack Pyburn, Atlanta
Deborah Marcella Rehn, Atlanta
Klaus Roesch, Atlanta
Michele Schuff, Atlanta
Beth Shorthouse, Atlanta
Susan Turner, Atlanta
Jessica Vera, Atlanta
Rob Yallop, Atlanta
Thomas Frank, Decatur
Dale Jaeger, Gainesville
W. Ray Luce, Marietta
Robert Allen, Savannah
Michael Brown, Savannah
Marlborough Packard, Savannah
Connie Pinkerton, Savannah
Lois Caroline Watts, Savannah
Crystal Weaver, Savannah
Chandra L. Reedy, Newark
Student
National Affiliate
Amy Brooke Bracewell, Athens
Jennifer Lynn Krintz, Athens
Connecticut
International
Jacqueline A. Salame, AIA, Brookfield
Center
Leslie Klein, Greenwich
Anne Maletta, Greenwich
Kelly Streeter, Guilford
Alden R. Gordon, Hartford
Dana Hewson, Pawcatuck
Charles Rignall, South Glastonbury
Charles Rotenberg, AICP, South Windsor
National Affiliate
Darrell Petit, Branford
Student
Terry Yasuko Ogawa, Hartford
Delaware
Stephen O'R. Curtis, Milford
Florida
International
Maria Larrondo-Petrie, Boca Raton
Karl W. Stumpf, AIA, Coral Gables
Christopher Eck, Fort Lauderdale
Roy E. Graham, FAIA, Gainesville
Peter E. Prugh, Gainesville
Susan Tate, Gainesville
William Tilson, Gainesville
Richard Shieldhouse, Jakcsonville
Elizabeth Bell, Miami
Marta de la Torre, Miami
Marta Larrondo de Araoz, Miami
William H. Cary, Miami Beach
Enrique Madia, North Miami Beach
William J. Murtagh, Sarasota
David Ferro, Tallahassee
National Affiliate
James and Sallye Jude, Coral Gables
John H. Jameson, Jr., Tallahassee
Georgia
International
Pratt Cassidy, Athens
James Reap, Athens
Hawaii
Mark Esarey, Collinsville
Lynette Stuhlmacher, Evanston
Kit Carstens, McHenry
Deborah Slaton, Northbrook
Charles Pipal, AIA, Riverside
Helaine Silverman, Urbana
National Affiliate
Jodi L. Black, Chicago
Laurel Flentye, Kenilworth
Kenneth M. Itle, Northbrook
Keith Bringe, Oak Park
Melvyn A. Skvarla, Urbana
Student
Emma Colon, Champaign
Caroline M. Wisler, Rockford
Indiana
International
James A. Glass, Munci
Michele Chiuini, Muncie
Connie Weinzapfel, New Harmony
Student
Katherine Ann Seikel, Lafayette
Morag Kersel, Notre Dame
International
Kentucky
William Chapman, Honolulu
Spencer Leineweber, Honolulu
Thomas Papandrew, FASLA, Honolulu
Eva Wilkins, Honolulu
Delta R. Lightner, PhD, Kapolei
National Affiliate
National Affiliate
Ernie Endrina, Honolulu
Illinois
International
Rolf Achilles, Chicago
Audra Dye, Chicago
Phyllis Ellin, Chicago
Joshua Freedland, Chicago
Thomas "Gunny" Harboe, AIA, Chicago
Stephen J. Kelley, Chicago
Mario Machnicki, Chicago
Vincent L. Michael, Chicago
Jennifer Ries, Chicago
Ellen Stoner, Chicago
Anne Sullivan, Chicago
Kate Susmilch, Chicago
Raymond T. Tatum, Chicago
Scott Utter, Chicago
Yolande Oostens, Columbia
Rosalind Streeter, Louisville
Student
Jane Daniels, Laramia
Louisiana
International
Kirk Cordell, Natchitoches
Andy Ferrell, Natchitoches
David W. Morgan, Natchitoches
Saidee Newell, Natchitoches
Mary Striegel, Natchitoches
National Affiliate
Julie H. Ernstein, Natchitoches
Marcelle Boudreaux, New Orleans
Student
Chelsea Klein, Natchitoches
Stephen Fowlkes, New Orleans
Alice-Anne Krishnan, New Orleans
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
18 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
Maryland
International
Bruce Potter, Annapolis
Jacob A. Comer, Baltimore
Douglas C. Comer, Baltimore
Elizabeth A. Comer, Baltimore
Margaret A. Comer, Baltimore
Heather MacIntosh, Baltimore
Michael Murphy, AIA, Baltimore
Gustavo F. Araoz, Jr., AIA, Bethesda
Nellie Longsworth, Bethesda
Christine Mengin, Bethesda
Dori Carroll, Chevy Chase
Paul Hawke, Clarksville
Isabelle Gournay, College Park
Donald W. Linebaugh, College Park
Angel David Nieves, College Park
Mary Corbin Sies, College Park
B.D. Wortham, College Park
Kathy Nettler, Ellicott City
Kathryn M. Kuranda, Frederick
Tom McGrath, AIA, Frederick
Chris McGuigan, Frederick
Dorothy Printup, Frederick
Thomas Vitanza, AIA, Frederick
Pieter de Jong, Gaithersburg
Fred Holycross, Gaithersburg
Chris Polglase, Gaithersburg
Svetlana Popovic, Greenbelt
Thomas G. McDowell, La Plata
Ann Milkovich McKee, Owings Mill
Jeanette Honsa, Silver Spring
Alvin Rosenbaum, Silver Spring
Samuel Stokes, Silver Spring
Sally Stokes, Silver Spring
Barbara Little, Takoma Park
National Affiliate
Dennis Frenchman, AIA, Boston
Jeffrey T. Gonyeau, Boston
Pamela Hawkes, Boston
Matthew J. Kiefer, Esq., Boston
Jonathan S. Lane, AIA, AICP, Boston
Robert Page, Boston
Charlie Pepper, Boston
John R. Shields, AIA, Boston
Valentine Talland, Boston
Randall Bird, Cambridge
Ronald Lee Fleming, Cambridge
Joseph Greene, Cambridge
Jean-Paul Carlhian, Concord
Peter H. Stott, Dorchester
John Powell, Dorchester Center
Jessica Brown, Ipswich
Shaun Provencher, Jamaica Plain
W. Lewis Barlow, IV, FAIA, Marblehead
Masood Khan, Needham
Clifford Craine, Watertown
National Affiliate
Barbara Thibault, Boston
John Oshendorf, Cambridge
Eduard Sekler, Cambridge
David Hart, Salem
Cornelia B. Gilder, Tyringham
Wendy L. Price, Waltham
National Affiliate
Britta Bloomberg, St. Paul
Student
Jeffrey L. Adams, Minneapolis
Mississippi
International
Sarah H. McCullough, Jackson
Kenneth H. P'Pool, Jackson
Missouri
International
Osmund Overby, Columbia
David Ford, Kansas City
Geoffrey Hose, Kansas City
Katherine Dowdy, Ozark
National Affiliate
Brian Snyder, Kansas City
Montana
Student
International
Aimee Taberner, Arlington
Danielle L. Cavanna, Cambridge
Lynda Bourque Moss, Billings
Michigan
International
Mark Coir, Bloomfield Hills
John B. Henes, Menominee
Nebraska
International
Anne Giesecke, PhD, Lincoln
Nevada
William Ensign, Annapolis
Tyler Gearheart, Baltimore
Molly Van Meter, Baltimore
M. Hamilton Morton, Jr., AIA, Chevy Chase
J. Bryan Blundell, Rockville
National Affiliate
International
Alison Hoagland, Houghton
Patrick Martin, Houghton
Colleen Beck, Las Vegas
Student
Student
Jennifer Anne Kotting, Brookeville
Daniel Shoup, Ann Arbor
International
Massachusetts
Minnesota
International
International
Lisa Sasser, Amherst
Christopher P. Williams, AIA, Meredith
Marni Blake Walter, Westmoreland
Nicholas Thaw, AIA, ASID, Amherst
Edward K. Dey, Belchertown
Harvey L. Mendelsohn, Belmont
Barbara Timken, Belmont
Jillian Adams, Boston
Beatrice Bernier, Boston
Wm. Eric Breitkreutz, Boston
Margie Coffin Brown, Boston
Bonnie Clendenning, Boston
Eliot Foulds, Boston
Arthur Chen, Minneapolis
Bruno Franck, Minneapolis
Benjamin Ibarra, Minneapolis
Robert Mack, Minneapolis
Lance Neckar, Minneapolis
Charlene Roise, Minneapolis
Gary Stern, Minneapolis
Mary K. Stern, Minneapolis
Nina M. Archabal, St. Paul
New Hampshire
New Jersey
International
Michael C. Henry, Bridgeton
Margaret Hickey, Linden
Mary Delaney Krugman, Montclair
Archer St. Clair Harvey, New Brunswick
Erica Avrami, Summit
Michael Calafati, AIA, Trenton
Annabelle Radcliffe-Trenner, Trenton
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 19
National Affiliate
Michael Mills, Princeton
Amy Speckart, Princeton
John D.S. Hatch, Trenton
New Mexico
International
Shalie Gasper, Albuquerque
Alexandra M. Harrison, Albuquerque
Peter Harrison, Albuquerque
Daniel Mallach, Albuquerque
Jean Fulton, Las Cruces
Jake Barrow, Santa Fe
Amanda Crocker, Santa Fe
Edward E. Crocker, Santa Fe
Josette de la Harpe, Santa Fe
Eric Delony, Santa Fe
James Hare, Santa Fe
Craig Hoopes, Santa Fe
Charles C. Newman, Santa Fe
Joseph Sembrat, Santa Fe
Kak Slick, Santa Fe
Jonah Stanford, Santa Fe
Pat Taylor, Santa Fe
Michael Taylor, Santa Fe
Francisco Uvina, Santa Fe
Alexandra Ward, Santa Fe
Alan "Mac" Watson, Santa Fe
National Affiliate
Peggy Lynn Allison, Albuquerque
Stephen Fosberg, Santa Fe
Student
Jill Cowley, Santa Fe
New York
International
Kelly S. Moody, Brooklyn
Richard J. Moylan, Brooklyn
Jan C.K. Anderson, Chappaqua
James W. Rhodes, FAIA, Croton-on-Hudson
Kent Diebolt, Ithaca
Evan Kopelson, Ithaca
Librarian, Ithaca
Janet O'Hare, Jackson Heights
James Banta, New York
Norma Barbacci, New York
John Belle, FAIA, RIBA, New York
Joan C. Berkowitz, New York
Daniel Biddle, New York
Kyle Brooks, AIA, New York
Jon Buono, New York
Bonnie Burnham, New York
Paul Byard, New York
Jennifer Cappeto, New York
Michael Devonshire, New York
Mary Dierickx, New York
Dorothy Dinsmoor, New York
Madelyn Bell Ewing, New York
Christopher Forbes, New York
Janet Foster, New York
Barbara Hoffman, New York
Morris Hylton, III, New York
Mary A.C. Jablonski, New York
Judith Jacob, New York
Pamela Jerome, New York
Jennifer Ko, New York
Roz Li, New York
Librarian, New York
Giorgio Stefano Maroulis, New York
Laura Mass, New York
Margaret McMahon, New York
Edmund P. Meade, New York
Dorothy Miner, New York
Wendy Moonan, New York
Craig Morrison, AIA, New York
Elizabeth Moss, New York
Robert Motzkin, New York
Kyle Normandin, New York
Richard Pieper, New York
Jan Hird Pokorny, New York
Theodore Prudon, New York
Judith Saltzman, New York
Constance Silver, New York
Lauren Stahl, New York
William Stivale, New York
John Stubbs, New York
Derek Trelstad, New York
Mark Weber, New York
George Wheeler, New York
Liza Wolfe, New York
Kate Ottavino, Ozone Park
Michele Hiltzik, Sleepy Hollow
Diane Barthel-Bouchier, Stony Brook
Cynthia B. Altman, Tarrytown
Judy Clark, Tarrytown
Charles L. Granquist, Tarrytown
Kimberly A. Miller, Tarrytown
National Affiliate
Student
Norah A. Krakosky, Norwich
North Carolina
International
Autumn Rierson Michael, Davidson
Benjamin Briggs, II, High Point
Lawrence Belli, Manteo
Milagros Flores Roman, Manteo
National Affiliate
Edward B. Lane, Chapel Hill
Student
Mary Ellen Sertell, Greensboro
Ohio
International
Yolita Rausche, Akron
Salim Elwazani, Bowling Green
Franklin B. Conaway, J.D., Chillicothe
Elizabeth A. Bartley, Cincinnati
David H. Ellison, Architect, Cleveland
William Kennedy, Dayton
Mark J. Meister, Dayton
Andrew Sawyer, Dayton
Lynn Simonelli, Dayton
Mike Tate, Genoa
John Shearman, Neapolis
Robert Lodge, Oberline
Gerardo Brown-Manrique, Oxford
National Affiliate
Patricia Murphy, Oberlin
Student
Kim Peterka, Oxford
Sheryl Davis, Trimble
Willard Bruce, Albany
Mary Kay Judy, Brooklyn
Theresa Marie Coolahan, New York
Kevin Daly, New York
George Haskins, Scarsdale
Karen S. Hartgen, Troy
Charles Leider, FASLA, Stillwater
Student
Student
Eleni Evdokia Glekas, Brooklyn
Stacy Lynn Day, Ithaca
Victoria Elizabeth Alvarado, New York
Michelle Marie Langlie, New York
Amanda Rachel Stauffer, New York
Rosemarie Trentinella, Spring Valley
Valerie Marie Allen, Norman
Seth Cole Slifer, Stillwater
Oklahoma
National Affiliate
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
20 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
Student
David G. Woodcock, College Station
Toni Carrell, Corpus Christi
Roy B. Brown, El Paso
Mark Holland, Houston
Randall Pollock, Houston
S. Sparks, Round Rock
William Dupont, San Antonio
Barbara Johnson, San Antonio
Melissa Kazen, San Antonio
Virginia Nichols, San Antonio
Jody Williams, San Antonio
Claudia C. Rosa López, San Juan
National Affiliate
Rhode Island
William Scott Field, Austin
F. Lawrence Oaks, Austin
Raul E. Berrios, AIA, San Antonio
Charles John, AIA, San Antonio
Oregon
Puerto Rico
International
International
Liz Carter, Eugene
Charles Rhyne, Portland
Alfred Staehli, FAIAEM, FAPT, Portland
Agamemnon Gus Pantel, PhD, Guaynabo
Miguel Bonini, San Juan
Karen Gonzalez-Jenson, San Juan
Nydia Prestamo-Torres, San Juan
Aida Belen Rivera Ruiz, San Juan
National Affiliate
Daniel Mattson, Bend
Nicholas Starin, Portland
Student
Anne Elizabeth Kidd, Eugene
Pennsylvania
International
Charlene Donchez Mowers, Bethlehem
Barbara Schafer, Bethlehem
Meg Sharp Walton, Bethlehem
Amber Tarnowski, Carlisle Barracks
Robert Wilburn, Gettysburg
Richard I. Ortega, Glen Mills
Brenda Barrett, Harrisburg
Scott Standish, Lancaster
Andree Suplee, Media
A. Elena Charola, Philadelphia
Derick Dreher, Philadelphia
Sara Jane (Sally) Elk, Philadelphia
Nan Gutterman, Philadelphia
Dominique M. Hawkins, AIA, Philadelphia
Robert Hotes, Philadelphia
Sean Kelly, Philadelphia
Randall Mason, Philadelphia
Frank Matero, Philadelphia
Satoko I. Parker, PhD, Philadelphia
Robert Powers, Philadelphia
Andrea Reidell, Philadelphia
George C. Skarmeas, AIA, Philadelphia
Cecil L. Striker, Philadelphia
Arthur Ziegler, Pittsburgh
National Affiliate
Diane Shafer Graham, Meadville
Diane Shafer Graham, PhD, Meadville
Henry Hoffstot, Jr., Pittsburgh
International
Sarah Butler, Bristol
Eric Hertfelder, Bristol
Hassan-Uddin Khan, Bristol
Philip Cryan Marshall, Bristol
Okan Ustunkok, Bristol
James Wermuth, Newport
National Affiliate
John Fobert, Bristol
South Carolina
International
Roger Parke (Bessie) Hanahan, Charleston
Jennifer McStotts, Charleston
Ralph C. Muldrow, Charleston
Jonathan Poston, Charleston
Ashley Robbins, Charleston
Katharine Robinson, Charleston
Robert Russell, Charleston
Katherine Saunders, Charleston
James L. Ward, Charleston
Frances H. Ford, Charleston
Richard Marks, Charleston
National Affiliate
Matt Webster, Charleston
Michael Trinkley, Columbia
Texas
Student
International
Jenna Cellini, Philadelphia
Amila Ferron, Philadelphia
Anita Francheth, Philadelphia
Davivd William O'Malley, Philadelphia
Alexis Chantel Stephens, Philadelphia
Donald Del Cid, Arlington
Richard Cleary, Austin
Christopher Long, Austin
Lauria Zapalac, Austin
Richard Burt, College Station
Anat Geva, College Station
Robert B. Warden, College Station
Utah
National Affiliate
Wilson Martin, Salt Lake City
Anne Oliver, Salt Lake City
Vermont
International
Patricia Meriam, Barre Town
Tordis Ilg Isselhardt, Bennington
Blaine Cliver, Brandon
Gregory Wade DeVries, Charlotte
Patricia M. O'Donnell, FASLA, AICP,
Charlotte
Douglas Porter, Jeffersonville
Rolf Diamant, Woodstock
Virginia Farley, Woodstock
Nora J. Mitchell, Woodstock
Virginia
International
Nancy J. Brown, Alexandria
Roger Courtenay, ASLA, Alexandria
Jere Gibber, Alexandria
Faye Harwell, Alexandria
Nathan Imm, Alexandria
Bohdana (Dana) Urbanovych, Alexandria
John Cohrssen, Arlington
Wendy Claire Jessup, Arlington
Russell Keune, FAIA, Arlington
Antoinette Lee, Arlington
Connie Ramirez, Arlington
Carol Shull, Arlington
Margarita McGrath, Blacksburg
Malcolm Bell, III, Charlottesville
Brian C. Broadus, Charlottesville
Gina M. Haney, Charlottesville
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007 - 21
Madison Spencer, Charlottesville
Mary G. Bezzini, Clifton
Sarah T. Bridges, Falls Church
Arlene Fleming, Great Falls
Meghan Jean Boyce, Leesburg
Matthew T. Marchione, Reston
W. Brown Morton, III, Waterford
Thomas H. Taylor, Williamsburg
David w. Look, FAIA, FAPT, Winchester
National Affiliate
Eugenio de Anzorena, Alexandria
Debra Nauta-Rodriguez, AIA, Alexandria
Maria Sanchez Carlo, Alexandria
George Siekkinen, Jr., Alexandria
Sarah Elizabeth Cleary, Arlington
Joseph L. Scarpaci, Blacksburg
Daniel Jordan, Charlottesville
Robert McGinnis, RLA, Charlottesville
Catherine Kahl, Cumberland
Douglas Sanford, Fredericksburg
Hugh C. Miller, FAIA, Richmond
Heather Noelle McMahon, Warrenton
Nathan Altshuler, Williamsburg
Annette Parham, Williamsburg
Student
Emily Gunzburger Makas, Arlington
Washington
International
Stephen Waite, AIA, Edmonds
David Hansen, Olympia
David L. Leavengood, AIA, Seattle
David Strauss, Seattle
Virginia Voorhees Wilcox, Seattle
National Affiliate
Kevin Thompson, Pullman
Karin Murr Link, Seattle
Aubrey Louise Morrison, Seattle
Vinita Sidhu, Seattle
Student
Tyler Sprague, Seattle
Washington, DC
International
Ronald D. Anzalone, Washington
Joan Bacharach, Washington
Francine Berkowitz, Washington
Peter Brink, Washington
Sharon S. Conway, Washington
Hiroshi Daifuku, Washington
Ellen Delage, Washington
Paul Dolinsky, Washington
Paul W. Edmondson, Washington
Jerry Erbach, AIA, Washington
John Fowler, Washington
William Greer, Washington
Christine Henry, Washington
Ellen Herscher, Washington
John Huerta, Washington
Donald G. Jones, Washington
John Kemper, Washington
James Kiernan, Washington
Manuel L. Knight, Washington
Grachel J. Kubaitis, Washington
Margaret G.H. MacLean, Washington
Paul Daniel Marriott, Washington
Tom McCulloch, Washington
Francis P. McManamon, Washington
Bruce Milhans, Washington
Richard Moe, Washington
Paul Morris, FASLA, Washington
Darwina Neal, FASLA, Washington
Richard B. Nettler, Washington
Manuel T. Ochoa, Jr., Washington
David C. Overholt, Washington
Susan Reynolds, Washington
Rolando Rivas-Camp, FAIA, Washington
Judith Robinson, Washington
Donovan Rypkema, Washington
Joe Shull, Washington
Rhonda Sincavage, Washington
Jon Smith, Washington
Nancy Somerville, Washington
Jennifer Strassfeld, Washington
Troy Thompson, Washington
Esther Varkay, AIA, Washington
James Vaughan, Washington
Anne Vytlacil, Washington
National Affiliate
David Bennett, AIA, ASLA, Washington
Sally Berk, Washington
Mary Oehrlein, FAIA, Washington
Richard Waldbauer, Washington
Wisconsin
International
Thomas Jeffris, Janesville
Jane C. Waldbaum, Milwaukee
National Affiliate
Jeanne Lambin, Mineral Point
Wyoming
International
R. Malcolm Porter, Jr., Laramie
Non-US
International
John N. Miksic, Singapre
Olga Pizano, Bogata, Colombia
Mariana Patino, Bogota, Colombia
Giancarlo Fre, Bologna, Italy
Sandra Uskokovic, Dubrovnik, Croatia
Mariana Mould de Pease, Lima, Peru
Linda Abend, Mangrove Bay, Bermuda
Charlotte Andrews, Mangrove Bay,
Bermuda
Jane Downing, Mangrove Bay, Bermuda
Edward Harris, Mangrove Bay, Bermuda
M. Carolina Castellanos, Mexico
Neil Silberman, Ohain, Belgium
Jamie M. Donahoe, Repulse Bay, Hong
Kong
Thomas Wheaton, Santiago de Queretaro,
Mexico
Chao-Ching Fu, Tainan, Taiwan
Pasuya Poiconu, Taitung, Taiwawn
Cheng-Hwa Tseng, Taitung, Taiwan
Shanna Wen, Taitung
C. W. Sun, Taiwan
Barry Lord, Toronto, Canada
Christine Leger, Montreal, Canada
Student
Kathleen Lane, Washington
West Virginia
International
Peter Dessauer, Harpers Ferry
Stephen B. Thayer, Thornton
Student
Melissa Renee Crosby, Kearneysville
US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
22 - US/ICOMOS Newsletter No. 3 2007
Support World Heritage Preservation—Join US/ICOMOS!
US/ICOMOS guides and promotes activities through an extensive
membership network of preservation professionals, institutions, and
organizations, including specialized scientific committees. US/ICOMOS
membership is open to all individuals who care about preserving our world's cultural
heritage.
Individuals and institutions may join at different levels to receive different
benefits. Membership categories and benefits are listed below. US/ICOMOS is a 501(c)(3) notfor-profit organization, so donations to US/ICOMOS are tax-deductible. Membership dues
account for less than five percent of the operating budget. To achieve its mission, US/ICOMOS
depends on the generous philanthropy of foundations, members, and friends.
Enroll me as an individual member in the following category:
International ($135) - a portion of International membership dues goes to the
ICOMOS Secretariat in Paris, which sends out the ICOMOS Card, good for free or
discounted entry to heritage sites around the world
National Affiliate ($80)
Student ($30)
For non-profit organizations, educational institutions, government agencies, private commercial
firms, and other institutions, Institutional membership is a cost-effective way to support
international preservation and reward the professional commitment of your staff.
Enroll my organization/institution/agency as an Institutional member at the following level:
Institutional ($425) - designate up to 4 staff members as International members)
Supporting ($850) - designate up to 8 staff members as International members)
Benefactor ($1500) - contact US/ICOMOS for benefits
Name
Mail your completed membership
enrollment form with payment to:
Title
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If paying by credit card, you may fax the
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Please visit our website at
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For more information on membership and
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US National Committee of the International Council on Monuments and Sites
US/ICOMOS Board of Trustees
Officers
Chair: John Fowler, Washington, DC
Vice Chair: Stephen Farneth, California
Secretary: Erica Avrami, New Jersey
Treasurer: Gina Haney, Virginia
Trustees at Large
Jan CK Anderson, New York
Kathryn H. Barth, Colorado
Douglas C. Comer, Maryland
Michael Devonshire, New York
Frank Hodsell, Virginia
Pamela Jerome, New York
Spencer Leineweber, Hawaii
David W. Look, Virginia
Jonathan Poston, South Carolina
James K. Reap, Georgia
Carol Shull, Virginia
Katherine Slick, New Mexico
George Skarmeas, Pennsylvania
Jon Smith, Washington, DC
Janelle Warren-Findley, Arizona
Ex-Officio Representation
Advisory Council on Historic Preservation
American Association of Museums/ICOM
American Institute of Architects
American Institute of Conservation/AIC
American Planning Association
American Society of Civil Engineers
American Society of Landscape Architects
Archaeological Institute of America
Association for Preservation Technology Int’l
Getty Conservation Institute
National Building Museum
National Geographic Society
National Park Service
National Trust for Historic Preservation
Preservation Action
Smithsonian Institution
Society for American Archaeology
Society for Historical Archaeology
United States Department of State
ICOMOS International Bureau
Officers
President: Michael Petzet, Germany
Secretary-General: Dinu Bumbaru,
Canada
Treasurer-General: Giora Solar, Israel
Vice Presidents
Gustavo F. Araoz, United States
Kristal Buckley, Australia
Tamás Fejerdy, Hungary
Carlos Pernaut, Argentina
Guo Zhan, China
Advisory Committee President:
John H. Hurd, United Kingdom
ICOMOS International Scientific Committees
Archaeological Heritage Management
Cultural Landscapes & Historic Gardens
Cultural Routes
Cultural Tourism
Documentation of Heritage
Earthen Architectural Heritage
Economics of Conservation
Fortifications & Military Heritage
Heritage Objects in Monuments and Sites
Historic Cities & Villages
Intangible Cultural Heritage
Interpretation & Presentation of Heritage Sites
Legal-Administrative-Financial Issues
Pacific Islands Heritage
Polar Regions Heritage
Rock Art
Risk Preparedness
Shared Built Heritage
Stained Glass
Stone Conservation
Structural Analysis & Conservation of Architectural Heritage
Theories & Philosophies of Heritage Conservation
Training
Twentieth Century Heritage
Underwater Heritage
Vernacular Architectural Heritage
Wall Painting
Wood Conservation
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