[net-gold] TOURISM AND TRAVEL: HERITAGE TOURISM : RECREATION: OUTDOOR: PARKS : HISTORY PRESERVATION STANDARDS TECHNIQUES AND TECHNICAL METHODS : UNITED STATES: GOVERNMENT: United States. Department of the Interior. National Park Service. Technical Preservation Services (TPS)

  • From: "David P. Dillard" <jwne@xxxxxxxxxx>
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  • Date: Mon, 23 Jul 2012 14:52:19 -0400 (EDT)



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TOURISM AND TRAVEL: HERITAGE TOURISM :

RECREATION: OUTDOOR: PARKS :

HISTORY PRESERVATION STANDARDS TECHNIQUES AND TECHNICAL METHODS :

UNITED STATES: GOVERNMENT:

United States. Department of the Interior.

National Park Service.

Technical Preservation Services (TPS)

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United States. Department of the Interior.

National Park Service.

Technical Preservation Services (TPS)

http://www.nps.gov/tps/

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Technical Preservation Services develops historic preservation policy and guidance on preserving and rehabilitating historic buildings, administers the Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives Program for rehabilitating historic buildings, and sets the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties.

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About TPS

http://www.nps.gov/tps/about.htm

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Preserve and Protect our Nations Heritage

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We develop national standards and guidelines for preserving, rehabilitating, restoring, and reconstructing historic properties. We provide the tools and information that historic property owners, preservation professionals and organizations, and government agencies at all levels need to care for the nations historic properties.



We have over 150 publications currently in print, which are available at minimal or no cost. We organize national conferences and workshops with leading experts to share best preservation practices.

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In partnership with State Historic Preservation Offices, we administer the Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives Program. We certify approximately 1000 projects every year, leveraging nearly $4 billion annually in private investment in the rehabilitation of historic buildings across the country.

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With the General Services Administration, we coordinate the Historic Surplus Property Program, which transfers surplus historic properties from federal ownership to state and local governments.

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We manage the Historic Preservation Internship Training Program, which provides interns the opportunity to work in cultural resource management programs in the National Park Service and other Federal agencies.

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Our staff brings an average of 21 years of historic preservation experience to our national historic preservation program. We have worked in the private sector, local non-profit preservation organizations, the National Trust for Historic Preservation, State Historic Preservation Offices, national parks, National Park Service regional offices, the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, and the Office of the Assistant Secretary of the Department of the Interior. Contact us for more information.

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The Standards

http://www.nps.gov/tps/standards.htm

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The Standards are a series of concepts about maintaining, repairing, and replacing historic materials, as well as designing new additions or making alterations. The Guidelines offer general design and technical recommendations to assist in applying the Standards to a specific property. Together, they provide a framework and guidance for decision-making about work or changes to a historic property.

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The Standards and Guidelines can be applied to historic properties of all types, materials, construction, sizes, and use. They include both the exterior and the interior and extend to a propertys landscape features, site, environment, as well as related new construction.

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Federal agencies use the Standards and Guidelines in carrying out their historic preservation responsibilities. State and local officials use them in reviewing both Federal and nonfederal rehabilitation proposals. Historic district and planning commissions across the country use the Standards and Guidelines to guide their design review processes.

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The Standards offer four distinct approaches to the treatment of historic propertiespreservation, rehabilitation, restoration, and reconstruction with Guidelines for each.

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The Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties are regulatory for all grant-in-aid projects assisted through the national Historic Preservation Fund.

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The Standards for Rehabiliation, codified in 36 CFR 67, are regulatory for the review of rehabilitation work in the Historic Preservation Tax Incentives program.

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The Guidelines are advisory, not regulatory.

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Four Approaches to the Treatment of Historic Properties

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There are Standards for four distinct, but interrelated, approaches to the treatment of historic propertiespreservation, rehabilitation, restoration, and reconstruction.

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http://www.nps.gov/tps/standards/four-treatments.htm

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Choosing an appropriate treatment for a historic building or landscape is critical.

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Preservation focuses on the maintenance and repair of existing historic materials and retention of a property's form as it has evolved over time.

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Rehabilitation acknowledges the need to alter or add to a historic property to meet continuing or changing uses while retaining the property's historic character.

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Restoration depicts a property at a particular period of time in its history, while removing evidence of other periods.

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Reconstruction re-creates vanished or non-surviving portions of a property for interpretive purposes.

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The choice of treatment depends on a variety of factors, including the property's historical significance, physical condition, proposed use, and intended interpretation. Historic buildings are used as an example below. The decisionmaking process would be similar for other property types.

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Relative importance in history. Is the building nationally significant? Is it a rare survivor or the work of a master architect or craftsman? Did an important event take place in it? National Historic Landmarks, designated for their "exceptional significance in American history," or many buildings individually listed in the National Register often warrant Preservation or Restoration. Buildings that contribute to the significance of a historic district but are not individually listed in the National Register more frequently undergo Rehabilitation for a compatible new use.

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Physical condition. What is the existing condition, or degree of material integrity, of the building prior to work? Has the original form survived largely intact or has it been altered over time? Are the alterations an important part of the building's history? Preservation may be appropriate if distinctive materials, features, and spaces are essentially intact and convey the building's historical significance. If the building requires more extensive repair and replacement, or if alterations or additions are necessary for a new use, then Rehabilitation is probably the most appropriate treatment.

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Proposed use. An essential, practical question to ask is: Will the building be used as it was historically or will it be given a new use? Many historic buildings can be adapted for new uses without seriously damaging their historic character. However, special-use properties such as grain silos, forts, ice houses, or windmills may be extremely difficult to adapt to new uses without major intervention and a resulting loss of historic character and even integrity.

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Mandated code requirements. Regardless of the treatment, code requirements will need to be taken into consideration. But if hastily or poorly designed, code-required work may jeopardize a building's materials as well as its historic character. Thus, if a building needs to be seismically upgraded, modifications to the historic appearance should be minimal. Abatement of lead paint and asbestos within historic buildings requires particular care if important historic finishes are not to be adversely affected. Finally, alterations and new construction needed to meet accessibility requirements under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 should be designed to minimize material loss and visual change to a historic building.

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The Guidelines for the Treatment of Historic Properties illustrate the practical application of each treatment to historic properties. These Guidelines are also available in PDF format and are sold in printed format.

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The Guidelines for the Treatment of Cultural Landscapes apply the treatment standards to historic cultural landscapes.

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Guidelines

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/index.htm

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Introduction and Historical Overview

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/overview/choose_treat.htm

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The Standards are neither technical nor prescriptive, but are intended to promote responsible preservation practices that help protect our Nation's irreplaceable cultural resources. For example, they cannot, in and of themselves, be used to make essential decisions about which features of the historic building should be saved and which can be changed. But once a treatment is selected, the Standards provide philosophical consistency to the work.

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The four treatment approaches are Preservation, Rehabilitation, Restoration, and Reconstruction, outlined below in hierarchical order and explained:

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The first treatment, Preservation, places a high premium on the retention of all historic fabric through conservation, maintenance and repair. It reflects a building's continuum over time, through successive occupancies, and the respectful changes and alterations that are made.

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Rehabilitation, the second treatment, emphasizes the retention and repair of historic materials, but more latitude is provided for replacement because it is assumed the property is more deteriorated prior to work. (Both Preservation and Rehabilitation standards focus attention on the preservation of those materials, features, finishes, spaces, and spatial relationships that, together, give a property its historic character.)

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Restoration, the third treatment, focuses on the retention of materials from the most significant time in a property's history, while permitting the removal of materials from other periods.

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Reconstruction, the fourth treatment, establishes limited opportunities to re-create a non-surviving site, landscape, building, structure, or object in all new materials.

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Choosing the most appropriate treatment for a building requires careful decision-making about a building's historical significance, as well taking into account a number of other considerations:

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Relative importance in history. Is the building a nationally significant resource--a rare survivor or the work of a master architect or craftsman? Did an important event take place in it? National Historic Landmarks, designated for their "exceptional significance in American history," or many buildings individually listed in the National Register often warrant Preservation or Restoration. Buildings that contribute to the significance of a historic district but are not individually listed in the National Register more frequently undergo Rehabilitation for a compatible new use.

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Physical condition. What is the existing condition--or degree of material integrity--of the building prior to work? Has the original form survived largely intact or has it been altered over time? Are the alterations an important part of the building's history? Preservation may be appropriate if distinctive materials, features, and spaces are essentially intact and convey the building's historical significance. If the building requires more extensive repair and replacement, or if alterations or additions are necessary for a new use, then Rehabilitation is probably the most appropriate treatment. These key questions play major roles in determining what treatment is selected.

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Proposed use. An essential, practical question to ask is: Will the building be used as it was historically or will it be given a new use? Many historic buildings can be adapted for new uses without seriously damaging their historic character; special-use properties such as grain silos, forts, ice houses, or windmills may be extremely difficult to adapt to new uses without major intervention and a resulting loss of historic character and even integrity.

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Mandated code requirements. Regardless of the treatment, code requirements will need to be taken into consideration. But if hastily or poorly designed, a series of code-required actions may jeopardize a building's materials as well as its historic character. Thus, if a building needs to be seismically upgraded, modifications to the historic appearance should be minimal. Abatement of lead paint and asbestos within historic buildings requires particular care if important historic finishes are not to be adversely affected. Finally, alterations and new construction needed to meet accessibility requirements under the Americans with Disabilities Act of 1990 should be designed to minimize material loss and visual change to a historic building.

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Guidelines

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Preserving

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/preserve/preserve_index.htm

Standards

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ preserve/preserve_standards.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/c6vhb5f


Guidelines

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ preserve/preserve_approach.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/cduaxhf


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Rehabilitating

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/rehab/rehab_index.htm

Standards

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/rehab/rehab_standards.htm

Guidelines

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/rehab/rehab_approach.htm

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Restoring

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/restore/restore_index.htm

Standards

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ restore/restore_standards.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/bnz2bn9


Guidelines

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ restore/restore_approach.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/buxpbmu


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Reconstructing

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ reconstruct/reconstruct_index.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/bux7zvx

Standards

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ reconstruct/reconstruct_standards.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/d8yncpf



Guidelines

http://www.nps.gov/history/hps/tps/standguide/ reconstruct/reconstruct_approach.htm

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A shorter URL for the above link:

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http://tinyurl.com/d2pdl3k


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Tax Incentives for Preserving Historic Properties

http://www.nps.gov/tps/tax-incentives.htm

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20% Tax Credit

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A 20% income tax credit is available for the rehabilitation of historic, income-producing buildings that are determined by the Secretary of the Interior, through the National Park Service, to be certified historic structures. The State Historic Preservation Offices and the National Park Service review the rehabilitation work to ensure that it complies with the Secretarys Standards for Rehabilitation. The Internal Revenue Service defines qualified rehabilitation expenses on which the credit may be taken. Owner-occupied residential properties do not qualify for the federal rehabilitation tax credit. Learn more about this credit before you apply.

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Each year, Technical Preservation Services approves approximately 1000 projects, leveraging nearly $4 billion annually in private investment in the rehabilitation of historic buildings across the country.

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10% Tax Credit

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The 10% tax credit is available for the rehabilitation of non-historic buildings placed in service before 1936. The building must be rehabilitated for non-residential use. In order to qualify for the tax credit, the rehabilitation must meet three criteria: at least 50% of the existing external walls must remain in place as external walls, at least 75% of the existing external walls must remain in place as either external or internal walls, and at least 75% of the internal structural framework must remain in place. There is no formal review process for rehabilitations of non-historic buildings. Learn more about this credit in Historic Preservation Tax Incentives.

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Tax Benefits for Historic Preservation Easements

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A historic preservation easement is a voluntary legal agreement, typically in the form of a deed, that permanently protects an historic property. Through the easement, a property owner places restrictions on the development of or changes to the historic property, then transfers these restrictions to a preservation or conservation organization. A historic property owner who donates an easement may be eligible for tax benefits, such as a Federal income tax deduction. Easement rules are complex, so property owners interested in the potential tax benefits of an easement donation should consult with their accountant or tax attorney. Learn more about easements in Easements to Protect Historic Properties: A Useful Historic Preservation Tool with Potential Tax Benefits.

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How to Preserve Historic Properties

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Technical Preservation Services provides technical assistance and guidance on the preservation of historic properties. Our publications have become the basis for responsible care of historic buildings and are routinely referenced by preservation professionals, local design review commissions, state and federal agencies, students, and historic property owners.

http://www.nps.gov/tps/how-to-preserve.htm

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Preservation Briefs provide in-depth information about various aspects of historic preservation. Many provide guidance on the appropriate treatment of traditional building materials such as slate roofing, plaster, and masonry. Others address architectural features including storefronts and porches, or focus on the reuse of specific building types such as historic gas stations and barns. Additionally, this publication series covers broader themes such as how to understand architectural character and making historic buildings accessible.

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Preservation Tech Notes provide practical information on traditional practices and innovative techniques for successfully maintaining and preserving cultural resources.

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The preservation of Cultural Landscapes presents unique issues and challenges. These historic resources range in scale from small formal gardens to large tracts of land. And they include all types of resources from natural features with significance for Indian tribes to roadside features of the early automobile era.

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Sustainability

http://www.nps.gov/tps/sustainability.htm

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Energy Efficiency in Historic Buildings

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With increasing pressures to save energy and go green it can be difficult to determine the appropriate and effective treatments for a historic property.

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New Technology and Historic Properties

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From solar panels to green roofs, modern devices are increasingly popular ways to reduce the environmental impact of our existing built environment.

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Sustainable Preservation in Practice

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Benefit from the experience of others. Check out success stories, learn about sustainability studies and research, and discover available resources.

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New Guidelines

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TPS recently published Illustrated Guidelilnes on Sustainability for Rehabilitating Historic Buildings

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Historic preservation is inherently a sustainable practice.

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A commonly quoted phrase, the greenest building is the one thats already built, succinctly expresses the relationship between preservation and sustainability. The repair and retrofitting of existing and historic buildings is considered by many to be the ultimate recycling project, and focusing on historic buildings has added benefits for the larger community.

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Traditional materials are generally durable, the continued maintenance of historic buildings and features relies on local craftsmen rather than replacement parts, and these structures generally make up the heart of our towns and cities. For decades, preservation programs like the Historic Preservation Tax Incentives have demonstrated that whole communities can be revitalized by rehabilitating individual buildings.

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The National Park Service recognizes that climate change is real, and efforts to reduce our energy consumption on a national scale are vital. According to the U.S. Energy Information Administration, buildings are the largest consumers of energy in the nation.

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In recognition of the role the built environment plays in energy use, Technical Preservation Services develops guidance and technical information about how historic properties can incorporate sustainable practices to reduce energy consumption, while maintaining those characteristics that make historic properties significant.

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Historic Surplus Property Program

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The Historic Surplus Property Program enables state, county, and local governments to obtain historic buildings once used by the Federal government at no cost and to adapt them for new uses.

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http://www.nps.gov/tps/historic-surplus.htm

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A Partnership Program to Preserve and Reuse
Federal Historic Properties

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Federally-owned historic buildings that are no longer needed by the Federal government are declared surplus by the General Services Administration. The Department of Defense also uses the Historic Surplus Property Program to dispose of historic military bases that have been closed.

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States, counties, municipalities, and other governmental entities are eligible to acquire a surplus property at no cost if the property is listed in, or eligible for listing in, the National Register of Historic Places. Custom houses, office buildings, and military buildings have all been transferred under this program.

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Transferred properties may be used for a wide variety of public facilities or revenue-producing activities. Private and not-for-profit organizations cannot acquire property under this program, but they may enter into long-term leases with recipients of historic surplus properties. Private developers with a long-term lease may be eligible to take advantage of Federal Historic Preservation Tax Incentives.

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The National Park Service works with applicants who are acquiring historic properties, provides guidance to ensure that any work on the property meets the Secretary of the Interior's Standards for Rehabilitation, and approves applicants leases to other organizations.

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Learn more about the Historic Surplus Property Program and see how properties have been reused in communities.

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Questions about historic properties in specific states can be directed to the National Park Service regional coordinators.

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Learn about related National Park Service programs that transfer surplus historic lighthouses and surplus Federal land for park uses.

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Discover more about the Federal government's disposal of real property from the U.S. General Services Administration.(Note: "Historic Monument" on the GSA website refers to the Historic Surplus Property Program.)

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Education and Training

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Technical Preservation Services provides a variety of educational and training opportunities. Staff members also participate in national, regional, and state conferences. Check our news for our schedule of future presentations, or contact us if you are looking for a speaker at a planned conference or workshop.

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http://www.nps.gov/tps/education.htm

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Student Internships

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For students in historic preservation and comparable fields, the National Park Service, in partnership with the National Council for Preservation Education, offers short-term internships at cultural program headquarters, field offices, and in parks.

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Online Training

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Technical Preservation Services has created web-based training features to provide professional development alternatives and enrichment programs for professional preservationists, local preservation commissions, volunteers, and anyone interested in more in-depth training in historic preservation.

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Printed Publications

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Many of our publications are available in print through the Government Printing Office. Selected items are available free of charge.

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Links related to the general operations of this government department and found on the bottom section of each web page on this website:

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Technical Preservation Services

About
The Standards
Tax Incentives
How To Preserve
Sustainability
Historic Surplus Property
Education & Training
Site Map

Cultural Resources

National Register of Historic Places
National Historic Landmarks
Historic Preservation Grants
National Center for Preservation
Technology and Training

National Park Service

Find a Park
Discover History
Explore Nature
Working with Communities
Get Involved
Teachers
Kids
About NPS


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This is a related Net-Gold post:

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HISTORY: UNITED STATES :

ARCHEOLOGY :

CULTURE :

CULTURAL HERITAGE:

United States.

Department of the Interior.

National Park Service.

History and Culture

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/Net-Gold/message/22145



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Sincerely,
David Dillard
Temple University
(215) 204 - 4584
jwne@xxxxxxxxxx
http://workface.com/e/daviddillard

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Bushell, R. & Sheldon, P. (eds),
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Wellness Tourism: Bibliographic and Webliographic Essay
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  • » [net-gold] TOURISM AND TRAVEL: HERITAGE TOURISM : RECREATION: OUTDOOR: PARKS : HISTORY PRESERVATION STANDARDS TECHNIQUES AND TECHNICAL METHODS : UNITED STATES: GOVERNMENT: United States. Department of the Interior. National Park Service. Technical Preservation Services (TPS) - David P. Dillard