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Bernstein s Preserving Los Angeles just released : Larchmont Chronicle

NEW BOOK: published in April. At a wonderful late-April book launch event attended by 497 people via Zoom, author Ken Bernstein and photographer Stephen Shafer discussed their new book, “Preserving Los Angeles,” with award-winning local author and National Trust for Historic Preservation trustee Lisa See. Bernstein is a principal city planner in the City Planning Department, and he directs the city’s Office of Historic Resources. Previously, he was the director of preservation issues for the Los Angeles Conservancy. I had the privilege of reviewing an advance copy of the book, and it truly is worth reading (and owning!). It is 256 pages long, with more than 300 full-color images. Architectural photographer Shafer makes a major contribution to Bernstein’s story, one that touches less on the “old reliable” monuments that we locals generally know, and more on the less-known and even hidden historic treasures throughout the region. Many of these contributors to our collecti

The Getty Has Partnered With the City of Los Angeles to Identify and Preserve Landmarks Related to Black History

St. Elmo Village, est. 1969. Photo: Elizabeth Daniels. © J. Paul Getty Trust. The Getty has partnered with the City of Los Angeles to rethink how the metropolis identifies and preserves local Black heritage landmarks. The Los Angeles African American Historic Places Project, as the three-year initiative is called, will see the Getty’s Conservation Institute and the city’s Office of Historic Resources (OHR) work with communities and cultural institutions to celebrate sites that best represent Black life.  The project is “ultimately about equity,” Conservation Institute director Tim Whalen said in a statement. Currently, just over three percent of the city’s roughly 1,200 historic landmarks are tied to African American heritage, and part of the plan, Whalen said, is to examine preservation methods “for systemic bias.” 

Getty teams with city of Los Angeles to identify places that are important to African American heritage

St. Elmo Village, founded in 1969 as an African American artists enclave occupying a compound of ten small Craftsmen bungalows in Los Angeles © J. Paul Getty Trust Declaring the historical record woefully incomplete, the Getty Conservation Institute (GCI) and the city of Los Angeles today announced a three-year effort to identify, protect and celebrate local sites that are central to African American heritage. Of the 1,200 places in Los Angeles designated as cultural or historic landmarks, the Getty and the city note, just over 3% are linked to African American heritage. “Having only about 40 feels well short of reflecting the totality and richness of African American heritage in the city,” says Ken Bernstein, principal city planner at the Los Angeles Department of City Planning and manager of its Office of Historic Resources (OHR), which is teaming with the Getty on the

Project will identify Black heritage places in Los Angeles

LOS ANGELES    Places linked to African American heritage in Los Angeles will be identified in an effort to preserve them, the Getty arts organization and the city announced Tuesday. The three-year Los Angeles African American Historic Places Project will work with local communities and cultural institutions to identify places that best represent the African American experience in the city, the collaborators said in a statement. Just over 3% of the city’s 1,200 designated local landmarks are linked to African American heritage despite extensive efforts to record LA’s historic places, they said. Advertisement “Historic preservation is about the acknowledgment and elevation of places and stories,” said Tim Whalen, the institute’s director. “The point of this work is to make sure that the stories and places of African Americans in Los Angeles are more present and complete than previously.”

Getty, L A Launching Major Project to Celebrate City s Black History

By City News Service Apr 6, 2021 LOS ANGELES (CNS) - The Getty Foundation and Los Angeles planning officials are teaming up for an ambitious project to identify, protect and celebrate African American heritage within the city, it was announced today. Over the next three years, the Los Angeles African American Historic Places Project will identify and help preserve the places that best represent the depth and breadth of African American history here, and work with communities to develop creative approaches that meet their own aims for placemaking, identity, and empowerment, museum officials said. In citing the need for such a project, they noted that only about 3% of L.A. s 1,200 designated local landmarks are linked to African American heritage.

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