The 20th century brought unprecedented change. As the world’s population shifted from majority rural to urban areas, it caused significant transformations of our built environment. Concurrently, advancements in building materials, systems and technologies — the latter ranging from construction mechanization to digital design — allowed us to build taller, faster and more affordably.
But as much as the 20th century’s built environment was defined by accelerated change, it was also defined by gradual destruction. In response, advocates of historically significant buildings, structures, objects and sites organized to preserve, conserve and protect. This emerging concept, aptly named historic preservation, culminated in the United States with the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966.
Today's professional historic preservationists balance community engagement with innovative strategies that preserve, conserve and protect cultural heritage.
— Dana Gould, Principal Architect, Adaptive Reuse & Historic Preservation SpecialistMus doluptas dem arum est doluptio quodigene re, te nullore peliquis earitatus magnisquunt, quos aut ut am fuga.
SFS has extensive experience renovating, restoring, preserving and repurposing historic structures and building systems serving those structures. This includes historically significant buildings eligible for or listed on the National Register of Historic Places, National Historic Landmarks, National Historic Sites, National Parks, National Memorials, National Battlefields and National Monuments. Projects have required close coordination with State Historic Preservation Offices to ensure proposed design solutions, fixtures and new systems maintain the historical integrity of the structures. Select historic preservation projects are featured below.
SFS lead a team to preserve an iconic, 1960's marina building's structure, roof and siding at the most visited park in the State of Kansas.
SFS was tasked with uniting the operational services of the City of Bonner Springs, Kansas into one complex. To do so, our team transformed a 1918 school building listed on both the Register of Historic Kansas Places and the National Register of Historic Places into a city hall.
Want to learn more about historic preservation projects? Reach out.