Action Items.
1. The owners of the Grier House property have responded to the
Commission’s offer to purchase the house. The Commission will need to
discuss this issue and determine what it wishes to do. Staff
recommendation: do not modify your offer on the property.
The property is endangered. However, it setting would be severely
damaged by the proposed project, and the economic viability of the
project is questionable.
Information Items.
1. The joint public hearing to consider
removing land from the Cedar Grove Historic Landmark shall occur with
the Town Board of Huntersville at 6:30pm in the Huntersville Town Hall
on September 17, 2001. State statute technically requires that a
majority of the Commission be present. Please advise the HLC Office as
to whether you will attend.
2. There have been several developments with
respect to the Charlotte Trolley Barn issue. Meetings with public
officials suggest that the most acceptable way to provide funds to the
HLC for purchase of the building might be for the Board of County
Commissioners to consider making a special allocation from Land Bond
money to the HLC’s revolving fund. Also, there appears to be support in
the City for giving serious consideration in its 2002 Budget process to
a request for money to upfit the building. The Survey Committee did
visit the building on September 6th and will be making a
recommendation to the Commission concerning this matter.
3. I did meet with Bruce Parker, owner of the
former East Avenue Tabernacle A.R.P. Church, now known as the Aunt
Stella Center. It was a productive session. I explained the consequences
of historic landmark designation and stated that the Commission was most
interested in advancing the cause of preserving the building.
4. I have not yet met with the Mallard Creek
Presbyterian Church regarding the prospective designation of the Mallard
Creek Schoolhouse as a historic landmark, but I will be contacting the
Church this week.
5. Ron Kimble will be arranging a meeting with
me and City officials to discuss the issue of the prospective
designation of Elmwood/Pinewood Cemetery as a historic landmark.
6. The Commission’s survey of industrial and
institutional buildings of the late nineteenth and first half of the
twentieth centuries is nearing completion. David Gall Architect will be
preparing the final report by the end of September.
7. Paula Stathakis and Stewart Gray have
applied to conduct the survey of African American resources in
Mecklenburg County. The Division of Archives and History will be
interviewing them and will make a determination as to whether they are
suited to perform the project.
8. Progress continues at the W. T. Alexander
House. The rock wall along the driveway is being repaired. The interior
of the garage apartment is being painted. Don Yelverton is under
contract to advise us as to what immediate repairs need to be done to
the house and the garage apartment, to develop a design for the
reconstruction of the barn as condominiums, and to develop a site plan
for the property. The Projects Committee is scheduled to meet in the
house on October 1st. A graduate UNCC historic preservation
course that I am teaching has been meeting in the house. The History
Department at UNCC is continuing to explore how the University might
move toward making some sort of permanent use of the house.
9. The Charlotte Cotton Mills project continues
to evolve. Demolition of non-historic interior elements of Building B
(the HLC’s portion of the property) is 90 percent completed. Jack
Copeland, architect, is reviewing a contract to prepare plans for
repairs to the roof and to the skylights. Paul Fomberg is scheduled to
visit the property this week to advise as to whether windows can be
placed in the western face of Building B and still satisfy the Secretary
of Interior’s Guidelines.
10. Paul Fomberg of Archives and History will
be visiting the Oehler property, McAuley House, W. T. Alexander House,
and the Charlotte Cotton Mills to advise as to what procedures will be
necessary to assure the availability of investment tax credits for all
of these projects. The moving of the McAuley House will occur after Mr.
Fomberg’s visit.
11. Contracts for architects Donny Luke (Rozzell
House) and Joseph Opperman (McAuley House and Oehler House) are being
reviewed by the architects.
12. The closing for the Rozzell House is
scheduled for September 19th. Pat Nystrom will be preparing
lease agreements for the tenants for the two houses on the property.
Arrangements have been made for removal of hazardous or unsightly
materials from the property.
13. Patricia Nystrom continues to negotiate
with attorneys representing the owner to acquire the lot across Rea Road
to which the Grier-Rea House will be moved. If those negotiations are
not successful, the Commission will have to consider whether it wants to
seek alternative locations to which to move the house.
14. Bryan Turner is overseeing the construction
of bathroom at the Rural Hill Schoolhouse. Bryan is seeking competitive
bids and is also obtaining prices for a well. Work should begin in the
next couple of months.
Dan L. Morrill