{"id":5105,"date":"2015-11-24T10:53:50","date_gmt":"2015-11-24T15:53:50","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.consigli.com\/?p=5105"},"modified":"2020-12-09T11:06:06","modified_gmt":"2020-12-09T16:06:06","slug":"historys-best-renewing-landmarks-for-worship-art-and-academia","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.consigli.com\/historys-best-renewing-landmarks-for-worship-art-and-academia\/","title":{"rendered":"Timing Our Work on History with Today\u2019s Busy Schedule: Renewing Landmarks for Community, Art and Academia"},"content":{"rendered":"
When the building you are the steward of is an active church or national cultural institution, its landmark restoration needs to be both of highest restoration quality and completed as efficiently as possible. We understand the importance of meeting tight deadlines while delivering premium craftsmanship so that business as usual is not interrupted.<\/p>\n
This was the case for the Parish of All Saints, Ashmont in Dorchester where Consigli\u2019s Landmark Restoration team restored over 46,000 linear feet of the church\u2019s masonry exterior and reconfigured key interior spaces, all while working around the parish\u2019s non-stop schedule. It was also true for the restoration of the Renwick Gallery at the Smithsonian American Art Museum where Consigli used laser scanning to find enough room for state-of-the-art, energy efficient HVAC and lighting systems, and build a renewed structure capable of supporting 21st century art installations in time to open a groundbreaking contemporary art exhibition. And again for Coles Tower at Bowdoin College, where swing staging was engineered at the top of the building and a 180-foot boom lift was used for the first time in the Northeast to finish exterior renovations over school\u2019s 11-week summer break.<\/p>\n
Religious institutions are the social centers for the communities they serve making it crucial that their daily operations continue uninterrupted, no matter how extensive the renovation project.<\/p>\n
Though Consigli\u2019s extensive renovation of The Parish of All Saints<\/a>, Ashmont in Dorchester was impressive based on scale alone, it\u2019s even more impressive when considering that the entire project was managed around the parish\u2019s schedule for its weekly services and daily functions.<\/p>\n \u201cYou could really feel the sense of community in the building,\u201d said Todd McCabe, Consigli Project Executive. \u201cIt was important that we get this right not just for ourselves but for the parishioners because you could tell that the church is such a large part of their lives.\u201d<\/p>\n Though most of the work concentrated on the painstaking repair of the church\u2019s historic stone exterior, Consigli reconfigured the parish house\u2019s staircase to make the flow of foot traffic more efficient while not interrupting the parish\u2019s daily activities.<\/p>\n Originally built in 1892, the church added\u201415 years later\u2014a three floor parish house that included a basement, two upper floors and a gymnasium sunk an additional half floor below the basement.<\/p>\n However, it was impossible to align the parish house with the two levels of the existing church, creating uneven, mismatched floors between the two buildings that forced users to go down a half-flight of stairs before using the main staircase to access the other levels.<\/p>\n To build this 21st century improvement within the historic building with as little disruption to parish operations as possible, Consigli\u2019s team did major advance work and planning. By utilizing 3D imaging tools, Consigli was able to layout the elevations between the two buildings to make sure the new levels were accurate.<\/p>\n Consigli also developed a structural shoring plan to re-engineer the concrete foundation and wood framing plans so that even though major renovation work was taking place, parishioners were still able to safely access the parish house.<\/p>\n A staging plan to access the 80-foot ceilings for plaster and painting, fire protection and stained glass window restoration was developed and installed throughout the pews to allow for continued parishioner mass celebration.<\/p>\n Additionally, Consigli remained in constant communication with parish officials to fully understand the operations for the church and planned accordingly around major events.<\/p>\n Ultimately, to provide access to all levels of the church buildings and eliminate the need for a half staircase, a five-stop elevator was installed in a modest seventeen-by-twenty-foot addition with a gracious new vestibule and entrance to the parish buildings as well as a wheelchair lift from the parish house basement to the gymnasium, and lobbies.\u00a0Additionally, the original awkward counter clockwise stair hall was completely replaced with a smaller, clockwise staircase that functions better not just as a way to get around but as a fire block between floors. Now, the central nervous system of this social center for Dorchester is fully functional.<\/p>\n Listed on the National Register of Historic Places, the Episcopal church was designed by noted church architect Ralph Adams Cram and became the prototype for 20th-century American church building in the Gothic Revival style.<\/p>\n Supported by a devoted congregation, the Parish of All Saints, Ashmont, launched an extensive campaign in 2013 to restore the beauty of Cram\u2019s original vision, as well as to update building systems and improve accessibility.<\/p>\n A community-wide fundraising effort resulted in a $2 million capital repairs endowment to preserve the buildings for future generations.<\/p>\n Restoring century-old stained glass windows, making masonry repairs by hand, and stripping stone arches to expose original sandstone are a few examples of the painstaking detail and quality craftsmanship that went into this unique project.<\/p>\n And just as the church\u2019s interior received a makeover, so did its exterior.<\/p>\n Consigli master masons restored 23,000 square-feet of highly visible granite by using more than 35 tons of mortar in over 46,000 linear feet of masonry joints. In particular, the masons used recycled stone and implemented the \u201cDutchman\u201d method to replace the church\u2019s sandstone trim in 15 areas\u2014from the roof\u2019s parapet, to the entry porch, to door and window lintels.<\/p>\n The beautifully restored building with modern amenities was unveiled to parishioners and the public in the spring of 2015. The project has been honored three times this year with awards from the Boston Preservation Alliance, Preservation Massachusetts and from the national building industry publication, Engineering News Record.<\/p>\nThe Renwick Gallery\u2019s Hidden Secrets and False Ceilings: How We Stayed on Track Even While Finding Unexpected Surprises<\/strong><\/h3>\n
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