2011 Annual Report - Michigan Historic Preservation Network
Transcription
2011 Annual Report - Michigan Historic Preservation Network
Michigan Historic Preservation Network Annual Report 2011 www.mhpn.org MHPN STAFF, BOARD OF DIRECTORS AND COMMITTEE MEMBERS Staff Nancy Finegood, Executive Director Nan Taylor, Greater Michigan MHPN/NTHP Field Representative Ellen Thackery, Southeast Michigan MHPN/ NTHP Field Representative Katie Large, Assistant to the Director Brenna Moloney, Preservation Specialist Gary Scheuren, MHPN Programs Director OFFICERS Janet Kreger, President Melissa Milton-Pung, Vice President Ruth Mills, Secretary Cheryl Early, Treasurer Elaine Robinson, Immediate Past President Executive committee Ken Czapski Michael Kirk Meredith Long Tom Roberts DIRECTORS Robin Adair Christine Bowman Ron Campbell Randy Case Steve Fox Kathleen M. Holtz Richard Hosey Gregory Jones Richard Karp Karen Nagher Lisa Nuszkowski Scott Lowell Bill Ruff Jim Schmiechen David Schon, Esq. Grace A. M. Smith Anne Stevenson Committees Auctions Kathy Lindroth Meghan Schafbuch Denise McGeen Communications Elaine Robinson, Chair Ruth Mills Aimee D’Agostini Sara Jean Baker Conference Janet Kreger, Conference Manager Development Janet Kreger, Co-Chair Kristine Kidorf, Co-Chair Christina DiBartolomeo Amanda Davis Nancy Finegood Alia Geffrard Frank Gregory Emily Jarvi Wendy Johnson Cal Leeke Kathy Lindroth Denise McGeen Meghan Schafbuch Gary Scheuren Michelle Smay Nancy Thompson Thomas Trombley Lynn Wilson Education Anne Stevenson, Co-Chair Dan Bollman, Co-Chair Steve Stier, Co-Chair Lloyd Baldwin Sheila Bashiri Hank Berry Nancy Finegood Ted Grevstad-Nordbrock Tim Hunnicutt Denise Leach Ted Ligibel Brian Lijewski Michelle McClellan David Muylle Ryan Schumaker Nan Taylor Historic Resource Council Grace A.M. Smith, Chair Cheryl Early Kenneth Czapski Pat Hudson Kira Macyda Dan Schneider Steve Stier Public Policy Lisa Nuskowski, Co- Chair Scott Lowell, Co-Chair Nick Bozen Randy Case Gregory Jones 2 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network Steve Jones George Larimore Jim Manning Martha MacFarlane-Faes Melissa Milton-Pung Arthur Mullen Karen Nagher Jim Tischler Richard Hosey Michael Kirk Gary Scheuren Nan Taylor Leslie Lynch-Wilson Paul Zelenak Dave Biskner Greg Saxton Timothy Boscarino Ron Campbell Awards Ruth Mills, Chair Randy L. Case Ken Czapski Steve Jones Ted Ligibel Pam O’Connor Gary Scheuren Membership & Volunteer Meredith Long, Co-Chair Denise McGeen, Co-Chair Leanne DeVreugd Preservation Easements Tom Roberts, Co-Chair Steve Fox, Co-Chair David William Conwill Nancy Finegood Scott Grammer Jonathan Ringel Richard Karp Kathleen Holtz David Schon Elaine Robinson Preservation Incentives Michael Kirk, Chair Ken Beall William Danforth Nancy Finegood Steve Fox Gregory Jones Richard Hosey Gary Scheuren James Schmiechen Nan Taylor Table of Contents Letter from the Executive Director and President.......... 3 Treasurer’s Report............................................................ 4 Michigan Historic Preservation Network 107 East Grand River Avenue Lansing, Michigan 48906 517-371-8080 [email protected] Educate............................................................................. 6 Advocate........................................................................... 8 Protect.............................................................................. 9 2011 Calendar Year Financial Support.......................... 12 Many thanks to those who so graciously shared their photographs of MHPN events during 2011. Photographers include: 68 Commerce, L. L. C., Randy Case, Commerce Rehab L.L.C., Amanda Davis, Kristine Kidorf, Silk City Preservation Society, and Nan Taylor. Fundraising..................................................................... 15 Financial Report............................................................. 15 Membership Awards....................................... Back Cover 2011 Annual Report | 3 Letter from the Executive Director and President ichigan Historic Preservation Network (MHPN) is the only statewide membership organization focused on recognizing, preserving and protecting Michigan’s rich cultural and historical resources. It takes an army to do the work of MHPN, a small army that has a huge impact on preservation advocacy and education around the state. Our army includes a committed Board of Directors, committee members, interns, and other volunteers. Our dedicated staff adds to our army by performing well beyond their job descriptions. The year 2011 was a momentous one for MHPN. This was in part because the Michigan Historic Tax Credit (HTC) went on the chopping block, threatening protection of historic neighborhoods and individual resources alike. Most of the efforts were won, but the one with the most impact was sadly lost. MHPN and its partner organizations were true warriors in their efforts to save the Michigan HTCs during 2011. They were effective incentives that, for over ten years, allowed the rehabilitation of historic properties to compete with new construction. That battle was lost in spite of what we all did to save the HTCs. But we have strategized and will move forward in our advocacy efforts, supporting the new Community Revitalization Incentives Plan and hiring a lobbyist to represent MHPN and historic preservation at the Legislature. MHPN acquired our first historic building in 2011, a purchase that was funded in part by a donation from an anonymous donor. The Thelma Joyce Osteen Comfort Station in historic Old Town Lansing had sat empty for almost a decade. We are rehabbing the building for both our new office space and as a site for practical preservation workshops during the renovation. The first floor of the building will be a rental space, while the second floor will serve as the new MHPN offices beginning in the fall of 2012. Thanks to the innovative MHPN staff and education committee, our education programs continue to expand Janet L. Kreger Board of Directors, President 4 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network in offerings and in numbers. The MHPN 2011 annual conference, “Just Add Water,” held in Saugatuck was a huge success. Local planning committees and volunteers worked with MHPN to offer a unique conference that focused on their local heritage and accentuated their marine assets. With a grant from the Michigan State Housing Development Authority-Michigan State Historic Preservation Office, we were able to train 10 more historic district commissions, plan two regional two-day historic preservation workshops in Ypsilanti and Marquette, begin working on a lead removal manual for homeowners that will be available in 2012, coordinate a two-week wood window job-training workshop for 12 unemployed or under-employed contractors while rehabbing a local community resource in Muskegon, and continue the high school preservation training program at the Randolph Career and Technical Center in Detroit. The MHPN staff continues to flourish, with MHPN/National Trust for Historic Preservation (NTHP) shared partner in the field Nan Taylor in Greater Michigan (that is everywhere outside of southeast Michigan, including the UP) and Ellen Thackery in southeast Michigan educating and advocating. Brenna Moloney, MHPN/NTHP right-sizing Preservation Specialist in Saginaw and Lansing has made a huge impact in both communities. Gary Scheuren, MHPN Program Director coordinates MHPN’s preservation tax incentive initiatives, including the tax credit partnership and preservation easement programs. Katie Large, MHPN Assistant to the Director (and right hand), keeps all of the staff and the office organized and running smoothly. We could not have accomplished all of this work without you, our Board of Directors, our volunteers, and our members who are working in their communities unflaggingly to preserve and protect Michigan’s historic heritage. Thank you! You are our heroes! Nancy M. Finegood Executive Director TREASURER’S REPORT By: Cheryl Early, P.E. and Gary Scheuren MHPN has continued to increase its revenue when compared to only five years ago. This is quite an accomplishment in Michigan’s tough economy. We are especially thankful to our Executive Director, Nancy Finegood, and her staff for all of their efforts. The Board of Directors and committee members have also worked hard to maintain the similar levels of revenues for the various aspects of MHPN programming such as conferences, workshops, and Historic Resource Council. Some of the specific accomplishments this year include: acceptance of four preservation easement donations; conducted the 31st successful annual preservation conference in Saugatuck-Douglas; continued the tradition of a memorable Fall Benefit in Detroit, conducted training workshops; and many others. These, and other activities, greatly contributed to MHPN’s revenue and forwarding of its mission. Through various funding sources, such as the Michigan Stated Housing Development Authority (MSHDA), MHPN was funded to take on other important activities statewide to advance awareness of historic preservation. One notable change in the 2011 Budget over previous years was the addition of revenue and expenses for MHPN representation at the Michigan State Capitol. MHPN was able to secure the professional services of a political consultant to assist in our education efforts during the Michigan Business Tax debate. While the fight to save the state historic tax credits was lost, MHPN’s presence at the Capitol was noticed and MHPN was able to participate in significant legislative activities. A new effort that MHPN initiated in 2011 is the tracking of its volunteers’ time. In just the first four months of this effort, nearly $30,000 worth of volunteer hours were recorded. It’s important to note that this tracking effort has only just been initiated and does not include all of our volunteers! MHPN is the sole member of a related company, MHPN Preservation Investments I, LLC. The primary purpose of this separate company is to invest in the redevelopment of historic properties that will generate state tax credits. The immediate impact of this company has been to assist struggling real estate transactions to become feasible. In the long term, revenues from this investment program will allow MHPN to further its mission statewide. Thank you to all the volunteers, members, board, and staff. As always, we remain vigilant in fundraising and securing memberships. We are also prudent stewards of the precious funds we receive. Together, we will maintain MHPN at the forefront of preservation organizations in the nation. 2011 Annual Report | 5 EDUCATE Students of the Calhoun Area Career Center Work on the Porch Restoration at the Kimble House Museum. MHPN is committed to offering continuing education opportunities in historic preservation and its related trades, and our annual spring conference is our biggest event, reaching professionals and advocates from across sectors, interests, and experience. Over 355 attendees learned and networked at the aptly themed “Just Add Water” Conference in Saugatuck and Douglas over the following conference tracks: the influence of Michigan’s Great Lakes and waterways on its architecture, land use, and culture; best practices and skills; current historic building practices; and connecting preservation with tourism. Special events included a Saturday program developed specifically for Historic District Commissioners; walking tours of nearby historic districts; and events at the Felt Estate and the newly refurbished Pump House, Saugatuck’s first municipal water pumping facility and now the Saugatuck-Douglas Historical Museum. For 31 years, MHPN has offered a quality 6 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network conference that helps us connect with our membership and new preservationists while highlighting valuable preservation efforts in communities across the State. Our Preservation Trades program helps preserve our built environment while simultaneously training the next generation of preservation tradespeople. In 2011, 12 students attended our 10-day historic window workshop held in Muskegon. The workshop taught students to repair and rehabilitate wooden double-hung windows. The students received hands-on instruction, historic preservation training, lead-safe certification, weatherization training, and specialized tools. MHPN developed the workshop because windows in historic homes are endangered, and because there is a lack of skilled craftspeople available to perform this work. “MHPN is committed to training local people to fill this void,” Steve Stier, “Historic preservation education binds all our programs together and keeps our efforts relevant.” former MHPN Board Member and workshop leader stated, “thus providing sustainable employment that will improve local economies.” The workshop repaired the windows of the Grand Trunk Depot, a highly visible location near downtown Muskegon. Many of the workshop attendees have already started their own rehab businesses and purchased historic homes for repair. This is a continuing trend of past workshops, as many graduates pursue full and part-time careers in window rehabilitation. Our preservation trades trainings can do more than create the next generation of workers. It can also provide enhanced economic security and appreciation of our historic built environment for high school students. In 2011, we partnered with the A. Philip Randolph Career and Technical Center and the Calhoun Area Career Center (CACC) to complement their construction-training curricula with a preservation component. Randolph Career and Technical Center is a Detroit public high school that provides construction-trades training and job placement services. Over 98% of graduates are employed postgraduation. We created an extra-curricular preservation trades program that gave students hands-on experience while helping to restore and protect nearby Historic Fort Wayne. We are looking to continue and expand this successful program for 2012. The second program, CACC, is located in Battle Creek and students worked on the Kimball House Museum. Among the projects undertaken by the students were: the removal of an inappropriate front porch, reframing and installation of a porch with tongue and groove decking, re-creation of the steps, and the framing of the porch roof following historic photographs of the original porch. 49 Presentations Conducted 966 People in Attendance 27 Counties Reached Top Dawn Schumann (Saugatuck-Douglas Historical Society), Brian Conway (SHPO), and Pam O’Connor (NTHP Michigan Advisor) listen to a presentation during the 2011 MHPN Conference. Bottom Court Street Theatre, Saginaw, Michigan 2011 Annual Report | 7 ADVOCATE Advocacy Day MHPN is always looking for ways to bring attention to the cause of historic preservation and fight for legislation that supports our efforts. That is why this year a consortium of individuals traveled to Washington D.C. to meet with State Senators and advocate at the national level. Those who attended Lobby Day, March 8, 2011 included Marla Collum, Brian Conway, Nancy Finegood, Christopher Gale, Steve Jones, Pam O’Connor and Jim Turner. Offices visited included Senators Debbie Stabenow and Carl Levin, and Representatives Fred Upton, Dave Camp, Dan Benishek, Sander Levin, Dale Kildee, Gary Peters, and Hansen Clarke. Materials were also dropped off at the offices of Representatives Mike Rogers, Justin Amash, Thaddeus McCotter, and Candice Miller. This is just one small way our members can get directly involved and show their support for our work. Fighting for the Historic Tax Credit: We spent most of 2011 waging an aggressive campaign to retain Michigan’s Historic Tax Credit (HTC). With the help of our lobbyist, Mike Frederick, we met with dozens of legislators, legislative staff, and interest groups to inform them about the important role the HTC plays in economic development, job creation, and community revitalization. Committee “We advocate for Michigan’s historic places to contribute to our economic vitality, sense of place, and connection to the past.” members and staff testified in front of the House of Representatives Tax Committee along with representatives from the National Trust for Historic Preservation (NTHP) and the Community and Economic Development Association of Michigan (CEDAM). Our members wrote letters, made calls, and advocated on the benefits of the tax credit. We shared with the general public projects that wouldn’t be possible without the credits, like the Westin Book Cadillac in Detroit or the City Opera House in Traverse City. While we did not succeed in our goal, our efforts were not without purpose. For instance, our advocacy work resulted in new committee members volunteering with our organization. But more importantly, our voice became stronger and our cause more unified. We will continue to advocate in 2012 for historic rehab incentives in Governor Snyder’s Community Revitalization Incentives plan. We advocate at the city, state, and national level for Michigan’s historic places. We work directly with communities and residents, helping to protect their cultural and historical assets at the local level. Often it only takes a few concerned and motivated residents to launch an advocacy campaign in their community. Whether it’s to save a historic landmark from demolition, create a local historic district, or preserve the historic integrity of a building, MHPN has the tools and resources to help. Our field representatives provide custom trainings, seminars, presentations, and technical assistance that help local historic preservation efforts take off. In 2011, we helped numerous communities advocate on their own behalf, including the City of Belding and Mackinac Island. We advocate at the city, state and national level for Michigan’s historic places. 8 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network PROTECT Preservation Incentives Funds raised through our preservation incentives revolving fund are used to finance projects that serve Michigan’s historic properties and its residents. This fund provides essential financing for rehabilitation projects and interest earned from completed projects continues the cycle for future preservation projects. In 2011, we closed on five real estate transactions: The Broderick Tower Redevelopment, Detroit; NSO Bell Building Redevelopment, Detroit; Lofts on Ludington, Escanaba; Metropolitan Center, Kalamazoo; and Eastside Armory Redevelopment, Lansing. Easements MHPN also utilizes preservation easements to help owners protect their historic properties in perpetuity. These flexible legal instruments allow owners to work in cooperation with MHPN to achieve mutual goals – the property owner can preserve a historically significant building while MHPN participates in the preservation of resources in line with its values and goals. We finalized preservation easements on four properties in 2011: JA Building, Grand Rapids; Bowers Harbor Inn, Peninsula Township; US Post Office Parcel Post Annex, Grand Rapids; and Commerce Building, Grand Rapids. The Bower’s Harbor Inn property was constructed by Charles F. and Genevive W. Stickney as their summer house. Known as We-Gwa-Se-Min Ranch, the property is listed on the National Register of Historic Places, based on its long history as a summer resort and tourism destination in northwest Michigan The property was converted into a restaurant in 1959, and continues in this role today. Protecting and restoring Michigan’s historic places not only maintains a community’s unique heritage, but also creates jobs and strengthens the local economy, builds a strong sense of place and identity, promotes history and historic architecture, and increases property values. Belding Silk Mill Shortly after purchasing the 19th century silk mill and its iconic clock tower in September 2010, Electrolux informed the Belding community of their plans to demolish the building. But concerned residents recognized the value of the clock tower’s heritage and quickly banded together to save it, formalizing as the 501(c)3 organization Silk City Preservation Society (SCPS). MICHIGAN HAS Almost 2,000 National Register listed properties — Over 70 Local Historic Districts including over 21,000 properties! — 35 National Historic Landmarks 2011 Annual Report | 9 With the mission to provide assistance to renovate, repurpose, and preserve the mill as well as other historic buildings in Belding, the SCPS acted quickly and convinced city council to pass an emergency moratorium on the demolition and explore creating a local historic district. ited resources themselves. One year after the community started this important battle, their mill and its clock tower are safe. Belding residents are relieved that their local heritage is legally protected and their collective stories can be preserved. MHPN assisted SCPS’s efforts the entire way: we discussed how the mill could be preserved, provided information on the economic and environmental benefits of preservation, and provided technical assistance on creating a local historic district. MHPN Awards Throughout the process, our field representative Nan Taylor was touched by numerous residents’ personal stories about what these buildings meant to them and their community. It solidified the value of historic preservation and the community’s history; clarifying how the efforts to protect an iconic structure could affect an entire community. And our efforts paid off when the Belding City Council established a Local Historic District in September 2011, despite battling a large corporation with a wealth of financial and legal resources, despite Electrolux filing restraining orders and complaints, and despite having extremely lim- At our 2011 MHPN Awards Ceremony, we were surprised to be awarded the David Evans Memorials Award. Presented by Park Smith from the Michigan Architectural Foundation (MAF), the award honors small but worthy preservation projects undertaken by nonprofits that protect an irreplaceable historic building. We received this award for our work to protect and restore the Thelma Joyce Osteen Comfort Station down the street from our offices in Old Town Lansing. Originally known as the North End Rest Room, this former public facilities house was built in 1915 to serve shoppers and travelers alike. Despite its former use, the Comfort Station, as it came to be known, is a historic gem in Old Town that had unfortunately been long since abandoned. Our efforts to purchase, restore, and creatively adapt the building as both an office and preservation-trades workshop location garnered the attention “I volunteer for MHPN because I believe that preserving our historical legacy will lead to a vibrant future. I want to be a part of helping MHPN make Michigan a great state.” – Meredith Long 10 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network of the MAF and the Clanad Foundation, who presented us with an award at our own ceremony! Mackinac Island Mackinac Island, a National Historic Landmark (NHL), has been a treasured tourist destination since the late 19th century. Recently, commercial development and the demolition of the 100-year-old McNally Cottage threatened to alter this idyllic place and became the “tipping point” for many residents to spring into preservation action. A grassroots preservation group, Save Our Island, was created to pass a moratorium on proposed development projects and advocate for the creation of local historic districts. MHPN has been with Save Our Island every step of the way to help them reach their goals. Field staff represen- MHPN Committee Members volunteered an average of 550 hours monthly. In 2011, MHPN gained over 10 new volunteers. tative Nan Taylor first provided advocacy and educational assistance in the group’s beginning stages, and then met with the City Council and Planning Commission regarding preservation strategies for threatened buildings. In coordination with State Historic Preservation Office (SHPO), Nan created and presented to City Council a Five Preservation Strategies Proposal. Outcomes of this proposal include a historic resources survey of the downtown, public preservation educational presentations and workshops, and design guidelines for downtown commercial buildings. And the need for local historic districts progressed; one was created in the residential area of Hubbards Annex and a committee completed its preliminary report for the downtown area, with a public hearing scheduled in 2012. Throughout all of this, MHPN and Nan Taylor provided guidance, resources, and trainings on many related issues. Through the education, advocacy, and other resources MHPN provided to Save Our Island, Mackinac Island is better prepared to protect and preserve its historical assets, ensuring its legacy as a historical landmark and tourist destination. 2011 Annual Report | 11 2011 CALENDAR YEAR FINANCIAL SUPPORT $10,000 or more: Helen A. Kreger Ann Arbor, MI Loomis, Ewert, Parsley, Davis & Gotting, P.C. 2 Mission Design & Development HS - Crystal Kenneth W. Beall, Lansing, MI Jon Carlson and Greg Lobdell, Ann Arbor, MI Porter One Design, LLC Marriott St. Kitts Resort & Royal Beach Casino Commerce Rehab, LLC & 68 Commerce LLC Will Porter, Farmington Hills, MI U.S.V.I. Jeffrey Baker and Mark Sellers, East Lansing, MI $1,000 - $2,499: Dave Kiley, Eagan, MN Douglas J Housing - Grand Rapids, LLC Scott Weaver, East Lansing, MI Fulton Property Holdings, LLC Andy Winkel, Grand Rapids, MI Karp + Associates / Buildtech Ltd. Anonymous MI Anonymous TX Anonymous MI ASTI Environmental Doug Brown, Brighton, MI Marvin Windows & Doors Pond-Winslow Home Kam Morris, West Chester, OH Oakland County Bret Rasegan and Nancy Thompson, Waterford, MI Louisa and Albert R. Pieper Ann Arbor, MI Richard Karp, Lansing, MI HS - Silver The Clannad Foundation State Historic Preservation Office, Michigan State Housing Development Authority Don & Linda Weir and Commonwealth Cultural Resources Group $1,000 - $2,499 Donald J. Weir Don and Linda Weir, Jackson, MI Kathy J. and Donald N. Duquette Ann Arbor, MI Pamela Hall O’Connor Pamela and Terry O’Connor, Kalamazoo, MI HS - Copper HS - Copper Quinn Evans Architects East Arbor Architecture Michael Quinn Steven C. Jones, Ann Arbor, MI, HS - Copper Founding Member Brian Conway, Lansing, MI $5,000 - $9,999 David DiChiera Detroit, MI Steven R. Fox Traverse City, MI HS - Bronze Janet L. Kreger Ann Arbor, MI HS - Crystal - Founding Member Michigan Architectural Foundation Randy Case and Barb Sido, Detroit, MI Neumann / Smith Architecture J. Michael Kirk, Southfield, MI Nixon Peabody LLP David F. Schon, Washington, DC HS - Crystal Plante & Moran, PLLC Gordon Goldie, Auburn Hills, MI HS - Crystal Ralph Graham, Wilmington, NC Daniel Bollman, AIA Dan and Anne Dorrance Bollman, East Lansing, MI Eastern Michigan University Historic Preservation Program HS - Copper - Founding Member Preservation Practices RAM Construction Services of Michigan, Inc. Robert Mazur and Jessica Farley, Livonia, MI HS - Copper Ted Ligibel, PhD, Ypsilanti, MI Elaine H. Robinson Jackson, MI The Felt Estate HS - Copper Al Meshkin, Holland, MI Saugatuck Center for the Arts Fitzpatrick Structural Engineering, P.C. Kristin Armstrong, Saugatuck, MI Thomas Fitzpatrick, PE and Cheryl Early, PE, Ann Arbor, MI James A. Schmiechen, Ph.D., Douglas, MI Slow’s Bar BQ Kristi Gilbert Ann Arbor, MI Grand Hotel Ron Cooley, Detroit, MI Stewart Independent Production LLC $2,500 - $4,999 Dan Musser III andKenneth L. Hayward, Mackinac Island, MI Shannon Stewart, Saugatuck, MI MI HS - Bronze Grunwell-Cashero Company James Turner James & Stephanie Turner, Detroit, MI HS - Bronze Sally Linvill Bund and Ian R.N. Bund Ann Arbor, The Christman Company Ronald D. Staley Ron and Linda Staley, Lansing, MI HS - Copper - Founding Member Scott Cashero and Jelane Raycraft, Detroit, MI HS - Copper - Founding Member Jolly Pumpkin Jon Carlson, Ann Arbor, MI Turner Restoration Ridgway H. White Fenton, MI Wolverine Building Group Richard VanderZyden Michael Kelly, Grand Rapids, MI Andy Gutman, Southfield, MI Elisabeth Knibbe Ypsilanti, MI Richard H. Kraft Flint, MI Laurence Smith Window & Door Grand River Builders, Inc. Bill Ruff, Bay City, MI Dan and Margaret LeBlond Elk Rapids, MI JC Beal Construction Inc. Brian Black, Grand Rapids, MI Kidorf Preservation Consulting HS - Copper Fred Beal, Ann Arbor, MI HS - Copper - Founding Member Kristine Kidorf, Detroit, MI HS - Copper Locus Development LLC BlackBerry Window and Door Systems Andy Winkel and John GreenGrand Rapids, MI Michael Shields, Kalamazoo, MI Farbman Group 12 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network $500 - $999 (Continued) Up to $249 Building Arts & Conservation LLC Cusack’s Masonry Restoration Inc. Ronald Koenig, Saline, MI Doug and Nancy Cusack, Hubbardston, MI CASS Sheet Metal Inc. Esperance Glenn Parvin, Detroit, MI Suzanne Acharya, Charlevoix, MI Kathy Wilson, Saugatuck, MI Cornerstone Architects, Inc., P.C. Front Porch Renaissance Group Tom G. Nemitz, AIA, Grand Rapids, MI Tim Hunnicutt, Bay City, MI ETS Engineering, Inc. Great Lakes Shipwreck Historical Society Douglas M. Sayles, PE, Royal Oak, MI Sean Ley, Sault Saint Marie, MI Finnicum Brownlie Architects William L. Finnicum, Franklin, MI Hooker | DeJong Inc. Architects, Engineers and Planners Kenneth W. Beall East Lansing, MI Bassem Bitar Columbus, OH Christine Brummer Ann Arbor, MI CK Mediterranean Grille First Martin Corporation David Layman, Muskegon, MI William Martin and Bob Gates, Ann Arbor, MI Rod and Betsy Kreger Satellite Beach, FL Meredith Long Oak Park, MI Lord, Aeck & Sargent Architecture Frank Gregory Detroit, MI HopkinsBurns Design Studio PLLC Gene Hopkins and Tamara Burns Ann Arbor, MI Gregory A. Jones Ann Arbor, MI Balthazar Korab Troy, MI Denice Blair Leach Jackson, MI MHT Housing, Inc. Krystal Covington, Bingham Farms, MI Karen A. Nagher Redford, MI Oakland County Parks Laurie Stasiak Nancy Thompson, Waterford, MI Potapa-Van Hoosear Engineering, Inc. Karl Potapa, Shelby Township, MI Rotary Club of Battle Creek Battle Creek, MI Saugatuck-Douglas Historical Society Harold Thieda, Douglas, MI David F. Schon Washington, DC Marjorie Schultz Bloomfield Hills, MI Park Smith, AIA Flint, MI Star of Saugatuck Boat Cruises Marilyn Starring, Captain, Saugatuck, MI Traffic Jam and Snug Scott Lowell, Detroit, MI Westin Resort & Spa Cancun U.S.V.I. Rob Yallop, Ann Arbor, MI Michigan Humanities Council, an affiliate of the National Endowment for the Humanities Katie Wolf, Lansing, MI Michigan State University Office of Advancement/Individual Giving Unit East Lansing, MI Ruth E. Mills Ypsilanti, MI National Restoration Inc. John Fletcher, Keego Harbor, MI Nehil-Sivak PC Consulting Structural Engineers Thomas Nehil, PE and Jerome Sivak, PE, Kalamazoo, MI Past Perfect Inc. Jennifer Metz and Rebecca Smith Hoffman, East Grand Rapids, MI Mary Beecher Price Ann Arbor, MI Rueter Associates Architects Marc Rueter, Ann Arbor, MI Saarinen (Michigan) Chapter of the Society of Architectural Historians Ann Arbor, MI John Abraam Clawson, MI Beachway Resort Ouse Guli, Detroit, MI Elizabeth Calhoun Livonia, MI Ronald R. Campbell, AIA Flint, MI Dennis Carlson Bloomfield Hills, MI Architecture + Design Randy Case, Kalamazoo, MI Kathryn A. Caskey Decatur, MI Century Restoration LLC David Varney, South Haven, MI Chicago Architecture Tour Charles T. Stanford, Chicago, IL Walter P. Chrysler Museum Auburn Hills, MI Cincinnati Museum Cincinnati, OH Brian Clay Collins Grosse Pointe, MI Marla Collum Aldie, VA Cooper Design, Inc. Gary Cooper, Ann Arbor, MI Coopersville & Marne Railway Company Jerry Ricard, Coopersville, MI Julie and Max Courtney Plymouth, MI HS - Copper Creative Wellness, Inc. Amy Zander, East Lansing, MI Cupcake Station Kerry Johnson, Birmingham, MI William M. Danforth Royal Oak, MI Amanda D. Davis Photography Amanda Davis, Mt. Clemens, MI Martha Wickett-Schrock, Fennville, MI Lorri Sipes, Ann Arbor, MI Detroit Historical Museum Detroit, MI Detroit Sympony Orchestra Detroit, MI Detroit Zoological Society Pleasant Ridge, MI Diamond Jack’s River Tours Lincoln Park, MI Lisa DiChiera Chicago, IL Douglas J Aveda Institute East Lansing MI Cheryl Early, PE Plymouth, MI Kathryn B. Eckert Leland, MI Eckert’s Greenhouse Sterling Heights, MI The English Inn Cartier Mansion Ypsilanti Area Convention & Visitors Bureau Gary and Donna Nelson, Easton Rapids, MI Susan Kiel, Ludington, MI Debra Locke-Daniel, Ypsilanti, MI The Inn on Ferry Street Detroit, MI $250 - $499 Adair Restoration LLC Robin Adair, Ann Arbor, MI Stephen L. Stier East Lansing, MI Nancy Thompson Birmingham, MI Sylvia and Dave Tillman Dearborn, MI Ilene and Norman Tyler Ann Arbor, MI Wigen Tincknell Meyer & Associates, Inc. Arthur Murray Dance Center Royal Oak, MI Birch Lodge Ken Lemiesz, AIA, Saginaw, MI William Rutter and Deb Rhead, Trout Lake, MI Jim Winter-Troutwine, Grand Rapids, MI Camp Tosebo Wood Window Repair Company Winter-Troutwine Associates Inc. 2011 Annual Report | 13 Up to $249 (continued) Nancy M. Finegood Eaton Rapids, MI The Henry Ford Dearborn, MI M. Marlene Galus Lansing, MI Lisa Mower Gandelot Grosse Pointe Farms, MI Glass Academy Dearborn, MI Gordon Goldie Sterling Heights, MI Deborah Goldstein West Bloomfield, MI Grand Rapids Art Museum Grand Rapids, MI Ina Hanel-Gerdenich Ann Arbor, MI Richard C. and Mary N. Hansen Big Rapids, MI Melinda Hill Rochester Hills, MI Kathleen M. Holtz Ann Arbor, MI John F. Horvat Pleasant Ridge, MI Richard Hosey Detroit, MI Tim Hunnicutt Dewitt, MI Kimberly Johnson Pontiac, MI Rosalyn A. Johnson Detroit, MI Wendy Johnson Flint, MI Steven C. Jones Ann Arbor, MI Norman O. Jung Kalamazoo, MI Sharie Kahl Lansing, MI Kibbe & Associates Susanne O. McMillan Detroit, MI Jerome S. Mehler, DDS Farmington Hills, HI Michelle M. Mertz Okemos, MI Michigan History Foundation John M. Dempsey, Ann Arbor, MI Michigan State University Museum East Lansing, MI Melissa Milton-Pung Ypsilanti, MI Monroe Achers Farm Company Beverly Monroe, Manton, MI Motawi Tileworks Nawal Motawi, Ann Arbor, MI Lauren and Arthur Mullen Grosse Pointe Park, MI Shelly J. Neitzel Ann Arbor, MI Richard Neumann Architect Rick Neumann, AIA, Petoskey, MI Lisa Nuszkowski Detroit,MI Bob O’Connor Charles Town, WV Old Home Rehab, Inc. John W. Coleman, PhD, Royal Oak, MI Lost & Found Vintage Kristin Rose, Royal Oak, MI Love, Betti Kristin Olson, Lansing, MI MIHM Enterprises, Inc Frank Mihm, Hamilton, MI Martha L. MacFarlane-Faes, Lansing, MI Lynne DeForest Marthey Ludington, MI Jay McAdams and Debbie Devine Van Nuys, CA Denise McGeen Detroit, MI Dawn F. Schumann Douglas, MI The Shaffran Companies LTD. Edward A. Shaffran, Ann Arbor, MI Patricia Sinelli Birmingham, MI Michelle Smay Ann Arbor, MI Dean S. and Caroline B. Smith Ann Arbor, MI Grace A.M. Smith Rockford, MI Peggy Child Smith Grand Rapids, MI Spartan Specialties, Ltd. Steve Maranowski, Sterling Heights, MI Stafford’s Perry Hotel Donna J. Steinebach Port Orange, FL Olga and Dante Stella Detroit, MI Charlotte Whitney Stevens Olivet, MI Anne Stevenson Ypsilanti, MI Mary Warner Stone Durand, MI Tom Taylor Cadillac, MI Ten Thousand Villages Old Town Lansing Commercial Association Louise Gradwohl, Lansing, MI Look in the Attic & Company, Inc. Stephen Meyer, Holt, MI Old House Gardens Scott Kunst, Ann Arbor, MI Panera Bread Statewide, MI Matthew Paquin Whitmore Lk, MI Park Place Hotel Lonnie Dowd, Bay City, MI Ilene R. Schechter East Lansing, MI Gary A. Scheuren East Lansing, MI Schiffer Mason Contractors, Inc. Stafford Smith, Petoskey, MI Howard Kidorf Holmdel, NJ J. Michael Kirk, AIA Dearborn, MI Barbara Krueger Hartland, MI Lake Michigan Car Ferry Ludington, MI Katie Large Dewitt, MI Kelly Larson Lansing, MI Launstein Hardwood Floors Lonnie’s Home Improvement Sandhill Crane Vineyards Heather Price, Jackson, MI Peter Carroll, Kalamazoo, MI William A. Kibbe, Saginaw, MI Dan Launstein, Mason, MI Sanders & Czapski, Associates Ken Czapski, Marquette, MI Margaret Morse, Traverse City, MI Peaches Bed and Breakfast Jane Lovett, Grand Rapids,MI Downtown Petoskey Petoskey, MI Pewabic Pottery Terese Ireland, Detroit, MI Potter Park Zoo Lansing, MI Richard and Karen Rabeler Grass Lake, MI James E. Reagan, DDS Lowell, MI Patrick M. Roach, AIA Ann Arbor, MI Thomas Roberts Architect Tom Roberts, AIA, Wyandotte, MI Julee Rosso Saugatuck, MI Bill Ruff Bay City, MI Saginaw Art Museum Gerda Paschal, Ann Arbor, MI Mark Thomas Birmingham, MI Thomas F. Trombley Saginaw, MI University of Michigan, Exhibit Museum of Natural History Ann Arbor, MI Washtenaw County Parks & Recreation Commission - Rolling Hills Robert Tetens, Ann Arbor, MI Kathleen H. Wendler Detroit, MI Wheelhouse Detroit Karen Gage and Kelli Kavanaugh Detroit, MI Ryan Kaltenbach, Saginaw, MI Gary Wilson Owosso, MI Susan Cee Wineberg Ann Arbor, MI E. Gabriel Works and John O’Connor Grand Salt of the Earth Rustic American Eatery & Bakery Yellow Door Art Market Martha Wickett-Schrock, Fennville, MI April and Steve McCrumb, Berkley, MI 14 | Michigan Historic Preservation Network Rapids, MI FUNDRAISING Financial Report Financial support came from 252 individuals, businesses, foundations, organizations, educational institutions, governmental bodies, and grant-making entities. Revenue The total value of this financial support was $348,935, a figured comprising the following: Cash and cash equivalents $273,426 Goods and services purchased for the MHPN $6,437 In-kind goods and services provided the MHPN $47,527 Books and auction items given to the MHPN for free $21,545 The 20 current members of our Heritage Society continued to be an important part of MHPN’s support base, each member having pledged to make gifts totaling at least $1,000 in three consecutive years. Significantly they made gifts totaling $63,269 as part of the year’s $348,935 in total contributions – meaning, 8% of the donor base gave 18% of the support. In addition to our Heritage Society, several of our activities stood out as attracting the most cash support. They included: $134,560 $39,663 $8,500 $8,500 $8,392 $7,849 Easements Annual Conferences Outreach and Education Comfort Station Rehabilitation Field Representatives Fall Benefit January to December 2011 Historic Easements*............................$155,465 Grants*................................................$74,930 Conferences........................................$70,164 Donations............................................$25,382 Memberships.......................................$24,439 Fundraisers..........................................$23,128 Historic Resource Council...................$9,555 Education and Outreach.....................$6,699 Heritage Society..................................$3,250 Other....................................................$2,347 Total Revenue....................................$395,359 *Includes Board restricted funds Expense Payroll..................................................$138,983 Administration.....................................$89,447 Contract Staff......................................$41,103 Conferences........................................$34,911 Education & Outreach.........................$25,803 Travel...................................................$18,287 Public Policy / Consulting Fees...........$14,003 Historic Preservation Easements........$12,551 Memberships.......................................$6,088 Fundraising..........................................$1,543 Communications.................................$862 Total Expenses...................................$383,580 Net Income $11,779 2011 Annual Report | 15 2011 MHPN Award Winners Citizen Award Sharon Ferraro, Kalamazoo, for her many years of enthusiastic and effective preservation work in the Kalamazoo Area Citizen Award Willard “Bill” Finch, Stockbridge, for his service as the Michigan State Capitol’s Master Decorative Painter Government & Community Award Laketown Township for the creation of a community preservation plan Community Award Museum of Ojibwa Culture, St. Ignace, for the collaborative restoration of the Museum building. Preservation Gem Award Felt Estate, Saugatuck, for the restoration of the water garden Preservation Gem Award The Rochester-Avon Historical Society, Rochester Hills for the restoration of the 1938 WPA Mural Cultural Landscape Award River Raisin National Battlefield Park and River Raisin Heritage Trail, Monroe, for the creation of the Park and trail Tax Credit Award Richard Karp and Kevin Prater, Flint, for the rehabilitation of the Durant Hotel, Flint Lifetime Achievement John Halsey, for his 35 years of protecting Michigan’s Archeological Resources as the State Archeologist. Michael L. Quinn, FAIA, for his 40 years of historic preservation design leadership James Schmiechen, for his preservation advocacy work in Saugatuck-Douglas Leadership Award David Blaszkiewicz, for his work in flexible financing of historic rehabilitation projects in Detroit. Michigan Historic Preservation Network 107 East Grand River Avenue • Lansing, Michigan 48906 517-371-8080 • [email protected]