HomeMy WebLinkAboutLandmark Preservation Commission - Minutes - 04/13/2005LANDMARK PRESERVATION COMMISSION
Regular Meeting
April 13, 2005 Minutes
City Council Liaison: David Roy (407-7393)
Staff Liaison: Joe Frank (221-6376)
Commission Chair: W. J. "Bud" Frick, Jr. (484-1467)
SUMMARY OF MEETING: LPC approved plans for an addition at 124 N. Sherwood,
Remington House, and plans for window repair and repainting at 1109 W. Oak,
Vandewark House. LPC also accepted the Franz Smith Cabin restoration in the
Courtyard of the Fort Collins Museum as built, and heard plans for administrative
approval for a small change of materials on the porch at 601 W. Mountain. Final
selections for the 2005 Friend of Preservation Award were made and the 2006-07
budget was discussed.
CALL TO ORDER AND ROLL CALL: Commission called to order with a quorum present by
Chairman Bud Frick at 5:33 p.m. at 281 N. College Ave.,. Fort Collins, Colorado, Agnes Dix,
Heather Donahue, Alyson McGee, and Ian Shuff were present. Angie Aguilera and Janet Ore
were excused. Carol Tunner and Joe Frank represented City staff. No City Council members
were present.
GUESTS: Mark and Liz Knapp, owners, for 124 N. Sherwood; Cheryl Donaldson, Fort Collins
Museum, for the Franz Smith Cabin, 200 Mathews St.; Tony Westcott, owner, for 1109 W. Oak;
Kevin Murray for Franz Smith Cabin and 1109 W. Oak; David Datsko, Kyle Bemis, Bill Black,
Casey Kennedy, Sarah Bush, Ken O. Perilla and Katie Ward, CSU Tourism Planning class
student observers.
AGENDA REVIEW: Carol Tanner added administrative approval of small changes to 601 W.
Mountain to Other Business.
PUBLIC COMMENT: Chairman Bud Frick asked if anyone present wished to address items
within the purview of the Commission, whether or not the item appeared on the agenda. There
were no comments. Mr. Frick welcomed the many student observers.
MINUTES: Minutes from February 23, 2005, were unanimously approved as presented.
STAFF REPORTS: Carol Tunner shared the book to be presented to Per Hogestad in
recognition of his retirement from the Commission, and information about the National
Preservation Conference to be held in Portland Sept. 27-Oct. 2. She reminded Commission
members of the CSU and the Architectural Preservation Society workshop June 20-24, 2005, on
historic wood structures. Ms. Tunner also reported on the sugar beet flume that crosses the
Poudre River near Vine and Lemay, north of the Nix Farm. This limestone slurry sluiceway is
possibly the only one of its kind in the state; it operated from 1904 to the 1960s and was
determined to be eligible for landmark status in 1996. The Fort Collins Natural Areas
department wants to clean up the area along the bike trail and Poudre River, so Ms. Tunner and
Ms. McWilliams worked with them and with Parks & Recreation folk's help to salvage artifacts.
COMMISSION MEMBER REPORTS: Alyson McGee reported on the Archeology and Historic
Preservation training she attended with Bud Frick and Carol Tunner last week. She
recommended other Commission members attend one of the sessions held regularly by Dan
Corson of the Colorado Historical Society.
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April 13, 2005, Meeting Minutes
Page 2
Bud Frick reported on the Downtown Development Authority meeting he attended on April 4.
DDA approved funding for the east elevation of the Alpert Building renovation, but not at the
level requested. DDA also discussed the relocation of the Discovery Science Center, to be
renamed the Science and Heritage Center, to a site on Lemay near Vine. Mr. Frick said plans
call for the Rocky Mountain Raptor Center to relocate to the site, although it was unclear if the
Rule Farmhouse would be moved there. He said that Crossroads Safehouse seemed more
interested in the structure than the Raptor Center. The possibility of the DDA taking possession
of the Rule house and storing it was also discussed.
CURRENT REVIEW
1. 124 N. Sherwood, Remington House — presented by Mark and Elizabeth Knapp,
owners; introduced by Carol Tunner.
At the last LPC meeting, March 23, this property was designated with the understanding
that a proposed addition was acceptable, but a few items needed more discussion. The
two-story, 1 0-by-1 2-foot addition on the rear northeast corner of the house will contain a
new kitchen. The issues are the type of siding and the type and placement of windows to
be compatible with the house. The applicants have four siding options: stucco; 1x6-inch
#105 wood drop siding; 1/2x6-inch bevel lap siding with 4-inch exposure; or 4-inch on
center fir T1-11 siding, which the applicants prefer. This latter option is more reasonable,
and avoids using stucco that can be hard to match to original. The foundation will
continue the poured concrete of the existing building. Windows heights are planned to
line up with existing ones and to be a compatible style. The one window on the north
elevation and the east rear elevation kitchen window is changed to three vertical panes.
Staff recommended the addition as planned with the fir siding preferred by the applicants
as a further delineation of the addition as new. The change in roof direction and vertical
corner board at the end of the original house will also delineate the addition. Staff
recommends that the rear elevation first floor window be double -hung instead of the
proposed three vertical panes.
The applicants said they would also prefer a double -hung window, but thought the LPC
would prefer the three -pane style. Liz Knapp explained that there will be no window in
the basement entry as shown on the drawings provided, and the lattice detail shown will
actually be a bracket; one will be original, saved from the roof, and the other replicated
from it to match.
Bud Frick stressed the importance of keeping the addition differentiated from the existing
structure. Alyson McGee felt that use of the T1-11 siding will do that; Ian Shuff agreed
that use of contemporary materials on the addition is a good way to differentiate it.
Public input: None.
Alyson McGee moved that the LPC approve the plans for the addition at 124 N.
Sherwood, as presented, with fir T1-11 siding, a double -hung window in the
kitchen and no window in the basement entry. Ian Shuff seconded, and the motion
carried unanimously, 5-0.
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April 13, 2005, Meeting Minutes
Page 3
Liz Knapp said they still need a variance due to a property line dispute with a neighbor;
they will be meeting with Planning and Zoning in the morning.
2. Franz Smith Cabin, Museum Courtyard, 200 Mathews St. — Restoration, Final
Review of Completed Project — presented by Kevin Murray, Empire Carpentry, and
Cheryl Donaldson, museum director; introduced by Carol Tunner. Alyson McGee
recused herself from the discussion because of her responsibilities with the State
Historical Fund.
Kevin Murray presented a PowerPoint slide show documenting the work done on this
project, which was funded by a State Historical Fund grant. Due to an oversight when
the building permit was issued, the project was not reviewed by the LPC prior to the
work being done, but it was reviewed throughout by the SHF.
The cabin was brought into the museum courtyard from S. Shields St. (with a detour to
Livermore) because it was in the way of a new subdivision, Clarendon Hills. The
restoration period was selected by the museum on the basis of the only early photo of
the building, which was taken in the 1930s. The cabin had a corrugated metal roof at
that time. The logs have been rechinked and the rotted sill logs replaced. The museum
proposed to set it on a new concrete foundation, but the foundation was designed too
large by about 6 inches all around. They decided, in conjunction with the SHF, that the
best solution was to build a cobblestone apron around the building, using Poudre River
rock.
Staff recommended the project as completed. Much work went into meeting the
applicable restoration standards. There are good preservation and existing condition
construction reasons for the metal roof and cobblestone apron, and the cabin does offer
a log residence of a different, later period than those already in the museum courtyard.
Cheryl Donaldson explained that the cabin had been brought to the courtyard in 2000
after standing in Livermore for 13 years without a roof, during which time the elements
had not been kind to the original log structure. Mr. Murray explained the various
construction and reconstruction techniques used to meet the challenges presented by
the building during the five -month project. Ms. Donaldson added that with Mr. Murray's
crew using authentic tools such as the broadax to shape the logs, the project also
provided an interesting living -history lesson while it was underway in the courtyard.
Public input: None.
Ian Shuff moved that the LPC approve the as -built condition of the Franz Smith
Cabin in the Fort Collins Museum Courtyard, as presented, with final architectural
plans to be corrected and submitted. Agnes Dix seconded, and the motion carried
unanimously, 4-0.
Mr. Murray said he will redline the drawings and bring them back to Ms. Tunner for the
property file.
3. 1109 W. Oak, Vandewark House — Conceptual/Final Review to Repair/Reproduce
Shutters, Repair Windows, Add Exterior Storm/Screen Combinations, and Repaint
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April 13, 2005, Meeting Minutes
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for the 2006 No -Interest Loan Program — presented by Kevin Murray and Tony
Westcott; introduced by Carol Tunner.
This residence has no storm windows and the existing windows are in various stages of
disrepair; the applicants would like to repair and restore the upstairs windows to make
them more insulated. The windows show various stages of paint failure; some are
painted shut and inoperable but in general they are sound. There is some rot and sash
glazing compound deterioration in about one-third of the sashes. The owners propose to
scrape and clean the windows, replace glazing compound, apply epoxy fillers and
sealers to repair rotten wood pockets, replace rotted wood as needed and install
storm/screen combinations over the upstairs windows. They will also paint the body of
the house as well as the windows and trim in a historic and compatible color scheme —
Opal Essence 680 for the body, Garrison Red HC-66 for accent, and Monterey White
CH-27 for the trim. They will replace or repair false shutters on the house; at least one is
missing and will be reconstructed from existing examples.
Staff recommended the proposed work.
Kevin Murray explained that the storm/screen combos will have wooden frames and the
screen will slide up so the entire unit does not have to be removed to switch between the
two. Weather-stripping will be added for greater energy efficiency. He plans to repair
rotted bare wood sills with epoxy except for one or two that are so deteriorated they
must be replaced. The entire house will be scraped before being painted.
Public input: None.
Ian Shuff moved that the LPC approve the work to repair/reproduce shutters,
repair windows, add exterior storm/screen combinations and repaint 1109 W. Oak,
Vandewark House, as part of the 2005 No -Interest Loan Program, as presented.
Alyson McGee seconded, and the motion carried unanimously, 5-0.
DISCUSSION AGENDA
LPC 2006-07 Budget — introduced by Carol Tunner and Joe Frank.
Joe Frank felt that it was important for the LPC to maintain the resources already in
place for programs such as the No -Interest Loan Program, and continued funding should
be recommended. Other budget priorities should be surveys and money to support grant
requests.
Alyson McGee said that the No -Interest Loan Program funding should be increased to at
least keep pace with inflation, about 5 percent each year, since property owners can't do
as much as they used to with the same amount of loan money. Bud Frick added that
funding a context survey of post -World War II structures would keep the City ahead of
the game as those structures begin to move past the 50-year mark. Carol Tunner
thought that a good case could be made for funding historic preservation programs as
part of the City's economic development goals, as it provides jobs in construction and
improves neighborhoods.
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April 13, 2005, Meeting Minutes
Page 5
Ms. McGee also suggested having the Commission's legal advisor attend a meeting to
clarify the rules surrounding the prohibition against members of the Commission
advocating for specific issues, which seems to be in conflict with the LPC's mandate to
support historic preservation through public education. What activities are permitted as
part of that public outreach? Mr. Frick would also like to hear about regulations
concerning membership in other groups that may overlap with the concerns of the
Commission. Ian Shuff also thought getting clarification on how single -person design
firms should handle clients and projects required to come before the LPC when the
designer sits on the Commission would be helpful.
Carol Tunner will research times available for the LPC to hold a retreat or meeting
with a representative of the City Attorney's office to address these and other legal
issues.
2. Friend of Preservation Awards — Final Selections — presented by Carol Tunner
By consensus, the Commission selected the following as 2005 Friends of Preservation:
Poudre School District, for the Laurel School Addition and its participating in a survey
of all its historic school buildings.
Adam Thomas, for his work on surveys of the Poudre School District, local Quonset
huts, and the Sugarbeet Industry/Neighborhoods.
Cameron Gloss for his work in developing standards for alley houses in Old Town Fort
Collins.
Karen McWilliams for her accumulative work including revisions of the Land Use and
Municipal Code sections pertaining to historic preservation.
OTHER BUSINESS
601 W. Mountain — presented by Carol Tunner. Bud Frick recused himself from the discussion
and left the meeting.
Carol Tunner shared photos of the home, and said that the applicant had applied for a building
permit last week to tear off the concrete and overdoor where the porch will be reconstructed.
The applicant would prefer to use piers and skirting under the porch instead of the previously
approved modern concrete split block foundation. After reviewing the examples provided in the
packet, the Commission agreed, as long as the porch is a reconstruction, not an addition. Since
there is no indication that there ever was an original full foundation in place and the design
meets the appropriate standards, it is not the LPC's policy to require owners to use a more
expensive option. Ms. Tunner will handle the change administratively.
Meeting adjourned at 7:23 p.m
Respectfully submitted by
Kate Jeracki, Recorder
May 26, 2005