Celebrating a New Chapter for St. John Kanty’s Lyceum

Today, July 12th, marked a significant milestone in the Broadway Fillmore neighborhood as Community Services for Every1 held a ribbon-cutting ceremony for the Apartments at the Lyceum. This event, attended by Mayor Byron Brown, Common Councilmember Mitch Nowakowski, and State Senator Sean Ryan, celebrated the successful adaptive reuse of a historic building into 42 affordable workforce apartments. Among these, 12 units are specifically designated for survivors of domestic violence, 5 are fully ADA accessible, and 2 are for those with audio/visual impairments.

In 2023, a substantial investment of $18 million by Edgemere Development and Community Services for Every1 transformed the Lyceum into a pillar of hope and support for our community. This project not only preserves the architectural heritage of the historic 1930 building but also addresses critical housing needs.

However, the future of the St. John Kanty R.C. Church complex remains uncertain. The Buffalo Catholic Diocese has announced plans to close the church and merge its congregation with St. Stanislaus Church. The convent, a part of this historic complex, was listed for sale in May at $295,000.

Despite these challenges, there is a silver lining. Preservation Buffalo Niagara (PBN) is actively working to secure local landmark status for St. John Kanty and numerous other churches throughout the city. The Preservation Board will hold a public hearing on the landmark application on September 5th. Following this, they will send a recommendation for landmark status to the Common Council.

This effort underscores the importance of preserving our historic treasures and ensuring they continue to serve as vital parts of our community. By supporting these initiatives, we can honor our past while building a better Buffalo.

This slideshow requires JavaScript.

Richardson Olmsted Complex Photography Tours are BACK for 2024!

Preservation Buffalo Niagara’s tour program offers unique and informative ways to enjoy the historical, cultural, and architectural treasures of the Buffalo-Niagara region. Our tours support the mission of PBN, the region’s only professionally staffed preservation organization.

The 2024 photography tour schedule of the Richardson Complex is here!

Join us and the Richardson Olmsted Campus for an exclusive opportunity to capture the interior spaces of the iconic Richardson Olmsted Campus, a National Historic Landmark.

Photographers will be paired with an experienced docent to guide them through a collection of spaces in various states of renovation and disrepair. Your guide can also provide context on the history and future of the Richardson Olmsted Campus as you explore the site.

Photography Tours are $125 (includes access for the photographer and one assistant). Ages 16 & up. Funds from this effort support both PBN & the Richardson Olmsted Campus.

Tickets for June and July now available – click the date below to check availability and make a reservation:

JUNE

Wednesday, June 12, 2024     6:00 – 8:00pm

Saturday, June 15, 2024          6:00 – 8:00pm

JULY

Saturday, July 06, 2024          1:30 – 3:30 pm

Wednesday, July 10, 2024     6:00 – 8:00pm

Saturday, July 20, 2024          6:00 – 8:00 pm

August and September dates remain TBD.  

WHAT TO EXPECT

  • All attendees are required to sign a release in acknowledgement of the safety concerns. Please bring your pre-signed release(s) to allow more time for the tour.
  • Hard hats will be provided. It is imperative that you stay with your docent in the designated areas – there are very unsafe areas within the Campus.
  • This tour requires the ability to walk for the full duration of the tour as well as climb multiple flights of stairs.
  • Meet at the Lipsey Architecture Center, ground level of the Towers Building on the northside of the campus.

WHAT TO BRING

  • For your safety, sturdy, closed-toe shoes are required. We reserve the right to turn away anyone without appropriate shoes. Under no condition will sandals or high heels be allowed.
  • You are strongly encouraged to wear layers and bring bottled water as the temperatures inside the buildings can vary widely.
  • Prepare to get a little dusty during your time on-site. If you’re concerned about having an adverse reaction to the dust because of asthma or allergies, we recommend bringing a face mask or scarf.

Alt Homestead Wins Preservation Leadership Award by Preservation Buffalo Niagara

It is time to announce the winners of the 2024 Preservation Awards!

We have twelve awardees this year that span across preservation advocacy, preservation craft, residential restoration, commercial restoration, emerging preservation leaders, lifetime achievement, and more. We will be highlighting each of the awardees over the next few weeks – to entice you to attend our award ceremony on Thursday, May 30th at the Buffalo History Museum. You can get your tickets here. 

Preservation Leadership: Alt Homestead in Grand Island, NY

We are excited to announce our “Preservation Leadership” Award which goes to Alt Homestead, led by Nicole Gerber and Dave Reilly. We also must say a huge thank you to Windkanter Construction for bringing this project home.

From the nomination: The Alt family is one of Grand Island’s first settler farming families on land that was earlier populated by the Haudenosaunee, the Neutral Nation, and the Wenrohronon people. The Alt Farm and Homestead dates to the mid-1800s when the Alt family migrated from Germany.  The farm has been an agricultural location since the 1870s. Its agricultural history includes serving as the site of an apple orchard, a cattle farm, a dairy farm, a haying field, and has been farmed for various crops. Philip Alt purchased the property and created a farm that has been passed down through the family to the present day (six generations of the Alt family). The remaining property includes a historic farmhouse, Grand Island Schoolhouse #8, a historic icehouse, a barn built in the 1870s, sheds that at one time belonged to the Grand Island Highway Department, and an original plank construction garden shed.

For photos & details, we have included a presentation provided to us by Nicole & Dave here:

Alt Homestead Renovations

(Continued) The land is now protected as the Alt Nature Preserve through the recent establishment of a conservation easement with the WNY Land Conservancy. The property is approximately thirty-six acres in the center of Grand Island and is one of the few remaining farmsteads in the community. The property includes approximately ten acres of forested land that meets the ecological definition of a unique Wet Oak- Hickory Forest Ecosystem. Approximately twenty-three acres is a meadow and home to several NYS-threatened bird species.

Grand Island Schoolhouse #8 is on the Alt Preserve. It is an original one-room school used by Island children in the late 1800s-early 1900s. It was purchased by George H. Alt, Sr. in 1917 for $188.90 and relocated to the farm. The building became the original Alt Chevrolet – the first Chevrolet dealership on the Niagara Frontier – and was the service garage for Alt Chevrolet. After its use as a service garage and repair shop, the building was used for storage until its restoration in 2022-2023.

The building itself is a “plank house” construction, meaning there was no wood frame skeleton. The renovations, which included new flooring and restoration of the ceiling and beams, were critical for maintaining the integrity of the building. Markings on the planks in the schoolhouse indicate pitsaws (1600s to 1750s), up-and-down mill cuts (1700s to 1860), and circular blades (after 1840).

The schoolhouse was renovated using architectural designs by Kathleen M. Kinan to serve as the Alt Nature Center under the management of the environmental non-profit Citizen Coalition for Wildlife and Environment. All renovation work was completed by Marty Willett and his team at Windkanter Construction. In the process of the rehabilitation work, the writing on the walls that denotes repair jobs and car owners was saved and protected. Earlier chalk writing from the schoolhouse days is also visible on the walls and protected.

Schoolhouse #8 was renovated to return it to its educational roots as a nature center. It now serves as the Alt Nature Center, a space for historical and environmental education; for teaching and training about ecological gardening, native plants, and habitat protection; and to serve as an information center for free public access to the trails on the Alt Nature Preserve. The Center functions to highlight the preservation of Grand Island’s farming history and heritage and to educate on the importance of protecting habitat. To enhance the historical quality of the space, the furniture and decorations in the Nature Center are repurposed from antique and thrift stores with a commitment to sustainable reuse.

During the time of the schoolhouse project, Windkanter Construction was also renovating the historic Alt Barn. The Alt Barn was restored as part of the larger effort to preserve the history of the Alt Farm and Homestead. The Alt Barn was built in the late 1800’s and at some later date was lifted onto a concrete foundation. It was one of the first structures built on the farmstead.

The Alt Barn was used for dairy cows and meat cattle on the ground level and for storing hay in the loft. Hay was brought in by large bundles (and later in bales) on a wagon, lifted into the loft with the hay grapple hook which ran on a track at the peak (the track and grapple hook in the Alt barn are still intact!). The grapple hook was attached to a rope that ran to a pulley at the top of the barn and then down to an eye hook in the floor. When placed over hay a rope is pulled and the grapple hooks dig into the hay and allow for hoisting into and out of the barn.

The barn restoration efforts included replacing the external boards and facing on the South, East, and West sides. Corner posts were reinforced, and a foundational corner was poured with concrete, which required lifting the southeast corner of the barn. The original barn boards and beams from the Alt barn were repurposed for the interior of the Alt Nature Center. The west and east original barn boards had Maltese Crosses at the peaks of the barn; these have been built into the wallboards above the entry door and on the bathroom door. The step into the main room is an American Chestnut beam that was also located in the barn.

All these renovations have been funded, to date, by Nicole Alt Gerber, a sixth-generation Alt to live on the homestead.  Her commitment, with her husband Dave Reilly, is to preserve the history of the farm while enabling public access and environmental education. The longer-term plan to preserve the history and buildings involves educational signage along nature trails that explains the agricultural history of Grand Island. Alt family photos and farm journals have been saved and are on display in the Alt Nature Center to explain farm life in Western New York in the early 1900s.

With a commitment to education and preservation, in 2023 the Alt Farm was featured in Grand Island’s History Day as a tour site. Throughout the planning and renovation phases of the barn and schoolhouse, the Grand Island Historic Preservation Advisory Board has been engaged in the process as well. This includes tours of the site before, during, and after renovations, and a presentation of the history of the Alt Farm to Grand Island Historic Preservation Advisory Board members that explains the intent of supporting the legacy of the Alt family regarding the homestead and farm through the Nature Center and Nature Preserve.  The Grand Island Historic Preservation Advisory Board has included the Alt Farm in its list of historic home designations. Support from the Board has also been expressed through a letter from Chair June Crawford, who states “enthusiastic support for both projects. The CCWE is one of the most exciting and beneficial historic, cultural, and natural developments on our island.”

The Alt Nature Preserve has recently served as a location for Erie Community College students to research types of bluebird boxes and their success rate for attracting bluebirds, tree swallows, and other species of interest. Students presented their work and their recommendations for native plants to support wildlife at the Alt Nature Center. Elementary school classes have visited for experiential learning about plants, animals, and habitats. The WNY Native Plant Collaborative held its monthly meeting in the Alt Nature Center at the end of June 2023. The Alt Farm is an annual site in the Grand Island Garden Walk, at which people from across WNY can walk and see the native plant gardens and historical buildings. The University at Buffalo’s Native American Studies Program has been invited to use the property and Alt Nature Center for their courses and research. And Niagara University’s environmental student organization, NU CARES, has been invited to participate in internships and hold meetings on-site. The center will be open, free of charge, to any environmental organization whose mission is consistent with protecting and preserving ecological integrity and sustainability.

This is all possible because of the combined restoration vision and efforts of Kathleen M. Kinan, architect; Marty Willett and Windkanter Construction, Citizen Coalition for Wildlife and Environment, and Nicole Alt Gerber and family.

In addition to the farmstead and buildings being an important piece of Grand Island’s farming history, the Alt family also contributed to the development and establishment of Island and regional organizations, projects, and businesses.

  • George Alt Sr. is listed in the Erie County book, “Our County and Its People” (Truman C. White) which notes the family history, starting with the arrival and work of Philip Alt, and lists the accomplishments of George Alt Sr.
  • Both George Alt Sr. and George Alt Jr. were active in Grand Island town politics, were members of various boards and local organizations, and were founding members of the Grand Island Farmers Alliance and Grand Island Fire Company
  • Along with farming, the Alt family operated a general store and established Alt Chevrolet

The goal is to create, preserve, and share the Alt farm and land with the community so that people can learn about history and nature, view the original farmstead buildings and rehabilitated schoolhouse, and enjoy the outdoors with the gardens and trails. The public has already been able to experience the Alt farm through numerous ways:

Big big thanks to everyone involved in this project! This is an excellent example of leadership in WNY.

See you on Thursday, May 30th!

Lifetime Preservation Achievement: Ed Healy of Visit Buffalo Niagara

It is time to announce the winners of the 2024 Preservation Awards!

We have 12 awardees this year that span across preservation advocacy, preservation craft, residential restoration, commercial restoration, emerging preservation leaders, lifetime achievement, and more. We will be highlighting each of the awardees over the next few weeks – to entice you to attend our award ceremony on Thursday, May 30th at the Buffalo History Museum. You can get your tickets here. 

Lifetime Preservation Achievement

We are starting with announcing our Lifetime Preservation Achievement Award which will be going to the one and only, Ed Healy at Visit Buffalo Niagara!

Throughout his life and career, Edward Healy has been a champion of Buffalo and its beautiful, historic buildings. Professionally, Ed has worked, and succeeded, in establishing Buffalo and Erie County as a destination for cultural and architectural tourism for more than 20 years. We included a highlight reel of his work below – just so you can take in the amount of work he and his team have done.

A note from Bernice, our Executive Director:

Ed is someone everyone seems to know and love. His entire life has been focused on telling Buffalo’s story – a story that is founded on preservation and our remarkable historic architecture. Back in 2010, Ed helped to launch the Buffalo: This Place Matters video which focuses on the legacy that we have inherited at a time where not everyone seemed to realize what historic gems we had.

Ed and his team focus on local: local shops, local restaurants, local historic sites and beyond to create an experience that has put Buffalo and Niagara Falls on the map as a destination to visit. He took the lead with bringing the National Trust for Historic Preservation to Buffalo – a conference that personally changed the trajectory of my life and so many others who used the conference as a launch pad for their careers. People started to truly believe in Buffalo as a result of that conference! Ed directed the effort in the video Buffalo: America’s Best Designed City with John Paget which highlighted our historic city in so many ways.  I believe this video really helped to change the minds of people who did not believe in Buffalo. The good news is, the hard work is paying off! We see over 600 million dollars that come to Erie County for heritage tourism and almost 25% of all tourists coming for two things: family and architecture.

May we all be as fortunate as Ed to look back on our lives and see such a positive impact from our efforts.

One of our favorite recent articles that shows the passion Ed feels for our community can be found here: https://www.visitbuffaloniagara.com/the-rebirth-of-buffalo/

Here are some of Ed’s achievements and highlights throughout his career:

  • Worked to bring the National Trust for Historic Preservation Annual Conference to Buffalo in 2011, which arguably sparked Buffalo’s recent resurgence and increased attention to our architecture. During the conference, Visit Buffalo Niagara even trained cab drivers on the historic details of Buffalo’s historic buildings to make sure they were equipped to discuss and point out these places to attendees. You can read about its impact here. 
  • Ed and Visit Buffalo Niagara helped to bring the Congress for New Urbanism to Buffalo in 2013.
  • Served as Executive producer on John Paget’s short film, Buffalo: America’s Best Designed City, which was released in 2014. You can watch it here. 
  • Established a marketing campaign, The Unexpected Buffalo, which rolled out in 2017 and called attention to Buffalo’s overlooked aspects, including architecture and Buffalo’s unique brand of restoration and adaptive reuse of historic buildings. The campaign won an ESTO Award in 2018.
  • Worked to pitch and host hundreds of travel writers, architecture critics, and preservation journalists to write and highlight stories of Buffalo’s architecture, design, adaptive reuse, and resurgence.
  • Serves as board member of the Lipsey Architecture Center.
  • An avid photographer whose work has been featured in CEPA Gallery exhibits. A majority of Ed’s photography focuses on Buffalo architecture and buildings.
  • During Ed’s tenure at VBN, Buffalo has been named one of the National Trust’s Dozen Distinctive Destinations, America’s Friendliest City by the readers of Travel & Leisure magazine, one of 52 Places to Go in 2018 by The New York Times, a Top Ten Value Destination for 2020 by Lonely Planet, one of the Best Places to Travel in 2021 by Travel & Leisure magazine, and, most recently, one of the top 22 places to travel to in 2022 by Architectural Digest. The “Unexpected Buffalo” advertising campaign developed and implemented by my team was named the Best Branding and Integrated Marketing Campaign in the nation at the U.S. Travel Association’s ESTO Conference in August 2018 in the $1 million to $2.5 million budget category

Congrats to you Ed! This is an award we cannot wait to present to  you and your family and friends on May 30th. Well deserved, truly!

From Ed’s bio on Linkedin: Ed Healy is the Vice President of Marketing for Visit Buffalo Niagara where he is responsible for VBN’s destination marketing strategies. Ed’s portfolio includes overseeing all marketing communications, including the production of an annual touring guide, web sites, e-newsletters, social media, videos, podcasts and consumer advertising, as well as media and public relations. 

This slideshow requires JavaScript.