Preservation in Print
PRC Board member and long-time volunteer Katie Witry has long list of achievements to add to her 15 years as a Realtor in New Orleans.
Preservation in Print
Covered with a metal sheath for 60 years, the historic Pythian building has been uncovered, renewed, and enlivened.
Preservation in Print
The Preservation Resource Center was thrilled to welcome William Stoudt as the new director of Rebuilding Together New Orleans …
Preservation in Print
Eleven years post-Katrina, the storied structure continues to langish. Will its fate be tragic, or does revitalization lie in its future?
In The News
Leona Tate, one of the “McDonogh Three” who famously integrated the McDonogh No. 19 Elementary School in 1960, has big plans for the vacant school’s future.
Preservation in Print
A new project promises to construct a pavillion and interpretive site dedicated to Martin Luther King, Jr. and his contemporaries who incorporated the Southern Christian Leadership Council in a Central City church.
Preservation in Print
The former Marine Hospital site Uptown is the site of Children’s Hospital’s careful expansion.
Preservation in Print
The Caribe Building, an iconic Curtis and Davis-designed structure on Canal Street, is PRC’s 123rd preservation easement — and the first mid-century modern building in the bunch.
Preservation in Print
Built in part with salvaged materials from an 1879 police station, the building was relocated from its waterfront location in 1951 to its current home in a quiet pocket of Lakeview.
Preservation in Print
The massive renovation was designed by Waggonner and Ball Architects and executed by CORE construction. The building’s historic features were honored and restored whenever possible, qualifying the project for state and federal historic tax credits, and its addition, a new gym, also took inspiration from the neighborhood’s classical historic architecture, said architect Mac Ball.
Preservation in Print
The Garden Theater opened in the 1930s but closed in the 1950s. It was recently renovated into a chic and modern office space for Bond Moroch Public Relations.
Preservation in Print
Its angular shape, large horse-carriage opening and prime location has long made 1824 Sophie Wright Place a memorable historic structure in the Lower Garden District.