Preservation Home

Awards
Recipients
Resources

VSA Home

 

PRESERVATION AWARDS 2000

Ryan Legislative Office Building

Harrisburg, Pennsylvania

COMMENDATION

For the restoration and adaptive use of this oldest (1893) surviving state building on Capitol Hill.

 

Designed by architect John Windrim and constructed in 1893 as executive offices, state library and museum, this grand beaux arts structure is the oldest surviving government building on Pennsylvania's Capitol Hill.  The building was professionally restored in 1998 and adapted for contemporary offices, with the magnificent entrance stair, scagliola, finishes, and many spaces retained.  Furniture compatible with 19th century interiors was custom designed and fabricated for current usage.

New England College of Optometry Library

Boston, Massachusetts

COMMENDATION

For the superb restoration of the facade and ground floor of this 1894 Peabody & Stearns mansion

 

This magnificent Back Bay mansion was constructed in 1894 for the Sears family from designs by the architectural firm of Peabody & Stearns.  After many uses, owners, and modifications, it was purchased by the College of Optometry in 1971.  The facade, ground floor and staircase were beautifully restored in 1998.  Especially noted was the painstaking restoration of the original painted burlap wall covering and the stained glass dome above the grand stair.

Fairlawn Mansion

Superior, Wisconsin

COMMENDATION

For the outstanding restoration and opening as a house museum of this long-neglected Queen Anne landmark.

 

Constructed in 1890 for local lumber baron Martin Pattison, this 42-room Queen Anne mansion stood for many years as the grandest home in Superior.  A children's home for over 40 years, it was much abused until purchased by the City of Superior in 1963.  In 1998 it was restored at a cost of $1.6 million and opened to the public as a house museum with appropriate period furnishings and as offices for the Douglas County Historical Society on the upper floors.  VSA Board member Robert Furhoff participated in the restoration.

Tomes-Higgins House

Greenwich, Connecticut

COMMENDATION

For the preservation and exterior restoration of this important 1861 villa designed by Calvert Vaux.

 

This villa, constructed in 1861 and designed by architect Calvert Vaux, was included in Vaux' 1864 edition of his influential book, Villas and Cottages.  Built for Francis Tomes, the 22-room house is the only structure designed by Vaux in the Second Empire style and one of only two surviving Vaux structures in Connecticut.  Purchased as a rectory by the Episcopal Church next door in 1963, the house was narrowly saved from demolition on two occasions (the VSA Preservation Officer in 1978 wrote in support of saving the house), and was restored by the church in 1998 at a cost of $2.3 million, at which time the interior was converted into meeting rooms and apartments.


In Association with Amazon.com

THE VSA IS A NON-PROFIT ORGANIZATION
help to defray our costs  by using Amazon.com

either visit our  bookstore

for suggested books

or

make any purchase after clicking on the Amazon logo
 


THE VICTORIAN SOCIETY IN AMERICA

1634 Sansom Street
Philadelphia, PA 19103
Phone: 215-636-9872
Fax: 215-636-9873

Email: info@victoriansociety.org


Nominate an existing VSA member to the Board

Use this form