Richard Campanella


Preservation in Print

The Louisiana Sugar & Rice Exchange, 1884-1963

Two key commodities had warehouse homes on the riverfront from 1884 to 1963.

Preservation in Print

Bywater Before Bywater

The Olivier Plantation House, 1820s-1949

Preservation in Print

The Re-importation of Richardsonian Romanesque

The aesthetic of architect Henry Hobson Richardson, a native Louisianan, had world-wide impact, including in New Orleans.

In The News

A “French Chateau Style of Architecture”

Thomas Sully’s Long-Forgotten Liverpool & London & Globe Insurance Building

Preservation in Print

Before Foodies, There Was Solari’s

A history of New Orleans’ first gourmet grocery.

Preservation in Print

“The Aesthetic of Luxury:” Italianate Architecture in New Orleans

A look at Italianate architecture in New Orleans.

Preservation in Print

The New Orleans Cotton Exchange, 1871-1964

A look back on the buildings where cotton reigned king in New Orleans’ downtown “Cotton District.”

Preservation in Print

“Robb’s Folly:” Lost Palazzo of the Garden District

A manse unparalleled in its time once sat in the heart of the Garden District.

Preservation in Print

The Great Fire of 1895

If Algiers had to burn, it picked a good time.

Preservation in Print

Reconsidering the Christopher Inn: a Site History

A building long vilified as an eyesore in the Faubourg Marigny is reexamined.

Preservation in Print

Gallier and Dakin’s Merchants’ Exchange

In 1835, the company commissioned the architectural partnership of James Gallier Sr. and Charles Dakin to design what would be called the Merchants’ Exchange.

Preservation in Print

Times Picayune’s historic success created New Orleans’s Newspaper Row

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