Conference Photo : Tourism PEI/Jack Leclair Program

National Trust Conference 2015 in association with the Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals (CAHP) and in collaboration with the Historical Resources Foundation (AHRF)

October 22 – 24, 2015 , , Alberta

nationaltrustcanada.ca

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2 National Trust Conference 2015 National Trust Conference 2015 Heritage Energized

Greetings from the National Trust Chair and Executive Director

Hello, Bonjour!

On behalf of the Board of Governors of the National Trust for it is our pleasure to welcome you to the 42nd annual National Trust Conference, Heritage Energized, in Calgary, a city bursting with heritage enthusiasm. We know you will benefit from taking part in Canada’s largest heritage conservation learning and networking event. Scan the nametags of delegates around you and engage with the diverse range of participants – from professionals, trades and administrators, to volunteers and students.

Calgary 2015 will build on case studies from this dynamic city and across Canada to explore how heritage energy can turn places around, empower people, and create opportunities. We’ve assembled a slate of inspiring keynote speakers that will introduce you to cutting-edge heritage from around Alberta and the globe. Indigenous cultural heritage will have a strong presence throughout the conference including the ground-breaking pre-conference event, MOH-KINS-TSIS | Calgary Indigenous Heritage Roundtable.

Enjoy, learn, and spread the word! Tom Urbaniak Natalie Bull Chair, Board of Governors Executive Director

Conference Coordinator Chris Wiebe – Manager, Heritage Policy and Government Relations, National Trust for Canada, Ottawa, Ont. National Trust Conference Program Advisory Committee Boris Atamanenko – Manager, Culture & Heritage Division, GNWT Education, Culture & Employment, Yellowknife, N.W.T. Fred Bradley – Board Chair, Alberta Historical Resources Foundation, Crowsnest, Alta. Natalie Bull – Executive Director, National Trust for Canada, Ottawa, Ont. Darryl Cariou – Heritage Portfolio Program Manager, Corporate Properties + Buildings, City of Calgary, Calgary, Alta. Belinda Crowson – President, Historical Society of Alberta, Lethbridge, Alta. Matthew Francis – Executive Director, Chilliwack Museum and Archives, Chilliwack B.C. Don Luxton – Owner, Donald Luxton & Associates Inc., Vancouver, B.C. Cynthia Klaassen – President, Calgary Heritage Initiative, Calgary, Alta. Henry Maisonneuve – Vice-Chair, National Trust for Canada, , Alta. Sarah Meilleur – Vice-Chair, Calgary Heritage Authority, Calgary, Alta. Laura Pasacreta – Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals; Associate, Donald Luxton and Associates Inc., Calgary Alta. Larry Pearson – Director, Historic Places Stewardship, Alberta Culture and Tourism, Calgary Alta. David Ridley – Executive Director, Edmonton Heritage Council, Edmonton, Alta. Clint Robertson – Heritage Planner, Planning and Development, City of Calgary, Calgary Alta. Matthew Wangler – Executive Director, Historic Resources Management Branch, Alberta Culture and Tourism, Edmonton, Alta. Bob van Wegen – Co-Founder and Board Director, Calgary Heritage Initiative, Calgary, Alta.

Thank you to our Conference Partners

3 Conference Site Map B G. Calgary Club Petroleum SW – 5th Avenue 319 H. Bank and Baron P.U.B. SW – 8th Avenue 125 D E C F D. East VillageD. Sales & Experience Centre SE Riverfront Avenue 553 E. Calgary Athabasca University SE, 6th Floor 345 – 6th Avenue Concert Singer Hall, Jack F. SE – 8th250 Avenue H A G Conference Venues & Hotel Venues Conference A. Palliser Fairmont Hotel SW – 9th Avenue 133 B. SE – 9th750 Avenue C. Calgary Library Public – Central Branch MacLeod Trail SE 616

4 National Trust Conference 2015 Conference at a Glance

Wednesday, October 21 7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. Saturday, October 24 Keynote Address 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. (Jack Singer Concert Hall, Arts Commons) 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Moh-Kins-Tsis | Calgary Indigenous Registration (Lobby, Palliser Hotel) Heritage Roundtable (Fort Calgary) 9:30 p.m. – 10:30 p.m. Opening Reception 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. (Jack Singer Concert Hall, Arts Commons) Morning Coffee Tune Up Your Fundraising: Building a Strong Circle of Supporters Friday, October 23 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. ( – Central Branch) Plenary Session – Featured Speakers 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Registration (Lobby, Palliser Hotel) 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. National Trust for Canada Break, Exhibit Tables, Poster Session Conference Meet & Greet 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. (East Village Sales & Experience Centre) Morning Coffee 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Sessions and Workshops Thursday, October 22 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. Welcome and Plenary Session 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Lunch Registration (Lobby, Palliser Hotel) 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. Break, Exhibit Tables, Poster Session 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Concurrent Sessions and Workshops Tours (depart Palliser Hotel) 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Workshops (Palliser Hotel & Fort Calgary) Concurrent Sessions and Workshops 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Break, Exhibit Tables, Poster Session 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Main Street Training (Palliser Hotel) Lunch, Affinity Groups, Main Street 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Partners Closing Plenary Session 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. Workshops (Calgary Public Library – 12:15 p.m. – 1:15 p.m. 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. Central Branch) Canadian Association of Heritage National Trust AGM Leading and Governing Your Professionals AGM Organization Today and Tomorrow 8:00 p.m. – 12:00 a.m. Introduction to Real Estate Development 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Closing Party (Bank & Baron P.U.B.) Concurrent Sessions and Workshops 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Sunday, October 25 National Council Meeting 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. (Leduc Room, Palliser Hotel) Break, Exhibit Tables, Poster Session 8:00 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Post-Conference Tour 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Crowsnest Pass Heritage Bus Tour National Roundtable on Heritage Concurrent Sessions and Workshops (departs Palliser Hotel) Education (Athabasca University) 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. National Trust and CAHP National Tours (depart Palliser Hotel) Heritage Awards Ceremony Workshops (Palliser Hotel & Fort Calgary) and Reception (Petroleum Club)

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Pre-Conference Events

Wednesday, October 21 Bringing together elders and Nation knowledge keepers with practitioners Shawna Cunningham – Director, 8:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. in the fields of heritage, archaeology, The Native Centre, Moh-Kins-Tsis | Calgary Indigenous architecture and planning, MOH- Blair First Rider – Aboriginal Heritage Roundtable KINS-TSIS will discuss heritage sites in Cultural Advisor, Heritage Division, Location: Fort Calgary Calgary and how Indigenous and Non- Alberta Culture (750 – 9th Avenue SE) Indigenous protocols for protection Sara-Jane Gruetzner – President & CEO, A groundbreaking discussion on of heritage places can be aligned. The Fort Calgary the protection of Calgary’s Indigenous goal will be to map a way forward Dr. Gerald Oetelaar – Professor, heritage sites. Calgary has a rich to a shared understanding, strong Department of Anthropology Indigenous heritage with many places relationships and a new paradigm. & Archaeology, University of Calgary of sacred and cultural significance – Michelle Reid – Conservation Landscape from Nose Hill to . Moh-Kins-Tsis Architect, Calgary Parks, City of Calgary And yet these important places Advisory Committee Dr. Brian R. Sinclair – Professor, are rarely protected by provincial Lorna Crowshoe (Co-Chair) – Architecture, University of Calgary legislation or recognized by municipal Issues Strategist, Aboriginal Portfolio, City Erin van Wijk – Heritage Planner, bylaws and polices. MOH-KINS- of Calgary Planning, Development and Assessment, TSIS | Calgary Indigenous Heritage Makiinima, Roy Fox (Co-Chair) – City of Calgary Roundtable aims to open a dialogue Retired Chief of the Blood Tribe Dr. Eldon Yellowhorn – Professor, and to find solutions to this gap in Dr. Reg Crowshoe – Spiritual-Cultural Department of Archaeology, Simon Fraser knowledge and protection. Advisor, Former Chief of the Piikani University

Support Provided by:

6 National Trust Conference 2015 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. and historic sites, arts and cultural various branches of the documentation Tune Up Your Fundraising: Building facilities, festivals, and heritage field. No additional registration fee. a Strong Circle of Supporters conservation organizations. Requires Space limited. Location: Calgary Public Library – additional registration fee. Space Central Branch limited. Please see full course details 5:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. (616 Macleod Trail SE) at: nationaltrustcanada.ca National Trust for Canada Facilitator: Judy Oberlander Conference Meet & Greet (Judy Oberlander and Associates Inc., 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Location: East Village Sales Vancouver, B.C.) Workshop – Architectural Heritage and Experience Centre Increase your organization’s capacity Documentation for Conservation (553 Riverfront Avenue SE) to fundraise through this interactive Location: Calgary Public Library – Hosted by: Calgary Municipal workshop. Central Branch Land Corporation Organizations dedicated to (616 Macleod Trail SE) All registrants for the National heritage conservation, community Facilitator: Mario Santana Quintero Trust Conference and Moh-Kins- development, arts and culture (Assistant Professor, Architectural Tsis | Calgary Indigenous Heritage programs as well as museums and Conservation and Sustainability, Civil Roundtable are invited to attend. historic sites continue to seek ways and Environmental Engineering, Experience the exciting heritage-led to finance their activities. How do Carleton University, Ottawa, Ont.) revitalization of Calgary’s East Village we find ways to widen our circle of Recording the physical neighbourhood, meet old friends and supporters so that we can continue characteristics of historic structures make new ones. Food and beverages to maintain programs and undertake and landscapes is a cornerstone of provided. more ambitious projects? preventive maintenance, monitoring This workshop is designed for and conservation. The leaders of non-profit heritage information produced by organizations including board such work guides decision- members, executive directors making by property owners, and committee chairs. As an site managers, public officials, opportunity for mid-career and conservators. Rigorous professional development, it will documentation may also serve provide inspiration for Main Street a broader purpose: over time, Coordinators, Main Street Boards it becomes the primary means and Committee Chairs as well as for by which scholars and the Recognizing the next generation of heritage leaders. non-profit leaders of museums, arts public apprehends a site that and cultural organizations, historical has since changed radically or societies, and local community disappeared. Congratulations! associations. This short workshop has Sara Nixon (Grimsby, ON) It will also be of special interest the main aim of acquainting Ali Piwowar (Regina, SK) to both staff and board members of participants with a wide Jonathan Weller (Victoria, BC) heritage, arts + culture organizations range of recording techniques Meet our scholarship recipients – both large and small, as well and to help decision makers at the Awards Ceremony (Friday, Oct 23). as cultural planners, historic site decide which techniques are managers, and community leaders best suited to which sites and Make a donation today. responsible for raising funds to sustain objectives. Led by experts In-person at Registration or online at nationaltrustcanada.ca/HerbStovel the operation and growth of their in the field, the lectures will National Trust organizations including museums benefit from instruction in for Canada

7 National Trust Conference 2015 Heritage Energized

Learning Tours

Thursday, October 22 We’ll be walking rather than driving, East Village Revitalization (Walking) but it was the 1947 discovery of major Leaders: Kate Thompson (Director, Learning Tours oil deposits in Alberta that fuelled both Development, Calgary Municipal (Bus and Walking) car culture and the mid-century modern Land Corporation (CMLC) and All tours depart the Palliser Hotel Lobby office boom in Calgary. After decades Terry MacKenzie (Calgary Heritage promptly at times shown. No latecomers of little change in downtown, builders Authority) admitted. Please arrive at least 15 minutes responded to the new demand for office The idea of bringing East Village back before scheduled departure. space with a collection of buildings that to life as an urban village resurfaced grew downtown upward while suburban in 2005 – an idea and a discussion 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Calgary began to sprawl outward. A involving the City of Calgary, urban cSPACE (King Edward Creative Hub) tour of this Mid-Century evolution planners and the public. Two years & Currie Barracks: Cutting-Edge starts at the eclectic 1948 Barron later, city council created CMLC and Developments (Bus) Building – currently on The National gave them the ambitious mandate Leaders: Reid Henry (CEO, cSPACE Trust’s endangered list – and ends at the to revitalize the Rivers District and, Projects) and Doug Cassidy (Vice Centennial Planetarium. We’ll also visit in particular, the large brownfield President, Real Estate, Western Region, Century Gardens, a rare Brutalist style neighbourhood of East Village. Fast CMLC) park beloved by parkour enthusiasts. forward to today. East Village is in the As a showcase for the social enterprise Come along for a look at mid-century midst of an exciting transformation. mission of cSPACE, the historic sandstone Calgary, from curtain-wall to concrete. Since 2007, CMLC’s commitment King Edward School site was purchased of $357 million into infrastructure in 2012 for the development of a multi- Heritage Triangle Tour: Archives and development programs has so disciplinary ‘hub’ facility. Located on Keeping Heritage Alive (Walking) far attracted $2.4 billion of planned a full city block in South Calgary, the Leaders: Carolyn Ryder (Librarian, development. The heritage buildings vision for cSPACE King Edward will be Community Heritage & Family History, remaining on the site – Simmons delivered through three key platforms – City of Calgary), Lindsay Moir (Senior Building, St Louis Hotel, Hillier Block, the creative, learning, and community Librarian, Library), and King Edward Hotel – are being commons. Nearby Currie Barracks is a Carol Stokes (Archivist, Corporate revived as important anchors from the landmark military base that, since 1995, Records, Archives, City of Calgary) new area. has been developed by Canada Lands The Calgary Heritage Triangle is three Corporation (CLC) into residential organizations – the Glenbow Library and 1:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. development that blends historic Archives, the Calgary Public Library, Glenbow Town and Quarry buildings and parks commemorating and the City of Calgary Archives – that Archaeology Project (Bus) Canadian Armed Forces participation in co-exist within a two-block radius Leaders: Brian Vivian and Shari Peyerl the World Wars. Come see how they have downtown. Together they collect and (Archaeological Society of Alberta, achieved a walkable, sustainable design preserve the city’s heritage and ensure Calgary Centre) and achieved LEED-ND certification. this heritage is alive and accessible to The Glenbow Town and all Calgarians. Come and join us on an Quarry Project was established to Oil-Fuelled Mid-Century Modern exclusive behind the scenes tour of all archaeologically investigate the Calgary (Walking) three institutions and discover some of remnants of the town and sandstone Leaders: David Down (Manager of Urban the gems in their collections. Find out quarry originally founded in 1906. Design and Heritage, City of Calgary) how the Heritage Triangle is actively Since 2009 the Archaeological Society and Cynthia Klaassen (President, Calgary engaging the community in projects of Alberta, Calgary Centre has worked Heritage Initiative) such as Century Homes Calgary and in partnership with the Glenbow workshops on researching community Ranch Foundation to identify, map history. and excavate foundations and features

8 National Trust Conference 2015 associated with the original settlement East Village Revitalization (Walking) First Street & Warehouse District and quarry operation. Archival Leaders: Josh Sartorelli (Development (Walking) research undertaken concurrent to the Manager, Calgary Municipal Land Leader: Cynthia Klaassen (President, archaeological studies have assisted Corporation) and Terry MacKenzie Calgary Heritage Initiative) and Bob in attaching the faces and names (Calgary Heritage Authority) van Wegen (Co-Founder, Calgary of pioneering families to the many A reprise of the morning East Village Heritage Initiative) features identified on the ground. In Revitalization tour. Please see tour It used to be easy to overlook the this fashion, archaeological studies and description above. gritty, lower profile district that is archival research have worked together literally on the other side of the tracks to bring the Glenbow Town and Quarry 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. from Calgary’s gleaming downtown, to back to life, and more accurately : Revival of a but no more. After booms, busts and situated the role of this settlement in Pedestrian Mall (Walking) years of decline, Calgary’s historic establishing the province of Alberta. Leaders: Darryl Cariou and Clint warehouse district and 1st Street Robertson (Heritage Planning, City of SW corridor are being transformed 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. Calgary) by new developments and adaptive Historic Beltline Neighbourhood: Stephen Avenue is Calgary’s original reuse into an urban community with and Lougheed Main Street in the heart of Downtown. brick and sandstone roots. Calgary’s House (Walking) A portion is now a National Historic growth into a major distribution centre Leaders: Michelle Reid (Conservation District and one of North America’s in the early 20th century created a Landscape Architect, City of Calgary most successful pedestrian streets. boom of brick warehouses along the Parks) and Kirstin Evenden (Executive But – it wasn’t always this way. Join southern edge of the CPR mainline. Director, ) City staff Darryl Cariou and Clint Today they have been transformed into Founded in 1899, Central Memorial Robertson to learn how the masonry lofts, retail, restaurants, and offices. Park is Calgary’s oldest park. The Park buildings on Stephen Avenue have 1st Street SW became one of the first underwent a complete rehabilitation been recycled and reused to create one commercial strips to grow south of the in 2009 and saw many historical of North America’s most successful tracks – featuring commercial blocks, features of the century old park – complete, and pedestrian focused and apartments. Together this district with its geometric pathways and streets. From the only wooden is becoming a dynamic blend of old beds – restored, new café structures structure to survive the “Great Fire” and new, big and small, short and tall, introduced to animate the site, and of 1886, to John Lyle’s 1929 Art Deco sandstone and skyscrapers. the sandstone Memorial Park Library Bank, to the buildings that gave rehabilitated. Also visit nearby Calgary the moniker “Sandstone Gay Heritage in Beaulieu, a grand sandstone prairie City,” Stephen Avenue is an excellent (Walking) mansion built in 1891 for Senator case study in heritage conservation, Leader: Kevin Allen (Research Lead, . Declared downtown revitalization, sustainability, Calgary Gay History Project) a provincial historic resource in 1978, and prairie architectural history. This tour will highlight significant the mansion grounds are now a City political and social events that affected park and the restored home now run the gay community. On the way it will by a Conservation Society which has pass by several historical watering introduced many innovative programs holes where gays and lesbians gathered. for this house museum.

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Conference Program

Thursday, October 22 organization’s mission. Approach®. Hear local success stories of This workshop is designed for leaders Main Street® in action and discover how 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. of non-profit heritage organizations your community can take hold of its Registration including board members, executive revitalization plans. Location: Lobby, Palliser Hotel directors and committee chairs. As an opportunity for mid-career Session 2: Getting it Right – Design on 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. professional development, it will Main Street Leading and Governing Your provide inspiration for non-profit 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. Organization Today and Tomorrow: board members of museums, Nothing sparks a community’s A One-Day Workshop for Heritage, arts and cultural organizations, imagination more than positive physical Museums, and Arts & Culture historical societies and local planning changes on Main Street. Quality Organizations organizations as well as community streetscape and façade improvements Location: Calgary Public Library – leaders involved in community and sensitive infill, attract new Central Branch revitalization. Requires additional businesses and visitors and build (616 Macleod Trail SE) registration fee. Space limited. community confidence. This session Facilitator: Judy Oberlander Please see full course details at: will give you a firm understanding of (Judy Oberlander and Associates Inc., nationaltrustcanada.ca heritage design principles and strategies, Vancouver, B.C.) helping you make the most of physical Strengthen your organization’s 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. improvements on Main Street. capacity through this daylong Main Street Training interactive workshop. Leadership is Location: Turner Valley Room, Palliser 9:00 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. key to the strength and success of Hotel Introduction to Heritage Real Estate non-profit organizations whether Leader: Jim Mountain (Director, Development they engage in heritage conservation Regeneration Projects, National Trust Location: Calgary Public Library – projects, steward historic resources, for Canada, Ottawa, Ont.) Central Branch govern museums, lead historical Cost: Free for delegates / Non-delegates (616 Macleod Trail SE) societies, arts organizations, and $50 per session, $100 for both Leader: David Tomback (Director, cultural institutions, or govern Development Economics, Historic and implement community-driven England, London, England Resource Main Street initiatives to revitalize Person: Ross Keith (President, Nicor traditional commercial areas. Developments Inc., Regina, Sask.) This workshop will focus on the Gain insights into the heritage real roles and responsibilities of the boards estate industry through this interactive and staff who lead organizations both Session 1: Renewing and Sustaining workshop. The activities of the real large and small. How will we energize Your Main Street estate industry fundamentally shape and sustain these organizations in the 9:00 a.m. – 12:30 p.m. our historic built environment. And yet future? This workshop will focus on A downtown commercial district many outside the development industry, understanding the evolving nature is the most visible indicator of a such as heritage planners, professionals, of non-profit organizations and their community’s economic and social and advocates, do not have a clear sense structures; how to recruit and retain health. How can you unlock the of the principles and logic that drive board members as well as plan for potential of your main street? Join these decisions. This course is designed succession; how boards, staff, and veteran community revitalization coach to provide participants with practical volunteers can develop strategies Jim Mountain for a tour across Canada’s insights they can use in their work and, and set priorities, and how to secure main streets. Learn the fundamentals perhaps, inspire them to undertake real financial resources to realize an of the Main Street Regeneration estate development projects of their own.

10 National Trust Conference 2015 This workshop will provide Company fur trading operations 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. participants with a solid grasp of the that occurred in c. 1876. Believed to National Roundtable on Heritage financial and strategic considerations be the oldest in-situ extant structure Education that inform heritage real estate in Calgary, the Hunt House is very Location: Athabasca University development decisions. Participants significant. The workshop will review (345 – 6th Avenue SE) will gain powerful insights into what it the extensive documentation, research Heritage academics and students meet takes from a private sector perspective and recording that has occurred over to discuss issues relevant to heritage to conserve a heritage building, given the past two years as the log structure education and training in Canada. the challenges of financing, government was carefully dismantled, repaired, and For more information: Chris Wiebe regulations, and the nature of older refinished. Participants will be able to [email protected] buildings, themselves. meet the conservation team, including This workshop is designed for the key personnel of the conservation 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. heritage professionals, municipal contractor, and have an opportunity to Workshop – Brick Masonry planners, and members of non-profit see the log structure in detail on site. Conservation heritage organizations including board Preregistration required. Space limited. Location: JOW Gallery, Fort Calgary members, executive directors, and (750 – 9th Avenue SE) committee chairs. As an opportunity 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Leader: Malcolm Sissons (President, for midcareer professional development, Heritage Planning, Unplugged: What I-XL Industries Ltd.) it will provide inspiration and insight Advocates and Volunteers Need to This technical workshop primarily for non-profit board members Know intended for consultants and of museums, arts, and cultural Location: Marquis Room, Palliser Hotel professionals will explore conservation organizations, historical societies and Leader: Darryl Cariou (City of Calgary) challenges with this common building local planning organizations as well Primarily intended for volunteer material. It will begin with a brief as community leaders involved in advocates and members of municipal historical background to the brick community revitalization. Requires heritage committees, this workshop is manufacturing industry in Alberta, additional registration fee. Space designed to give advocates grappling and then move on to explaining the limited. Please see full course details at: with local heritage issues increased differences in manufacturing of the nationaltrustcanada.ca confidence. Heritage planning experts three main types of clay brick. This and elected officials will provide will lead into a discussion of technical 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. practical insights into the planning characteristics, identification of historic Workshop – Conserving Hunt House: system, and share best practices you can brick types, sources for replacement, Calgary’s Oldest Building use at home. Preregistration required. and problem analysis. The interaction Location: JOW Gallery, Fort Calgary Space limited. of bricks and mortar will also be (750 – 9th Avenue SE) discussed. A hands-on component will Leader: Lorne Simpson (Partner, 10:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. be included, as well as an observational Simpson Roberts Architects, Calgary, National Council Meeting walking tour of the nearby Inglewood Alta.) Location: Leduc Room, Palliser Hotel neighbourhood and its brickwork. This technical workshop primarily Leaders of province-wide heritage Preregistration required. Space limited. intended for consultants and organizations from across Canada professionals examines the conservation meet to discuss common issues and of the Hunt House located in the strategies. heart of the city at Fort Calgary. The For more information: Natalie Bull intent was to return the house to its [email protected] original configuration and interpret its association with the Hudson Bay

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Conference Program

1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. Vincent L. Friday, October 23 Workshop – Management of Michael, PhD is a Heritage Places: The Path Towards prominent leader 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Sustainability in the heritage Registration Location: Marquis Room, conservation Location: Lobby, Palliser Hotel Palliser Hotel field. For the last Leader: Tom Perrigo (CEO, three years he 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. National Trust of Australia was Executive Morning Coffee with Exhibitors (WA), Perth, Australia) Director of the Location: Oval Room A common key area for most heritage Global Heritage Fund in Palo Alto, organizations is the problem of how California, which works to conserve 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. to conserve, interpret and manage a heritage sites as economic assets for Session 2 – Plenary historic built property portfolio with a developing regions of the world. He Energy Investment: Heritage as a limited resource base. is a Trustee of the National Trust for Source of Strength This workshop is based on a journey Historic Preservation, where he served Location: Crystal Ballroom undertaken by the National Trust in as Vice Chair of the Preservation and Nimble for-profit and non-profit Western Australia which has resulted Sites Committee and the Diversity Task developers are showing that heritage in at least ten heritage places being Force. He has chaired the National properties attract investors and sustainably developed but also the Council for Preservation Education, generate economic energy. Allied establishment of a management model the Geographic Society of Chicago and REIT’s pan-Canadian business which is now the standard for all Trust served on the Executive Committee of model is an inspiring example of how places (built and natural). The Landmarks Illinois. He also serves on older buildings are a strong market workshop will firstly focus on initiating the Board of the Frank Lloyd Wright niche and solid assets for long-term a cultural shift, having a strategic Building Conservancy. Vince began investment. The rebirth of Medicine focus and incorporating an evaluation his career in 1983 working toward the Hat’s Historic Clay District, on the program. creation of the first heritage area in the other hand, shows how a derelict The second part of the workshop will United States. From 1996 to 2010 Vince industrial complex can leverage introduce the National Trust (WA) was Director of the Master of Science public investment to become a social management model which includes in Historic Preservation program at the enterprise and cultural hub that fuels the combination of the business, School of the Art Institute of Chicago, local economic revitalization. conservation, and interpretation plans. where he held the John H Bryan Moderator: Natalie Bull (Executive The final component of the workshop Chair in Historic Preservation. He Director, National Trust, Ottawa, Ont.) will be focussed on assisting has lectured and led tours throughout • Michael Emory (CEO, Allied participants in the development of a Europe, Asia and the Americas. He is Properties REIT, Toronto, Ont.) sustainable management plan for one the author of The Architecture of Barry • Barry Finkelman (Executive or more of their own heritage places. Byrne: Taking the Prairie School to Director, Historic Clay District, Preregistration required. Space limited. Europe and numerous journal articles, Medicine Hat, Alta.) travel guides and over 440 blog posts 7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. since 2005. www.vincemichael.com Keynote Address – Vincent L. Michael (Chicago, Illinois, USA) 9:30 p.m. – 10:30 p.m. Location: Jack Singer Concert Hall, Opening Reception Arts Commons Location: Jack Singer Concert Hall, (205 – 8th Avenue SE) Arts Commons (205 – 8th Avenue SE) (Cash bar)

12 National Trust Conference 2015 Michael Emory Historic Clay District, has been at 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. is a Trustee and the the epicentre of the revitalization of Session 3A President and CEO the River Flats neighbourhood. It has Harnessing the Power of Heritage of Allied Properties become a hub for the community and Stream: Energy Generation – Heritage REIT, a leading its artistic, education, and community as Power Plant owner, manager, and programming attracts users from all Location: Crystal Ballroom developer of urban demographics at all times of the year. Heritage is a valuable community office properties that Currently, Barry is the immediate resource whose full potential often enrich experience Past-President of the Alberta Museums goes untapped. Explore a wide range of and enhance profitability for business Association and, since 2013, has served experiences and strategies that can help tenants operating in Canada’s major as a member of both the Premier’s you see your own community’s assets cities. Allied went public in February Council on Culture and the Alberta in a new light: from marketing heritage of 2003 with assets of $120 million, a Order of Excellence Council. properties and streetscapes as film market capitalization of $62 million locations to revitalizing a “keystone” and a local urban-office portfolio of 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. property in a small prairie town. 820,000 square feet. Twelve years later, Break with Exhibitors Moderator: Fred Bradley (Chair, Allied has assets of nearly $4 billion, Location: Oval Room Alberta Historical Resources a market capitalization of $3 billion Poster Presentations Foundation, Crowsnest Pass, Alta.) and a national urban-office portfolio Presenters will be available: • Rollin Stanley (General Manager, of 10.5 million square feet. Michael is • Carly Farmer (MA Candidate, Planning Development and a graduate of Queen’s University (BA, Architecture, Carleton University, Assessment, City of Calgary, Hons., 1977) and the Faculty of Law, Ottawa, Ont.) – Regenerating the Calgary, Alta.) – Heritage University of Toronto (JD, 1982). Prior Industrial Heritage of Old Mill Park Incentives as Catalyst for to entering the real estate business in (Lindsay, Ont.) Community Revitalization 1988, Michael was a partner with the • Colleen Hughes (MA Candidate, • Morris Flewwelling (Retired Mayor law firm of Aird & Berlis, specializing Anthropology & Archaeology, of Red Deer, Alta.) – Promoting in corporate and real estate finance. University of Calgary, Alta.) – and Developing First Nations Michael is a Director of Real Property Sentiment Analysis of Inuit Place Heritage Sites and Features Association of Canada. Names in Heritage Valuation and • Noy Lim (President Licadel Hotel Archaeological Site Significance Group, Ltd. Maple Creek, Sask.) Barry Finkelman • Charles Christopher Moorhouse & Royce Pettyjohn (Main Street is a specialist in (Intern Architect, Richard Coordinator, Town of Maple cultural heritage, Lindseth Architecture Inc., Creek) – Filipino Newcomers and media, and Calgary, Alta.) – The Hanna the Extraordinary Revival of Maple education. Since Roundhouse: Past, Present, and Creek’s Commercial Hotel 2005, Barry has Future • Marla Touw (Locations and been the Executive • Ali Piwowar (M. Arch, Azrieli Logistic Coordinator, Alberta Director of the School of Architecture & Film, Government of Alberta, Historic Clay Urbanism, Carleton University, Edmonton, Alta) – Leveraging District in Medicine Hat and has led Ottawa, Ont.) – Living Heritage: Alberta Heritage Places as Film the re-development of the Medalta Re-imagining Wooden Grain Locations Potteries and the Medicine Hat Brick Elevators & Tile factories as a major museum, arts, and tourism complex for . Medalta, the focus of the

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Conference Program

Session 3B and cultural significance, most Places of faith anchor and shape our Financing and Heritage Development of which are unrecognized and communities. Yet many congregations Stream: Energy Investment – Heritage unprotected. The MOH-KINS-TSIS are facing declining attendance and as Business | Calgary Indigenous Roundtable insufficient funding to maintain and Location: Alberta Ballroom held on Wednesday, October 21 operate their buildings, and these Controlling costs aimed to open a dialogue and to find important community assets are facing Delve into the interplay between solutions in this gap in knowledge an uncertain future. This session, structural/design and the financial and protection. What did participants based on a new workshop offered by considerations for heritage learn about Calgary? How can Faith & the Common Good and the rehabilitation projects. Roving from communities integrate Indigenous National Trust for Canada, will share cultivating stakeholder buy-in at a and Non-Indigenous perspectives inspiring examples and success stories social enterprise hub to the reinvention in their processes? In addition, gain from urban and rural Canada. Case of heritage properties in Edmonton insights from Ontario where the studies include innovative projects and Toronto, this session will examine Ontario Heritage Trust has undertaken where places of faith are surviving a range of projects that have found initiatives to protect sacred lands, and thriving; new partnerships and strategies for success. preserve intangible heritage, and uses that are generating opportunities Moderator: Robert Shipley (Associate provide opportunities to share for places of faith in transition; and Professor, School of Planning, perspectives and stories. development of faithlands real estate University of Waterloo, Ont.) Moderator: Eldon Yellowhorn where mission and heritage value • Richard Witt (Principal, (Professor, Department of Archaeology, are part of the equation. An essential Quadrangle Architects Ltd., Simon Fraser University, Burnaby, workshop for faith groups, community Toronto, Ont.) – The Reinvention B.C.) organizations and heritage advocates. of Character Buildings: Liberty • Lorna Crowshoe (Issues Strategist, Preregistration required. Space limited. Village’s 60 Atlantic Avenue Aboriginal Portfolio, City of Leaders: • Gene Dub (Developer and Calgary, Alta.) – Learning from • National Trust for Canada Principal, Dub Architects Ltd., Moh-Kins-Tsis | Calgary Indigenous • Faith and the Common Good Edmonton, Alta.) – A Personal Heritage Roundtable • BuildGreen Solutions Inc. History of Heritage Investing • Gerald Oetelaar (Professor, • Will Teron (Director, Heritage and Department of Anthropology 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Investigation, Tacoma Engineers, and Archaeology, University of Lunch Guelph, Ont.) – Heritage Buildings, Calgary, Alta.) – Learning from Location: Crystal Ballroom, Alberta Engineering, and Cost Moh-Kins-Tsis | Calgary Indigenous Ballroom, Turner Valley Room • Reid Henry (President & CEO, Heritage Roundtable cSPACE, Calgary, Alta.) – Building • Beth Hanna (CEO, Ontario 12:15 p.m. – 1:15 p.m. Places for People at the Creative Heritage Trust, Toronto, Ont.) Canadian Edge of Change – Collaboration and Friendship: Association Building Respectful Relationships of Heritage Session 3C with Indigenous Communities Professionals AGM Indigenous Cultural Heritage: Location: Leduc Validation and Protection Session 3D – Workshop Room Stream: Energy Distribution – Heritage Regenerating Places of Faith: (Lunch provided in as Fuel for the Future A Workshop for Faith Groups, room) Location: Marquis Room Community Organizations and Calgary has a rich Indigenous Heritage Advocates. heritage with many places of sacred Location: Leduc Room

14 National Trust Conference 2015 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Risk, return on investment, extraordinary group of presenters who Session 4A construction and financing costs, are pushing the boundaries with social Conservation Challenges: Integrating tax treatment, ease of property media, pop-up events, and oral history Old and New development… Property owners gathering. Stream: Energy Generation – Heritage plotting the future of historic places Moderator: Judy Oberlander as Power Plant need to consider many factors to help (Judy Oberlander and Associates, Location: Alberta Ballroom ensure successful outcomes. Drawing Vancouver, B.C.) Explore the challenges and on a wide range of experiences – • Joseph Watson (London Creative opportunities presented by three from property developers to heritage Director, National Trust, London, very different public and private professionals – this session will England) – (Con)Temporary development projects. From the examine the nuts and bolts issues Heritage and Urban Audiences challenge of integrating a historic POW around the bottom line. • Caroline Adderson (Creator, camp into residential development Moderator: Chris Wiebe (Manager, Vancouver Vanishes Facebook, scheme, to retaining a heritage bridges Heritage Policy & Government Vancouver, B.C.) – The “Vancouver in the face of changing infrastructure Relations, National Trust) Vanishes” Facebook Page and Social needs, and the successful revival of one • Clint Robertson (Heritage Planner, Media as a Heritage Activism Tool of the last roundhouses on the prairies. City Wide Urban Design and • Mathieu Tremblay (Collections and Moderator: Jim Mountain (Director, Heritage, City of Calgary, Calgary, Expositions Manager, Musée de Regeneration Projects, National Trust) Alta.) – Incentivizing Heritage société des Deux-Rives, Salaberry- • Faye Langmaid (Manager of Retention in Calgary de-Valleyfield, Que.) – Sustaining Special Projects, Municipality of • Jay Yanota (Business Consultant, Working Class Heritage Through Clarington, Bowmanville, Ont.) Crowsnest Pass, Alta.) and Seth Oral History and Heritage Sites – Ehrenwort: The Camp 30 POW Leon (Research Officer, Alberta • Nancy Oakley (Executive Director, Camp-Jury Lands Story Community and Cooperative Yukon Historical and Museums • Marilyn Morawetz (Chair, Jury Association) – Financing Heritage: Association, Whitehorse, Yukon) – Lands Foundation, Bowmanville, A Cooperative Alternative ‘Making It Work’: Heritage Values Ont.) • Jane Kerr (Vice President, and Conservation Approaches in • Kelvin Whalen (Vice President, Ansonia Property Management the Yukon Territory Kaitlin Group of Companies, Inc., Calgary, Alta.) – Heritage Richmond Hill, Ont.) Redevelopment: A Complicated, Session 4D – Workshop • Michael Greguol (Cultural Challenging, Yet Rewarding Location: Leduc Heritage Specialist, Golder Endeavour Room Associates Ltd., London, Ont.) • Frits Pannekoek (President, CAHP Session – Preserving Heritage Bridges in Calgary Civic Trust, Calgary, Alta.) – Tse’K’Wa, The Southern Ontario – Heritage Covenants Charlie Lake Cave • Sandra Beaudoin (President/ Site Founder, Hanna Roundhouse Session 4C Tse’K’wa is a Society, Hanna, Alta.) – Reviving a Engaging New Supporters and spiritual, cultural Roundhouse in a Prairie Town Audiences and scientific Stream: Energy Distribution – Heritage archaeological site of great significance Session 4B as Fuel for the Future to Indigenous peoples in the northeast Heritage Financing and Incentives Location: Crystal Ballroom region of British Columbia and of Stream: Energy Investment – Heritage Constantly widening the circle of substantial importance in North as Business supporters is essential for any heritage American archaeology. In 2012, three Location: Marquis Room organization. Learn first hand from an Dane-Zaa Bands – West Moberly,

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Conference Program

Prophet River, and Doig River First 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Session 5B Nations – purchased land that Session 5A Spark Session – Regeneration and contains the archaeological site, a CAHP Session Conservation residence, a garage, and a garden. The – Conserving Streams: Energy Investment – Heritage Tse’K’wa Heritage Society, which is Industrial Heritage as Business & Energy Generation – administrated by the Treaty 8 Tribal Stream: Energy Heritage as Power Plant Association, has plans to create a Generation – Heritage Location: Crystal Ballroom cultural centre that will serve the as Power Plant Hold onto your seats, this fast and Treaty 8 communities. In addition Location: Alberta furious “Spark” session brings you to consultations with affected Ballroom nine presentations in 90 minutes. communities in spring/summer 2015, Canada has an extraordinary Always popular, watch ideas collide the Society is seeking advice and input industrial heritage legacy, much of and unexpected solutions emerge as from heritage professionals about it associated with harnessing power heritage experts from across Canada the potential of using the site for and extracting resources. Explore the step into the ring. community purposes. This session is challenges facing Canada’s industrial Moderator: Chris Wiebe (Manager, designed as a participatory ‘share and heritage sites and strategies for Heritage Policy & Government learn session,’ with everyone invited conservation, through the perspectives Relations, National Trust to share information and ideas, and of practitioners and professionals • Frieda Klippenstein (Historian, learn more about different perspectives working in the field. Parks Canada, Winnipeg, Man.) on the meaning of ‘heritage.’ Moderator: Donald Luxton – Neubergthal Mennonite Street Preregistration required. Space limited. (Principal, Donald Luxton & Associates Village: From National Historic Facilitators: Inc., Vancouver, B.C.) Site and Cultural Landscape to • Alain Fournier (Partner, FGMDA • Christopher Andreae (Historica Community Lifeline Architects, Montreal, Que.) Research, Delaware, Ont.) – The • Robert Hirano (President, RKH • Karen Aird (Cultural Heritage Finite Limit to Future Industrial Architecture Ltd., Lethbridge, Advisor and Project Coordinator Heritage Properties Alta.) – Conservation of the for the Treaty 8 Tribal Association) • Lashia Jones (Cultural Heritage Nikka Yuko Japanese Garden in Support: Specialist & Heritage Planner, Lethbridge, Alberta • Garry Oker (Cultural Heritage MHBC, Kitchener, Ont.) – Industrial • Michelle Reid (Cultural Landscape Consultant/Tse’K’Wa Board Heritage Conservation Districts and Conservation Lead, City of Calgary Director for Doig River First Harnessing Energy: Examples from Parks, Calgary Alta.) – Calgary’s Nation) Ontario Cultural Landscape Strategic Plan • Julie Harris (President, • Joe Sembrat (Senior Executive Vice • Tom Perrigo (CEO, National Contentworks Inc., Ottawa, Ont.) President & Senior Conservator, Trust of Australia (WA), Perth, • Rosanne Moss (Partner, FGMDA Conservation Solutions) and Australia) – An Unholy Alliance: Architects/President, CAHP- Caroline Guay (Senior Conservator The Conservation Workforce and ACECP, Montreal, Que.) & Project Manager, Conservation the Department of Corrective Solutions, Ottawa, Ont.) – The Services 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Conservation of Industrial • Andrea Isfeld (PhD Candidate, Break with Exhibitors Archaeology and its Role in Civil Engineering, University of Location: Oval Room Connecting Us with the Past Calgary) & Nigel Shrive (Professor, Poster Presentations: Presenters will • Gordon Macdonald (Managing Civil Engineering, University of be available Director, Macdonald & Lawrence Calgary) – Economic and Other Timber Framing Ltd., Victoria, B.C.) Benefits Accrue from Collaborative Research

16 National Trust Conference 2015 • Alexander Corey (Assistant Project how a cultural landscape approach can • Patricia Glanville (Heritage Manager, FGMDA Architects, be applied within both urban and rural Architect, Regina, Sask.) Toronto, Ont.) – Third Sector communities. Acquisition of Surplus Federal Organizer: Michael McClelland 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Heritage Buildings in Canada: (Principal, ERA Architects, Toronto, National Trust and CAHP National Challenges and Opportunities Ont.) Heritage Awards Ceremony and • Kathryn Molloy (Executive Reception Director, Heritage BC) & Karen Location: Room, Petroleum Dearlove (Capacity Trainer, Club (319 – 5th Avenue SW) Heritage BC, Vancouver, Experience the traditions of old B.C.) – Climate Change, Green Calgary at the Petroleum Club – Rehabilitation and Protecting • Christopher Rivet (President, usually accessible to members only Heritage for the Future ICOMOS Canada, Ottawa, Ont.) – an important oil industry “power • Robert Geldart (Senior Heritage • Nancy Pollock-Ellwand (Dean, centre” and mid-century modern Planner, City of Edmonton, Faculty of Environmental Design, icon built in 1958. Join us for the Edmonton, Alta.) – How Heritage University of Calgary, Alta.) presentation of Canada’s top heritage Created Downtown Edmonton’s • Bob Buckle (Heritage Planner, awards, including the Prince of New Signature Street Heritage Collaborative Inc., Wales Prize for Municipal Heritage • Jessie Andjelic (Founding Partner) Edmonton Alta.) Leadership and the Ecclesiastical & Philip Vandermey (Founding • Philip Evans (Principal, ERA Insurance Cornerstone Awards for Partner, SPECTACLE Bureau Architects, Toronto, Ont.) Building Heritage. Business attire. for Architecture and Urbanism, Additional tickets are available. Calgary, Alta.) – Thinking Hat Session 5D – Workshop Workshop – Create Vision, Inspire Saturday, October 24 Session 5C Action and Energize! ICOMOS Canada Session – Evolving Location: Leduc Room 7:30 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. Perspectives on Cultural Landscapes This workshop uses examples of Registration Stream: Energy Distribution – Heritage completed and ongoing projects to Location: Lobby, Palliser Hotel as Fuel for the Future help participants generate ideas that Location: Marquis Room could work in their own community. 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Cultural landscapes have We will look at how heritage can build Morning Coffee with Exhibitors increasingly shaped discussions sustainable and attractive places, about a holistic approach to heritage whether industrial or commercial/ 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. conservation – one that recognizes residential, and how unlikely Session 6 – Plenary the natural factors, cultural practices, partnerships can make a difference. Values Revolution? New Audiences, and other values that are dynamically Throughout the session there will Shifting Significance, and the integrated with a place. Following a be opportunities to stop, write, Implications for Heritage Practice crest of recent work, such as last year’s and discuss those ideas with other Location: Crystal Ballroom Florence Declaration on Heritage participants. Preregistration required. Changing values in heritage and Landscapes as Human Values, Space limited. conservation have brought on a ICOMOS Canada has organized a Moderator: Ross Keith (President, shift in emphasis from tangible session that will trace the evolution of Nicor Corporation, Regina, Sask.) to intangible heritage, from the these ideas at the international scale. • Janet Baker (Culture and Tourism conservation of materials to a focus The session will then share case studies Planner, JEB Enviro Design, on interpretation and experience. This from across Canada that demonstrate Regina, Sask.) shift is occasioning dramatic changes

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in both theory and practice. Join us Institute of Art. Trained originally as 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. in a dynamic session that explores a musician, he takes up a place on a Break with Exhibitors this brave new world, from changing part-time Master of Studies degree in Location: Oval Room heritage doctrine and management the history of design at the University Poster Sessions: Presenters will be approaches, to creative engagement of Oxford in October 2015. available. and interpretation practices that are galvanizing new audiences. Harold Kalman, 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Moderator: Natalie Bull (Executive CM, PhD, LLD, Session 7A Director, National Trust, Ottawa, Ont.) CAHP, specializes Designing for Old Places: Creative • Joseph Watson (London Creative in heritage planning Muse or Creative Straitjacket? Director, National Trust, London, and architectural Stream: Energy Generation – Heritage England) history. He began as Power Plant • Dr. Harold Kalman (Author and his professional Location: Alberta Ballroom Co-Founder, Commonwealth career teaching art This high-octane session will debate Historic Resource Management, and architectural whether designing in an historical Victoria, BC) history at UBC, after studies at context – be it adaptive reuse or Princeton University. In 1975 he set an older neighbourhood – creates Joseph Watson up practice as Canada’s first heritage opportunities for the designer or shuts has worked for the consultant. After training in heritage them down. How does one add infill National Trust for conservation in the U.S. and U.K., Hal or new uses and create richly layered close to five years, Kalman co-founded Commonwealth places that speak to the passage of initially managing Historic Resource Management, which time? Join four senior architects as Fenton House and developed an extensive Canadian and they discuss the potential inherent in 2 Willow Rd. before international practice. He withdrew any heritage project and how it can be accepting a position from consulting in 2010. He writes for successfully unleashed. with The London popular and technical audiences, and Moderator: Julia Gersovitz (Partner, Project, the National Trust’s urban teaches at the Universities of Hong FGMDA Architects, Montreal Que) audience engagement strategy. Since Kong (where he is Honorary Professor) • Joe Lobko (Partner, DTAH, January 2015 he has overseen the urban and Victoria. His books include Toronto, Ont.) off-property engagement work of the Heritage Planning: Principles and • Vivian Manasc (Principal, Manasc National Trust as London Creative Process, Exploring Vancouver, and A Isaac, Edmonton, Alta.) Director. He sits on the Southbank History of Canadian Architecture. Hal • Kevin Nyhoff (Principal, Nyhoff Centre’s Heritage Advisory Group and is a member of the Historic Sites and Architecture, Calgary, Alta.) is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts. Monuments Board of Canada and was He authored the short guidebook for the founding president of the Canadian Session 7B the ‘pop-up’ opening of the Balfron Association of Heritage Professionals. Heritage Energized – The Cowboy Tower (September 2014) and has a He received the BC Heritage Award Way guidebook on Brutalist architecture in 2006 and the Gabrielle Léger Stream: Energy Investment – Heritage forthcoming (September 2015). Joseph Medal for Lifetime Achievement in as Business has delivered lectures and convened Heritage Conservation in 2009. He was Location: Crystal Ballroom courses for the Victoria & Albert appointed to the Order of Canada in Calgary is full of energy, with135 Museum, National Trust, Southbank 2012. head offices, 72,000 people employed Centre, and King’s College London. in the energy industry, and 93,000 Before joining the Trust he held employed in creative services. roles at the V&A and The Courtauld Calgary is vibrant and full of ideas

18 National Trust Conference 2015 and this is reflected in the heritage as Fuel for the Future Session 7D – Workshop conservation activities taking place. Location: Marquis Room Alberta Culture and Tourism: From the restoration of Calgary’s New insights into the cultural Protecting and Promoting first oil-related manufacturing site, diversity and sustainability of urban Appreciation for Alberta’s Rich to the revitalization of East Village and rural communities is leading to Heritage (“Calgary’s newest, oldest, coolest, new approaches in municipal planning Location: Leduc Room warmest neighbourhood”), from the and development. Explore how space The Historic Resources Management celebration of our western heritage at is being made in Canadian cities for Branch of Alberta Culture and Tourism Stampede Park, to the redevelopment Indigenous urbanism, heritage walks is responsible for managing impacts of historic Currie Barracks, all as a means of engagement between to historic resources in the province, illustrate this energy and relate to Indigenous and non-Indigenous including archaeological sites, fossil the conference themes of investment, peoples, how traditional Main Streets localities, heritage buildings, and generation, and distribution. sustain economic diversity, and how historic places of cultural significance Moderator: Darryl Cariou (Heritage those town centres are repositories for to Indigenous communities. Speakers Portfolio Program Manager, Corporate community anchoring stories. in the session will explore a range of Properties and Buildings, City of Moderator: Brian R. Sinclair topics, including: how the branch’s Calgary, Calgary, Alta.) (Professor, Architecture & regulatory processes uncovered the • Neil Richardson (President, Environmental Design, EVDS, Quarry of the Ancestors, a remarkable Heritage Property Corporation, University of Calgary) archaeological site that illuminates Calgary, Alta.) • Ryan Walker (Professor, Regional one of the most intensive ancient uses • Kate Thompson (Director, and Urban Planning, University of of the boreal forest yet identified in Development, Calgary Municipal , Saskatoon, Sask.) – Canada; how the visual arts can be Land Corporation, Calgary, Alta.) Indigenous Urbanism and Spatial used to create compelling and dynamic – Revitalizing the Historic East Equity in Canadian Cities evocations of Alberta’s history; Village • Ourania Emmanouil (PhD and how the branch engages with • Jeanie Gartly (Senior Planner/ Candidate, School of Indigenous Indigenous communities to record Urban Designer, Brown & Knowledges and Public Policy, and preserve historic places of cultural Associates Planning Group, Charles Darwin University, significance. Calgary, Alta.) & Chris Elkey Darwin, Australia) – Making Moderator: Matthew Wangler (Senior Director, Real Estate, Indigenous Heritage Visible: (Executive Director, Historic Resources Canada Lands Company, Calgary, Dreaming Trails as Cross-Cultural Management Branch, Alberta Culture Alta.) – How Currie Barracks Bridges to a Shared Sense of Place and Tourism, Edmonton, Alta.) Historic Resources are Generating • Catherine Nasmith (Principal, • Darryl Bereziuk (Director, Energy for a New Urban Village Catherine Nasmith Architect, Archaeological Survey of Alberta) • Shannon Murray (Calgary Toronto, Ont.) – Main Streets as – The Discovery and Layered Stampede Archives Assistant, Old Growth Forests. History of the Quarry of the Calgary, Alta.) – • Charles Ketchabaw (Managing Ancestors Foundation – Celebrating Built and Director, Tale of a Town – Canada, • Todd Kristensen (Regional Intangible Heritage Toronto, Ont.) – Word on the Archaeologist, Archaeological Street: Insights on Main Streets Survey of Alberta) – The Heritage Session 7C and Rural Heritage from a Cross- Art Series: Reimagining Heritage Border Crossings: Cultural Country Theatre-Media Project through the Visual Arts Diversity, Sustainable Heritage, and • Laura Golebiowski (Aboriginal Community Revitalization Consultation Advisor, Alberta Stream: Energy Distribution – Heritage Culture and Tourism) – Engaging

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with Indigenous Communities on tangible and intangible cultural approach? This wide-ranging session Traditional Use Sites heritage. The remaining panelists will will examine development pressures, offer potential models which illustrate recent policy responses, and will 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. the interconnections between people unpack the very latest thinking on Lunch and place in sustainable community heritage and sustainability. Location: Crystal Ballroom, Alberta revitalization. Moderator: Sean Fraser (Director, Ballroom, Turner Valley Room Leaders: Ingrid Cazakoff (CEO, Heritage Programs and Operations, Heritage Saskatchewan, Regina, Toronto, Ont.) Sask.) & Wendy Fitch (Executive • Jane Pickering (Deputy Director Director, Museums Association of of Planning, City of Vancouver) – Saskatchewan, Regina, Sask.) Vancouver’s Heritage Action Plan • Dale Jarvis (Intangible Cultural • David Johnston (Principal Heritage 12:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Heritage Development Officer, Planner, City of Edmonton, Session 8E Heritage Foundation of N.L., St. Edmonton, Alta.) – Edmonton’s Inglewood Main Street Regeneration John’s, N.L.) Heritage Character Areas and the Workshop • John Norman (CEO & Co-Owner, Infill Question Location: Workshop will depart the Bonavista Creative/Bonavista • Susan Ross (Assistant Professor, Palliser Hotel lobby. Living, Bonavista, N.L.) Canadian Studies, Carleton Leader: Jim Mountain (Director, • Ali Piwowar (M. Arch, Azrieli University, Ottawa, Ont.) – Regeneration Projects, National Trust) School of Architecture & Heritage and Sustainability: An This field workshop will engage Urbanism, Carleton University, Update on the Evolving Discussion participants in a dynamic “resource Ottawa, Ont.) • Mark Brandt (Principal, Senior team” exercise to identify key issues • Glenn Sutter (Curator, Human Conservation Architect & Urbanist, and opportunities essential to the Ecology, Royal Saskatchewan MTBA, Ottawa, Ont.) – Building sustainability of historic Inglewood’s Museum, Regina, Sask.) Resilience: Practical Guidelines for main street. This session will take the Sustainability Rehabilitation of participants onto the streets of Session 8B Buildings in Canada. Inglewood. Please wear appropriate Heritage Policy in a Changing World: clothing and footwear. Intensification and Sustainability Session 8C Preregistration required. Space limited. Stream: Energy Investment – Heritage Spark Session – Engagement and as Business Diversity 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Location: Crystal Ballroom Stream: Energy Distribution – Heritage Session 8A The session will explore how the as Fuel for the Future The Power of Safeguarding a Sense heritage and sustainability discussion is Location: Alberta Ballroom of Place: Bridging Tangible and expanding from a building by building Hold onto your seats, this fast and Intangible view (often exclusively energy focused) furious “Spark” session brings you Stream: Energy Generation – Heritage to one looking at the built environment nine presentation in 90 minutes. as Power Plant as a whole. Are there urban models Always popular, watch ideas collide Location: Marquis Room of sustainable development and and unexpected solutions emerge as The interconnection between intensification that are fundamentally heritage experts from across Canada tangible and intangible cultural at odds with the principles of step into the ring. heritage is essential to community cultural heritage conservation and Moderator: Nancy Oakley (Executive revitalization. In fact, we can’t have one sustainability? What are the pros Director, Yukon Historical and without the other. Dale Jarvis will set and cons of addressing sustainability Museums Association, Whitehorse, the stage by exploring the link between building by building versus a top down Yukon)

20 National Trust Conference 2015 • Erin van Wijk (Heritage Planner, Session 8D – Workshop 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Urban Design & Heritage, City of Facades, Conservation and Cultural Session 9 – Plenary Calgary, Calgary, Alta.) – From Hip Heritage Value – Part 2 Story and Place: The Energy in the Replacements to Hipsters: A New Location: Leduc Room Tangible-Intangible Nexus Generation’s Interest in Heritage This session continues the discussion Location: Crystal Ballroom • Sarah Meilleur (Member, Calgary at National Trust Conference 2014 This year’s closing plenary brings Heritage Authority, Calgary, about the practice of façade retention. together three award-winning Alta.) – Building Connections, Recognizing that it is not always Canadian authors for a dynamic Collaboration, Capacity, and possible to conserve a building in its discussion of how stories energize and Advocacy entirety, a multi-disciplinary panel will transform our experience of place. • Marianne Fedori (Urban Historian examine a series of Calgary projects Intangible cultural heritage is now and Advocate, Edmonton, Alta.) – where façade retention was employed. a central part of heritage conservation Reflections of a Life Long Heritage The goal is to begin to identify best thought and practice, but how do Activist practices and concrete actions to narratives permeate and animate a • Sara Nixon (MA Candidate, Public support the conservation of what is community? How do they become History, Carleton University, valued by people and communities. “heritage” and transform the material Ottawa, Ont.) – The Grimsby Beginning with a discussion of world around us? Join us as we explore Timescapes App: Digitally Engaging design principles and their intersection the interplay between stuff and story with Heritage on Main Street with conservation philosophy, through the “character” embedded in • Tim O’Grady (Archivist, City of the session will examine a broad older homes, the removal of the sacred Edmonton Archives, Edmonton, range of factors that shape project Manitou stone from an Eastern Alberta Alta.) – Successfully Translating outcomes – for example, the social hilltop, and the way urban stories Architectural Archival Material into and economic dimensions of a project; inscribe themselves into our lives. an Online Presence its contribution to street life; its Moderator: Chris Wiebe (Manager, • Harry Sanders (Historical relationship to its broader setting; and Heritage Policy and Government Consultant, Calgary, Alta.) – The the specificity of the urban heritage Relations, National Trust) Calgary Heritage Authority 2012 being conserved. • Caroline Adderson (Vancouver, Historian Laureate Project Leader: Michael McClelland (Partner, B.C.) • Amery Calvelli – (Design Advocate ERA Architects, Toronto, Ont.) • Aritha van Herk (Calgary, Alta.) & Co-Founder, Design Talks • Darryl Cariou (Heritage Portfolio • Rudy Wiebe (Edmonton, Alta.) Institute (d.talks), Calgary Alta.) – Program Manager, Corporate Better With Time: How Experience Properties and Buildings, City of Caroline Adderson and Appreciation are Linked Calgary) is the author of • Danielle Metcalfe-Chenail • Jacqueline Hucker (Architectural four novels, two (Edmonton’s Historian Laureate, Historian, Ottawa, Ont.) collections of Edmonton, Alta.) – Ghosts • Marcus Letourneau (Adjunct short stories, as of Charles Camsell Hospital: Professor, Geography, Queen’s well as books for Reconciling Our Communities University, Kingston, Ont.) young readers. Her • Tom Perrigo (CEO, National • Lorne Simpson (Principal, work has received Trust of Australia (WA), Simpson Roberts Architects, numerous prize Perth, Australia) – The Road Calgary, Alta.) nominations including the International to Reconciliation: The National IMPAC Dublin Literary Award, two Trust in Western Australia and 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. Commonwealth Writers’ Prizes, the Aboriginal People. Break with Exhibitors Governor General’s Literary Award, Location: Oval Room the Rogers’ Trust Fiction Prize, and the

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Conference Program

Scotiabank Giller Prize longlist. Winner Rudy Wiebe, Historical Resource in 1981. After of three BC Book Prizes and three CBC widely published various incarnations as a restaurant Literary Awards, Caroline was also internationally and and nightclub, the building was reborn the recipient of the 2006 Marian Engel winner of numerous in 2014 with a no-expenses-spared Award for mid-career achievement. In awards, including rehabilitation. Additional tickets are addition to her literary work, Adderson two Governor available is the creator of the Facebook page General’s Awards Vancouver Vanishes, a lament for, and for Fiction, is the Sunday, October 25 celebration of, the vanishing character author of ten novels, homes in Vancouver. A book based on five short-story collections, and ten 8:00 a.m. – 8:30 p.m the page will be published in fall 2015 non-fiction books. His most recent Crowsnest Pass Heritage Bus Tour by Anvil Press. publications include an autobiography, Cost: $95 Of This Earth: A Mennonite Boyhood Location: Bus will depart the Palliser Aritha van Herk is in the Boreal Forest (2006), the Hotel. Professor of English biography Big Bear in the Extraordinary Cap off your National Trust at the University of series (2008), and his conference experience with a journey Calgary in Calgary, Collected Short Stories, 1955 – 2010. to one of Alberta’s most beautiful and Alberta, Canada, as His latest novel, Come Back, won the historic regions – the Crowsnest Pass. well as a novelist, 2015 Robert Kroetsch City of Edmonton Travel down the famous Cowboy Trail critic and writer. She Book Prize. He is an Officer of the and feast on spectacular foothills and is the author of five Order of Canada and lives with his wife Rocky Mountain scenery. Visit the novels, Judith, The Tena in Edmonton. Interpretive Centre and Tent Peg, No Fixed Address, Places Far Bellevue Underground Mine and From Ellesmere, and Restlessness, as well 8:00 p.m. – 12:00 a.m. explore the heritage communities of as six works of criticism and non-fiction, Closing Party Coleman, Blairmore, and Hillcrest. place-writing, geografictione and Location: Bank and Baron P.U.B. On the return to Calgary, visit Fort cultural commentary. Her irreverent but (125 Stephen Avenue SW) Macleod and see how it jump-started relevant , Mavericks: Meet your new friends from across its downtown with the National Trust’s An Incorrigible History of Alberta, Canada and enjoy one of Calgary’s Main Street program in the 1980s. frames the permanent exhibition most spectacular heritage conversions. Additional Fee Required. Space limited. on Alberta history at the Glenbow Designed by Toronto architect John Lyle Museum. Her latest works, In This Place and opened in 1930, the Bank of Nova and Prairie Gothic (with photographer Scotia was protected as a Provincial George Webber) develop the idea of geographical temperament as tonal accompaniment to landscape. She teaches Creative Writing and Canadian Literature at the University of Calgary in Calgary.

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Karen Aird Christopher roundhouse & property, May 2014 Cultural Heritage Andreae Sandra receives Governor General Planner, Principal Caring Canadian Award, Aug Treaty 8 Tribal Historica Research 2015 Provincial Historic Resource Association (Delaware, Ont.) Designation. New: Interest in Alberta (Fort St. John and Chris continues to Historic Restoration Trade School in Kamloops, B.C.) provide heritage Hanna, Alta. For the past 19 years, planning services Karen has worked since retiring as Darryl Bereziuk as an archaeologist and a Heritage Senior Built Heritage Specialist from Director Advisor for various First Nation groups Golder Associates. The primary focus is Archaeological throughout the province of BC. on planning and conservation of historic Survey She is a member of Saulteau First industrial properties. He has worked (Edmonton, Alta.) Nations, who are signatories to Treaty as a museum curator, consultant and A graduate of the no. 8, and is currently acting as the professor, thoughout his career of over University of Alberta, Cultural Heritage Advisor for the Treaty 40 years in the heritage field. Darryl specializes in 8 Tribal Association and the Tse’K’wa archaeology within (the Charlie Lake Cave archaeological Janet Baker circumpolar and cultural resource site) Heritage Society. (Regina, Sask.) management contexts. Much of his 25 A graduate of year career was devoted to contract Jessie Andjelic Environmental archaeology in the private sector. Darryl Founding Partner Design at the relies upon this real world experience SPECTACLE University of in managing Alberta’s archaeological Bureau for Calgary, Janet’s focus resource management programs. Architecture is building links and Urbanism between culture, Mark Thompson (Calgary, Alta) community and commerce. During her Brandt Jessie has worked 35-year career, she has been a professor Principal, Senior with award-winning of tourism, hospitality and recreation Conservation architecture firms in and an urban planner guiding visioning Architect Calgary and Rotterdam, and led design in communities such as Calgary and & Urbanist, MTBA teams on three competition wins. She Regina. Janet is cultural policy planner (Ottawa, Ont.) has worked on houses, multi-family for the Province of Saskatchewan. Former Director and mixed-use housing, civic centers, of Canadian university buildings and master plans, Sandra Beaudoin Association of Heritage Professionals and is a sessional instructor at the President/Founder and Canada Green Building Council, University of Calgary. Hanna Roundhouse Mark is a Director of the Association Society for Preservation Technology, Co- (Hanna, Alta.) Chairing APT’s Technical Committee Fall 2009 Research on Sustainable Preservation. Award- begins on 1913 winning MTBA specializes in CNoR Roundhouse, natural and cultural conservation in Jan 2010 Non- architecture and planning; currently Profit Society, “Exposing” this historic undertaking several projects on building, Sept 2013 HRS purchases Parliament Hill.

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Robert Buckle + Place about architecture, urban design development, and engineering, with Cultural Heritage and visual culture on Calgary’s CJSW. experience in retail, residential and Planner A walker and lover of streets, she has resort developments. Doug holds a Heritage found the habitual stroll essential to B.Sc. and an MBA and is a registered Collaborative Inc. cultivating a deeper understanding of Professional Engineer in Alberta and (Edmonton, Alta.) place. She’s a co-founder of the non- British Columbia. Robert’s current profit organization, d.talks, which hosts focus is on cultural conversations about design and the built Ingrid Cazakoff heritage as a environment in Calgary. CEO generator of community development, Heritage economic development, and tourism. Darryl Cariou Saskatchewan He currently serves as Vice President Heritage Portfolio (Regina, Sask.) - Strategic Planning for International Program Manager Ingrid has just Council on Monuments and Sites Corporate marked her 5th Canada. Robert is the Co-Chair for Properties and anniversary as the Edmonton’s Historic Urban Landscape - Buildings, CEO of Heritage Old Strathcona Case Study. City of Calgary Saskatchewan, an organization that is (Calgary, Alta.) creating awareness for heritage, with a Natalie Bull Darryl spent focus on living heritage. Ingrid’s work Executive Director 10 years as a with the organization has led to many National Trust municipal heritage planner for the opportunities to expand perspectives on for Canada City of Edmonton, taking time off to heritage across multiple sectors. (Ottawa, Ont.) manage significant historic building Natalie Bull has rehabilitation projects in Canada and Alex Corey been at the helm of Italy. He returned to heritage planning Conservation Canada’s National as Senior Heritage Planner for the City Specialist Trust since 2006, of Calgary in 2003. Returning to his FGMDA Architects working with a talented staff and a roots, early in 2015 he took up a new (Toronto, Ont.) national board of directors to lead and position to help manage and look after Alex is a recent inspire action to save historic places. Calgary’s inventory of 30 heritage graduate of Born and raised in New Brunswick, buildings. Columbia University, Natalie studied heritage conservation with a Masters of at the Université de Montréal, joined Doug Cassidy Science in Historic Preservation. His the City of Ottawa’s heritage team in Vice President, Real academic and professional experiences 1990, and spent 13 years at the federal Estate, Western include undertaking heritage studies, Heritage Conservation Directorate. Region architectural conservation projects, non- Canada Lands profit advocacy and policy development Amery Calvelli Company in Canada, the United States, the UK, Design Advocate & (Calgary, Alta.) and Myanmar. Co-Founder Design Doug is responsible Talks Institute for the development (d.talks) of Currie Barracks and other Canada (Calgary, Alta.) Lands Company projects in Western Amery Calvelli hosts Canada. Doug has twenty years the radio show Space of experience in real estate, land

24 National Trust Conference 2015 24 Lorna Crowshoe Building, The Shaw Building, and The Philip Evans Issues Strategist Alberta Hotel. His architectural firm Partner Aboriginal Dub Architects Ltd., provided technical ERA Architects Portfolio, support for these projects which (Toronto, Ont.) City of Calgary normally involved repurposing. Philip is the founder (Calgary, Alta.) of Culture of Lorna is a Piikani Chris Elkey Outports and small. First Nation’s Senior Director, He has led a range member from Real Estate of conservation, Southern Alberta and maintains her Canada Lands adaptive reuse, design, and feasibility strong ties to the Blackfoot community. Company planning projects across his 14 year She received her MBA from the (Calgary, Alta.) career. Philip is known for transforming University of Phoenix, and is employed Chris is challenges into opportunities. He gives at the City of Calgary as an Issues responsible for the sound advice and guidance to better Strategist, supporting the Calgary redevelopment of manage cultural, heritage and property Aboriginal Urban Affairs Committee – a Currie Barracks and Canada Lands assets to leverage economic success committee of Council. Company’s other Calgary projects. while maintaining the highest level Chris has 14 years of experience in of integrity. His clients are private Karen Dearlove both the private and public sectors in and public developers, communities, Capacity Planner land acquisition, municipal approvals, municipalities, provinces and citizens. Heritage BC and on-site construction management. He has practiced on either side of and (Vancouver, B.C.) Chris holds a BA in Urban Geography within the Atlantic. Karen completed and a Master of Environmental Design a PhD in History in Planning. Carly Farmer and has several M. Arch Candidate years’ experience Ourania Carleton University teaching, researching Emmanouil (Ottawa, Ont.) and writing about public history and PhD Candidate As a graduate of built heritage. She served as Executive Charles Darwin the new Bachelor Director of several organizations in University of Architectural Ontario, and recently as Curator of (Darwin, Australia) Studies Conservation Chiefswood National Historic Site Ourania’s and Sustainability located on the Six Nations of dissertation program, Carly continues to focus River Reserve. highlights on this area in the Master’s program Indigenous and non-Indigenous people’s through research at the microscale Gene Dub connections with place and the role that of building components and at the President stories play in holding together these macroscale of adaptive reuse and Five Oaks Inc. connections. During her 13 years as an community revitalization. She has also (Edmonton, Alta.) educator, Ourania has taught in schools, completed internships with the Heritage Five Oaks Inc. has environmental education centers and Conservation Directorate (PWGSC), developed over universities, lecturing in eco-philosophy GML Heritage (Australia) and MTBA a dozen heritage and sustainability education. She is the Architects (Ottawa). buildings in author of the blog Being with Country Edmonton including and the forthcoming essay in the PAN the McLeod Building, The John Deere Journal, ‘You’ve got to drown in it’.

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Marianne Fedori Morris Jeanie Gartly Historian and Flewwelling Senior Urban Heritage Activist Former Mayor Planner/Designer (Edmonton, Alta.) City of Red Deer Associate Marianne has had a (Red Deer, Alta.) Brown & Associates 30-year career as an Morris Flewwelling Planning Group urban historian and was named a (Calgary, Alta.) advocate for heritage Member of the Jeanie has over 28 conservation in Order of Canada for years’ experience in Alberta and beyond and has maintained his leadership in heritage preservation architecture, planning, urban design an exceptional level of commitment. and the volunteer sector. He is a past and heritage conservation in the private She has been employed or contracted by Governor of Heritage Canada, Past and public sectors. She has contributed municipal and provincial governments, President of the Canadian and Alberta to a variety of projects from city heritage architects, museums, Museum Associations. Morris retired building policy to built-form and public educational institutions, publishers in 2013 after serving 12 years on City realm design and materials. She is a and the media. She is Past President of Council and 9 years as Mayor of Red life-long learner that is passionate about the Historical Society of Alberta and Deer. Morris was honored with the Cree continued learning and volunteering to Past Chair of the Edmonton Historical name of Asiniw-Waci Kihieu (Mountain further heritage conservation as it relates Board. Eagle) by central Alberta First Nations to city building and revitalization. Elders. He has retired to ranching. Wendy Fitch Robert Geldart Executive Director Sean Fraser Senior Heritage Museums Director of Heritage Planner Association Programs Ontario City of Edmonton of Saskatchewan Heritage Trust (Edmonton, Alta.) (Regina, Sask.) (Toronto, Ont.) Robert is responsible Prior to becoming Sean Fraser has for overseeing Executive Director an academic the management she served in the background in of the Register position of Museums Advisor for 25 archaeology, and Inventory of years. Wendy has a degree in History architecture Historic Resources in Edmonton. Today, from the U of C and began her museum and conservation. He has worked Edmonton has over 117 designated career at the Red Deer & District internationally in the field of cultural Municipal Historic Resources and over Museum. Currently she is serving as heritage management for 25 years. Sean 800 historic resources on the Inventory a member of the Board of Directors of is the Director of Heritage Programs eligible for designation. With a heritage Heritage Saskatchewan and is a member and Operations at the Ontario Heritage reserve budget of over 3 million, his of the Saskatchewan Ecomuseum Trust, and lectures on sustainability, primary role is to encourage owners Initiative. adaptive re-use, conservation theory and of historic resources to designate their heritage planning. buildings, restore and protect them for Edmonton’s present and future generations.

26 National Trust Conference 2015 26 Julia Gersovitz Laura Caroline Guay Partner Golebiowski Senior Conservator Fournier Gersovitz Aboriginal & Project Manager Moss Drolet et Consultation CSI Conservation Associés Architectes Advisor Solutions ULC (FGMDA) Historic Resources (Ottawa, Ont.) (Montreal, Que.) Management Caroline has Julia has 35 years Branch been working of professional Government in the heritage experience, with degrees in architecture of Alberta conservation field in both the private from McGill University and historic (Edmonton, Alta.) and public sector for 30 years. Since preservation from Columbia University. Laura works directly with Aboriginal 2013 she has been working on the She has established an international communities to help identify, preserve masonry conservation of West Block on reputation for her work with heritage and protect traditional use sites of a Parliament Hill and the conservation of buildings. Her commitment to historic resource nature. Laura is a the bronzes at the Supreme Court and excellence in conservation has led her to graduate of the University of Calgary’s the National War Memorial. four interrelated fields - private practice, Communication & Culture and teaching, design review commissions Museum & Heritage Studies programs Beth Hanna and community activism. In these and is currently completing her CEO capacities she is recognized as an Graduate Professional Certificate in Ontario Heritage architect, an architectural historian and Cultural Heritage Studies through the Trust as a conservation expert. University of Victoria. (Toronto, Ont.) Beth began her Patricia Glanville Michael Greguol career in the Heritage Architect Heritage Specialist museum sector (Regina, Sask.) AECOM and has served the A graduate of (London, Ont.) public in the field of conservation for the Universities A graduate of the more than 30 years. She has a breadth of and Willowbank School of experience in the design and delivery Calgary, Patricia’s of Restoration of inclusive, engaging public programs work specializes in Arts, Michael has and the conservation and stewardship of interdisciplinary project experience significant places. projects from the assessing heritage buildings, bridges, perspective of both landscapes and and cultural heritage landscapes as a Julie Harris buildings. During over 30 years of part of land use planning applications Heritage Consultant professional experience, Patricia most and environmental assessments. He is Contentworks, Inc. recently participated in projects such a member of the Society for Industrial (Ottawa, Ont.) as Claybank Brick Plant, McNaughton Archaeology, and an Intern Member of Julie has more Stores and the Saskatchewan Legislative the Canadian Association of Heritage than 30 years of Dome Rehabilitation Project. Professionals. experience in the areas of heritage planning, policy development and public history. She has extensive northern experience working on projects related to public works,

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

military history, Aboriginal heritage and Jacqueline deterioration of the Prince of Wales protected areas in Canada’s North. Hucker Fort walls using numerical modelling Architectural techniques. Reid Henry Historian President and CEO (Ottawa, Ont.) Dale Jarvis cSPACE Projects Jacqueline Hucker Intangible (Calgary, Alta.) was associated with Cultural Heritage He has over 18 Parks Canada for Development years of experience more than 20 years, Officer working on multi- and for five years managed the Federal Heritage sector initiatives Heritage Buildings Review Office. She Foundation of that build vibrancy is joint author of A Guide To Canadian Newfoundland in cities across Canada. With a focus Architectural Styles and Vimy Canada’s and Labrador on social purpose real estate, Reid is Memorial To A Generation. From 2004- (St. John’s, N.L.) passionate about rethinking historic 2007, Jacqueline served as the historian Dale is the Intangible Cultural Heritage buildings and urban districts as on the international conservation Development Officer for the Heritage places for artistic and entrepreneurial team responsible for the restoration of Foundation of Newfoundland and communities to thrive. Canada’s National Memorial on Vimy Labrador, helping communities to Ridge, in France. safeguard traditional culture. In 2014, Robert K. Hirano Dale served on UNESCO’s Consultative Principal Heritage Colleen Hughes Body for the Intergovernmental Architect M.A. Candidate Committee for the Safeguarding of the RKH Architecture Faculty of Intangible Cultural Heritage. (Lethbridge, Alta.) Anthropology Robert has practiced and Archaeology David Johnston in the field of University of Principal Heritage Conservation Calgary Planner Architecture since (Calgary, Alta.) City of Edmonton 1979 after studies at the Colleen has a (Edmonton, Alta.) University of Calgary. His experience Bachelor of Communication Studies David is a heritage and dedication towards the preservation and a BA in Archaeology. Her research planner and works of historic places can be seen in his interests include Arctic archaeology, on neighbourhood many projects and his long-time toponymy and heritage valuation. inventories, membership in the Association for municipal designations, policy Preservation Technology serving as Andrea Isfeld implementation, program development, a Board member and presenter at the PhD Candidate development review and advisory annual conferences. Department of Civil services. In his past career as a Engineering consultant, he also undertook historic University of neighbourhood inventories and building Calgary evaluations for a range of municipalities Currently a in Alberta. graduate student at the University of Calgary, Andrea’s research has focused on determining the cause of

28 National Trust Conference 2015 28 Lashia Jones Jane Kerr Cynthia Klaassen Cultural Heritage Vice-President President Specialist Ansonia Property Calgary Heritage & Heritage Planner Management Inc. Initiative MHBC Planning (Calgary, Alta.) (Calgary, Alta.) Urban Design Jane is a veterinarian As the Manager, & Landscape and second Visitor Services and Architecture generation member Earned Revenue at (Kitchener, Ont.) of a family real estate the National Music Lashia Jones, BA (Hons), MA, CAHP business. The Kerr family has a passion Centre (NMC) in Calgary, Cynthia is a Cultural Heritage Specialist and for heritage building redevelopment; is responsible for developing and Heritage Planner with MHBC. She has Jane is involved in all aspects of the delivering the visitor experience in over five years’ experience in heritage process from acquisition, financing, Studio Bell. She is currently President of consulting working for both private leasing and construction. She is the Calgary Heritage Initiative Society, and public sector clients providing passionate about preserving heritage past-President of the Doors Open research and analysis for heritage while providing a very desirable product Calgary Association, and co-chair of impact assessments, cultural heritage in the retail, office and niche housing the Governor General award-winning evaluations, heritage designations, markets. “Century Homes Calgary” project. heritage conservation districts, heritage master plans and management plans. Charles Frieda Esau Ketchabaw Klippenstein Ross Keith Managing Director Historian President FIXT POINT Parks Canada & Principal Co-creator / (Winnipeg, Man,) shareholder producer An historian with Nicor Developments The Tale of a Town – Parks Canada Inc. Canada. Agency since (Regina, Sask.) This national oral 1991, Frieda Nicor has a diverse history and theatre company has seen supports National portfolio of him tour this amazing country and Historic Sites across western Canada development projects and has particular interview 1000’s of regular people on by providing research, training and expertise in the subdivision of land their main streets. Charles is also a program advice. She studied at and buildings, syndicating real estate multiplatform media producer and University of Winnipeg and University investments, adaptive reuse of obsolete his projects have won numerous of Manitoba and specializes in prairie buildings and managing Condominium awards including Canadian Comedy settlement, the fur trade, and women’s Corporations and commercial Awards and LA WEB Fest Awards. history. real estate. The company analyzes He frequently produces work for CBC Saskatchewan real estate investment Radio-Canada. He is still looking for the Todd Kristensen opportunities, raises capital for real perfect downtown to open The Museum Regional estate investment projects, and develops, of Living Memory.... any takers? Archaeologist builds and manages these projects for its Archaeological own account and for its investor clients. Survey of Alberta Nicor Developments is the recipient of (Edmonton, Alta.) multiple awards for its adaptive reuse Todd manages projects. heritage resources

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

with the Government of Alberta and is a Library, and as a board member on the Wychwood Barns and Evergreen PhD student at the University of Alberta executive committee of the Community Brickworks, and helped develop a where he studies relationships between Wise Resource Centre. precinct plan for the 80 acre West Don First Nations and landscapes in Western Lands redevelopment. Canada. He is involved in a number Marcus R. of outreach projects designed to share Létourneau Donald Luxton Alberta’s heritage with the public. Principal Principal Letourneau Heritage Donald Luxton Faye Langmaid Consulting Inc. & Associates Inc. Manager of (Kingston, Ont.) (Vancouver, B.C.) Special Projects Marcus is also a Donald Luxton Municipality of Senior Associate with is principal of a Clarington Bray Heritage, an leading western (Toronto, Ont.) Adjunct Assistant Professor at Queen’s Canadian heritage Faye Langmaid is University in Geography & Planning, and cultural resource management Manager of Special and a Research Associate at the Heritage firm, based in Vancouver and Calgary. Projects for the Resources Centre (University of With over thirty years of experience in Municipality of Clarington, the eastern Waterloo). heritage planning, conservation and most edge of the Greater Toronto Area. the development of significant cultural With over 30 years of experience in Inigo (Noy) Lim facilities, he is currently lead consultant the public and private sectors and as a President on the City of Vancouver Heritage landscape architect and planner, Faye Licadel Hotel Action Plan. works with the community on a variety Group, Ltd. of issues. (Maple Creek, Sask.) Gordon Chef as a profession Macdonald Seth Leon and entrepreneur Managing Director Research Officer by heart, Noy was Macdonald Alberta Community born and raised in & Lawrence Timber and Co-operative Philippines. He studied the Hospitality Framing Ltd. Association industry in the UK. He has worked in (Mill Bay, B.C.) (Crowsnest, Alta.) Asia and the U.S.A before migrating to Gord is a master Seth was involved Canada in 2009. Chef Noy loves heritage carpenter and with establishing the and restoration. building conservator with more than Unleashing Local 20 years’ experience working with Capital Program, a successful Alberta Joe Lobko historic timber building. He has led based local financing program. He Partner his carpentry teams through a range has written several reports and policy DTAH of award-winning projects from the briefs on the role of the co-operative (Toronto, Ont.) restoration of medieval castles to the structure to address challenges in rural Joe is a partner at re-creation of a 30-ton Roman war health care, renewable energy, and DTAH, a Toronto machine for BBC Television. He is a Indigenous economic development. Seth firm with a long director of the international non-profit has a master’s degree in development history of public organization the Timber Framers Guild. economics from Dalhousie University, space design across and volunteers in his community as Canada. He was the lead architect for a tool librarian at the Calgary Tool the adaptive re-use of the Artscape

30 National Trust Conference 2015 30 Vivian Manasc Sarah Meilleur the Year; and is currently Edmonton’s Senior Principal Vice-Chair Historian Laureate. Manasc Isaac Calgary Heritage www.daniellemc.com @danicanuck Architects Authority (Edmonton, Alta.) City of Calgary Lindsay Moir Award-winning (Calgary, Alta.) Senior Librarian architect Vivian Sarah Meilleur is Glenbow Museum Manasc has been a born and raised Library shaping Edmonton’s Calgarian, with a (Calgary, Alta.) built environment for over 25 years. passion for heritage. She is currently Lindsay Moir Under her leadership as Senior Principal, the vice-chair for the Calgary Heritage graduated from the her 50-person design firm, Manasc Isaac Authority and has served on the School of Library & Architects, has pioneered sustainable board since 2010. Sarah was a key Information Science building in Alberta, achieving many member of the Century Homes Calgary at the University green “firsts”, including Alberta’s first committee, a 2012 project that won of Toronto and joined the staff of the LEED® Certified building, Edmonton’s the Governor General’s History Award Glenbow Museum Library in 1977. first LEED® Silver building and the first for Community Programming. In her She is currently the Senior Librarian, LEED® Gold building in the Arctic. working life Sarah has spearheaded where she is responsible for collection digitization projects of historical development and in assisting both Michael photos of Calgary as the Community museum staff and researchers in the use McClelland Service Manager of the Humanities, of Glenbow’s extensive documentary Partner Community Heritage and Family collections. E.R.A. Architects History Department at Calgary Public (Toronto, Ont.) Library. She is currently the Manager Kathryn Molloy A registered architect of Service Planning, leading the design Executive Director and founding team at the Calgary Public Library Heritage BC partner of ERA to create possibilities that matter for (Vancouver, B.C.) Architects, Michael Calgarians. In her spare time she enjoys Kathryn has been McClelland has specialized in heritage travelling the world and marveling at the in leadership roles conservation, heritage planning, and history and heritage of other cultures. in the nonprofit urban design for over 25 years. sector for nearly 25 Michael speaks regularly in the media Danielle years. Kathryn has and at public and professional events, Metcalfe-Chenail been Executive Director of Heritage has published numerous articles and Writer, Researcher, BC since September 2013. She has deep edited several books, and has received Historian experience in fundraising for nonprofits numerous awards and honours. (Edmonton, Alta.) as well as developing long and short Danielle Metcalfe- term funding strategies, implementing Chenail is the author individual donor and major gift of For the Love of campaigns, corporate sponsorship, Flying and Polar grant writing, and fee for service Winds, and is working on an anthology programming. project, a WWII-era novel, and a kid’s picture book. She was writer-in- residence at Berton House in Dawson City, Yukon; Chatelaine’s Maverick of

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Charles Rosanne Moss Calgary. Her dissertation focused on the Christopher Partner intersection of urban design and social Moorhouse FGMDA reform in Minneapolis, Minnesota Intern Architect (Montreal, Que.) from 1880 to 1920. She is currently the (Toronto, Ont.) A graduate of Historical Specialist for the Calgary A native Calgarian, McGill University Stampede. Charles received and the Université his M.Arch. from de Montréal (MA Sara Nixon Carleton University Conservation), MA Candidate in Ottawa (2014) and his B.E.D.S. Rosanne’s areas of practice include Public History, from Dalhousie University in Halifax heritage interiors and heritage district Carleton University (2011). Charles’ thesis, which received studies and guidelines. During her (Ottawa, Ont.) numerous awards including the Roger 35 year career, she has participated A recent graduate of Soderstrom Scholarship and the AIA in prominent projects such as the Carleton University, Certificate of Merit, looked at the West Block on Parliament Hill and Sara’s MA research adaptive reuse of the Roundhouse in the Harbor Master’s Building in Old focused on how Hanna, Alberta. As a result of his thesis, Montreal. She is currently President of digital tools can be used to interact Charles is developing a transtextual the Board of CAHP. with heritage spaces. She developed theory towards adaptive reuse and the Grimsby Timescapes iPhone is interested in the way architectural Jim Mountain app, a digital historic walking tour of narrative changes over time as adaptive Director downtown Grimsby, Ontario, as part reuse rewrites the existing condition. Regeneration of her Master’s. She currently works in Projects marketing and social media. Marilyn National Trust Morawetz for Canada John Norman Chair (Ottawa, Ont.) COO Jury Lands Jim has over 25 Bonavista Living / Foundation years of experience Bonavista Creative / (Clarington, Ont.) in the fields of heritage, culture and Bonavista Creative Chair of the Jury community renewal. With the National Workshop Lands Foundation Trust for Canada, he helped establish (Bonavista, N.L.) (formed 2013 to the original Main Street and Heritage A graduate of work with owners and Municipality Regions programs across Canada, and Memorial University, on the revitalization of Camp 30/Boys he is currently working to revive these John is passionate about the built Training School), board member of initiatives as Director of Regeneration landscape of his hometown, Bonavista. Clarington Museums and Archives since Projects. He is in the process of restoring over 2011, founding/active member of ACO- 30 buildings within the community, Clarington (since 2009), chair of Doors Shannon Murray focusing on the growth of a creative Open Clarington since 2010. Awarded Historical Specialist economy. A.K. Sculthorpe Award for advocacy Calgary Stampede (2014). (Calgary, Alta.) Shannon Murray recently earned her PhD in History at the University in

32 National Trust Conference 2015 32 Kevin Nyhoff professional development workshops municipal archivist and a Director on Principal for boards and staff members of the Edmonton and District Historical Nyhoff Architecture museums, heritage organizations and Society. Inc. foundations. She has gained valuable (Calgary, Alta.) insights from her service on a variety Garry Oker Kevin and his of non-profit boards as well as her Past Chief partner Mairi lead heritage conservation and cultural Doig River First a design focused planning work across Canada in the Nation architecture office public, private and non-profit sectors (Fort St. John, B.C.) in Calgary where they are currently over the past 30 years. In addition to her Garry has a broad engaged in the construction of the St. Masters in Historic Preservation, she range of experience Louis Hotel Upgrade and the King has a Certificate in Non-Profit Board working at Edward Arts Hub and Incubator. They Education from BoardSource and a community level have been awarded three Mayor’s Certificate in Fundraising from New resolving socio/economic issues. He Urban Design Awards and two Calgary York University. understands management change in Heritage Lion Awards for their work. political environments and has a passion Gerald A. for developing strategic solutions that Nancy Oakley Oetelaar incorporate traditional values in natural Executive Director Professor resource development. Garry is a Yukon Historical Department of bilingual speaker in English and Dane- & Museums Anthropology and zaa (Athabaskan Language) and is a Association Archaeology traditional song-keeper and composer. (Whitehorse, University of Yukon) Calgary Frits Pannekoek Nancy is Executive A graduate President Emeritus Director of of Southern Illinois University- Athabasca the Yukon Historical & Museums Carbondale, he concentrates on University Association and Treasurer for ICOMOS human perceptions of the landscape. (Calgary, Alta.) Canada. A graduate of the heritage His current research involves the use Frits is the former conservation program at Carleton of alternate worldviews to interpret Director of Historic University’s School of Canadian Studies, the archaeological record of the Sites for Alberta, Nancy has been involved in the fields of Northwestern Plains. and now President public history and heritage conservation of the Calgary Civic in a variety of professional and volunteer Tim O’Grady Trust. The Trust was founded over a capacities. Archivist decade ago to explore new strategies City of Edmonton for heritage preservation, to educate Judy Oberlander Archives the public and the property industry Judy Oberlander (Edmonton, Alta.) about these strategies and to explore and Associates Inc. A graduate of implementation. (Vancouver, B.C.) Western University Judy is a consultant with an MA in who designs fund Public History, development Tim has worked in museums, archives, programs and and heritage resource management customized for over ten years. He is currently a

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Tom Perrigo Jane Pickering Focusing on the history of urban Chief Executive Deputy Director of reform, landscape design and heritage Officer Planning conservation with a focus to the National Trust of City of Vancouver Olmsted Firm in Canada. Australia (WA) (Vancouver, B.C.) (Perth, Australia) As well as leading Michelle Reid Over the past 25 the Regional and Cultural Landscape years, Mr. Perrigo City-wide division, Conservation Lead has demonstrated Jane leads the team City of Calgary outstanding professional and personal working on the Heritage Action Plan Parks commitment to heritage in Western for the City. She has worked in the (Calgary, Alta.) Australia. Under his leadership, the planning field for over 25 years in a Michelle has National Trust has grown to be a career that has spanned work at both the participated in leading organization in heritage and provincial and local levels. the conservation made an outstanding contribution to efforts of many cultural landscapes the conservation and promotion of the Ali Piwowar including a 3000 year old buffalo kill State’s heritage. Under Mr.Perrigo’s M.Arch. site (Paskapoo Slopes), a formal 1912 leadership, the National Trust has Carleton University carpet bed garden (Central Memorial executed many successful heritage (Ottawa, Ont.) Park), a 1913 Edwardian rockery projects in WA, including Wanslea, 57 Ali completed her (Reader Rock Garden), a 1920s vacant Murray Street and Stirling House, all M.Arch. degree at lot garden (Bridgeland-Riverside), a 1967 excellent examples that have resulted in Carleton University modernist park (Confederation Park), strong heritage outcomes. in June and was and a 1975 brutalist fountain (Century awarded the Gardens). Royce Pettyjohn American Institute of Architects 2015 Manager of Henry Adam’s Medal. Her thesis re- Neil Richardson Community imagines wooden grain elevators using President & Economic living heritage. She is an architectural Heritage Property Development / Main researcher at Carleton Immersive Media Corporation Street Program Studio (CIMS) and worked with the (Calgary, Alta.) Coordinator National Trust on projects across the An award-winning (Maple Creek, Sask.) country. company specializing The Maple Creek in the restoration Main Street Program received the Nancy Pollock- and sensitive Canadian Institute of Planners 2014 Ellwand rehabilitation of Alberta’s historic Award of Merit for Rural/Small Town Dean resources. Past works in Calgary include Planning, and the 2015 Lieutenant Faculty of the Lorraine Building, the North-West Governor of Saskatchewan Award for Environmental Travellers Building, and the Lougheed Architectural Heritage Conservation. Design, University Building. Ongoing projects include Royce worked for 20 years with the of Calgary the Snowdon Block in Calgary and the Parks Canada Agency and is currently (Calgary, Alta.) Canmore Hotel in Canmore. Chair of Cypress Hills Destination Area VP, North America Inc., Chair of the Saskatchewan Heritage for the ICOMOS Scientific Committee Foundation, and a Past President of the on Cultural Landscapes, and serving Museums Association of Saskatchewan. on World Heritage review panels.

34 National Trust Conference 2015 34 Christophe Rivet private and public sectors in Montreal, Joseph Sembrat President Berlin and Ottawa. Her research Senior Executive International on modern heritage, sustainable Vice President & Council on conservation and the landscapes of Senior Conservator Monuments and urban waterworks is published in CSI Conservation Sites (ICOMOS) Canadian and international journals. Solutions ULC Canada (Ottawa, Ont.) (Ottawa, Ont.) Carolyn Ryder Joe has been Christophe has Librarian immersed in the worked in heritage for close to 20 years Community conservation field for over 20 years as an archaeologist, a planner, and a Heritage & Family specializing in the analysis, planning, project manager. He’s led numerous History Collection oversight, and implementation of a projects including the development Calgary Public wide-range of conservation assessments of standards and guidelines for the Library and treatments. He has vast experience conservation of archaeological sites (Calgary, Alta.) applying advanced preservation and the inscription of the Landscape of Carolyn Ryder, techniques to a broad range of materials Grand Pré WHS. MLIS, started her career in Special and projects that include hundreds of Collections at the University of Calgary. historic structures. Clint Robertson She is currently responsible for Calgary Senior Heritage Public Library’s Local History collection Robert Shipley Planner and has done extensive programming, Associate Professor City of Calgary outreach, collection development School of Planning, (Calgary, Alta.) and reference work on local heritage University of Clint has been a matters. She has been involved with the Waterloo heritage planner Heritage Triangle, Heritage Roundtable (Waterloo, Ont.) with the City of and Governor General Award winning Robert Shipley is an Calgary for eight Century Homes Calgary project. Associate Professor years. Previously, he worked at the in the School of Ontario Heritage Trust (Toronto) and Harry Sanders Planning, University of Waterloo, Donald Luxton & Assoc. (Vancouver) Historical Director of the Heritage Resource documenting places for the Canadian Consultant Centre and a former Research Fellow of Register of Historic Places. Clint is a (Calgary, Alta.) Oxford Brookes University, UK. He is graduate of Simon Fraser University and Harry Sanders is a member of the Canadian Institute of The George Washington University. a Calgary-based Planners and a member of the Canadian historical consultant Association of Heritage Professionals. Susan Ross and freelance writer. Assistant Professor He is best known Carleton University, as “Harry the Historian” on CBC School of Canadian Radio One and as the Calgary Heritage Studies Authority 2012 Historian Laureate. (Ottawa, Ont.) Susan Ross is an architect specialized in conservation and sustainability. She has practiced in the

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Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Nigel Shrive sinclairstudio inc., an interdisciplinary Carol Stokes Professor of Civil enterprise engaged in a spectrum of Archivist Engineering global design & planning projects. City of Calgary University of His expertise includes design theory Corporate Records, Archives Calgary & practice, agile architecture, tall (Calgary, Alta.) A graduate of Oxford building, informal settlements, cultural, With degrees from the University of University, Nigel spiritual & indigenous dimensions, and Alberta, the Alberta College of Art (now has researched into sustainability. ACAD), and the University of Calgary, masonry for many Carol has worked at The City’s Archives years. More recently he has tested walls Malcolm Sissons since 1998. She has developed a keen representing those on the Parliamentary President interest in local municipal government Precinct, been involved in assessing the I-XL Industries Ltd. history. cause of distress in the Prince of Wales (Medicine Hat, Fort and developed graduate courses on Alta.) Glenn Sutter conservation of historic structures from Malcolm Sissons, Curator, Human a structural engineering perspective. President, I-XL Ecology Industries Ltd., is Royal Saskatchewan Lorne Simpson fourth generation in Museum Principal the family brick business. During his 35 (Regina, Sask.) Simpson Roberts year career, he has served as President Dr. Glenn Sutter is Architects of the Clay Brick Association of Canada Curator of Human (Calgary, Alta.) and the Canadian Masonry Research Ecology at the Royal Lorne is a Institute, member of CSA Committees Saskatchewan Museum and currently conservation and Chair of the Heritage Resources a Governor of The National Trust. architect and Committee, City of Medicine Hat. Through his research and teaching, senior partner with Glenn tries to foster a “culture of Simpson Roberts Rollin Stanley sustainability” to help us meet the Architects in Calgary. He completed General Manager challenge of living well on a limited a MA in the Conservation of Historic Planning, planet. Structures at the Institute of Advanced Development Architectural Studies, York, England & Assessment Will Teron and has completed conservation projects City of Calgary P.Eng. CAHP throughout southern Alberta for the (Calgary, Alta.) Director past 25 years. Rollin Stanley has Heritage & worked in four major Investigation Dr. Brian R. metro areas in North America, in urban, Tacoma Engineers Sinclair suburban and rural environments and (Guelph, Ont.) Professor of distressed and booming urban areas. A Professional Architecture and In Calgary, he manages planning, Structural Engineer Environmental development, permitting, inspections specializing in the assessment, analysis Design and property and business assessment. and preservation of heritage buildings. University of He is an Expert Member of ICOMOS Calgary International Scientific Committee on (Calgary, Alta.) Analysis and Restoration of Structures Brian R. Sinclair is president of of Architectural Heritage. Fusing hard

36 National Trust Conference 2015 36 engineering science and restoration and “The Value of Conservation.” Tom Urbaniak techniques allows Will to develop Recently David was responsible for Chair practical and innovative solutions to all “Heritage Works – The use of historic National Trust his heritage projects. buildings in regeneration.” Board of Governors (Sydney, N.S.) Kate Thompson Marla Touw Tom Urbaniak chairs Architect, Director Locations the Political Science of Development and Logistics Department at Cape Calgary Municipal Coordination Breton University Land Corporation Alberta Film and also teaches in CBU’s MBA program (Calgary, Alta.) Commission in Community Economic Development. A registered Government He is the author of four books, member of the of Alberta focusing on organizational governance, Alberta Architects (Edmonton, Alta.) municipal leadership and social policy. Association (AAA) and active Member Marla enjoyed a successful 13 year He leads projects in affordable housing of the Royal Architectural Institute career in the Alberta Film and and community renewal, and works of Canada (MRAIC), Kate manages Television industry working on high- closely with multicultural communities. architectural controls for East Village, profile projects such as Rat Race, Open ensuring all plans for new development Range and Brokeback Mountain before Philip align with CMLC’s vision for the joining the Alberta Film Commission Vandermey neighbourhood. Currently, she is leading 6 years ago. She specializes in location Founding Partner development of the city’s New Central and logistics, providing creative SPECTACLE Library. location ideas and suggestions to film Bureau for productions interested in Alberta. Architecture and David Tomback Urbanism Development Mathieu (Calgary, Alta) Economics Director Tremblay Philip has worked Historic England Collections and with award (formerly English expositions manager winning firms in Calgary, Montreal, Heritage) Musée de société des Barcelona and Rotterdam on a wide (London, England) Deux-Rives range of project types around the In April 1993 he (Salaberry-de- world, including train stations, towers, joined Historic Valleyfield, Que.) affordable housing prototypes, offices, England where he has a wide remit. This An ethnologist public spaces, museums, libraries includes providing in-house commercial graduated from Laval University and master plans, and is a sessional property advice to the organisation; (QC), Mathieu specializes in the instructor at the University of Calgary. advice on levels of grant, listed building documentation, preservation and consents especially in connection presentation of cultural heritage and with enabling development; re-use of regional industrial history. He has redundant historic buildings; and the led or participated in various projects economics of conservation. He has been including data collection, oral accounts, involved in three significant economic thematic expositions and historical studies, namely “The Investment research. Performance of Listed Buildings,” “The Listing of Buildings - the effect on value”

37 National Trust Conference 2015 37 National Trust Conference 2015 Heritage Energized

Speakers, Moderators and Tour Leaders

Bob van Wegen McGill-Queen’s University Press (2013) Richard Witt Heritage Director and Canadian Cities in Transition: Principal Calgary Heritage Perspectives for an Urban Age, 5th Quadrangle Initiative edition, published by Oxford University Architects Limited (Calgary, Alta.) Press (2015). (Toronto, Ont.) Bob is a consultant Richard promotes in urban Matthew the development planning, heritage Wangler of cities through conservation, Executive Director urban intensification, community engagement and Historic Resources master planning, sustainable design and communications. He is founder of the Management adaptive reuse. He leads a wide array of Calgary Heritage Initiative, is a board Alberta Culture and urban projects from buildings to large member of Doors Open YYC and was a Tourism master plans and is also active in the leader of the Governor General’s Award- (Edmonton, Alta.) development community serving as: winning Century Homes Calgary Matthew holds a Vice Chair - City of Vaughan Design project. master’s degree in history from the Review Panel, member of the Advisory University of Alberta and has worked board for Urban Land Institute, Toronto Erin van Wijk in the heritage field for over 15 years. and Chairman (Canadian chapter) of Heritage Planner Much of his work has focused on the Council on Tall Buildings Urban City of Calgary exploring and illuminating the history Habitat. (Calgary, Alta.) of Alberta’s many cultural communities. A graduate of Jay Yanota the University of Kelvin Whalen Business Consultant Calgary’s Master Vice-President, (Crowsnest Pass, of Planning, Urban Land Development Alberta) Design stream and Kaitlin Corporation A graduate of of University of Victoria’s Cultural (Stouffville, Ont.) SAIT in Electronic Resource Management Programs, Erin Kelvin Whalen Engineering. Jay has been working the City of Calgary’s has been the vice pursued a business planning department for 15 years, the president of land management career last two of which have been in Heritage. development at becoming VP, North American Oil, Gas Kaitlin Corporation since 1991. Kaitlin and Water division before becoming Ryan Walker is a midsize developer/builder of several VP, Healthcare IT. Jay grew up in the Associate Professor communities in Southern Ontario with Crowsnest Pass and pursued his career Regional and Urban a focus in Durham Region. Kelvin has in Calgary for 40 years before returning Planning a BASc (Civil Engineering) from the to the Crowsnest Pass in 2012. In the University of University of Waterloo and an MBA Pass he consults and also chairs the Saskatchewan from York University. Crowsnest Opportunity Development (Saskatoon, Sask.) Cooperative who re-developed a Ryan specializes in heritage building into a multi-purpose urban planning and commercial-residential complex. design, with an interest in planning with Indigenous communities. He is co-editor and co-author of Reclaiming Indigenous Planning, published by

38 National Trust Conference 2015 38 NATIONAL TRUST FOR CANADA

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39 National Trust Conference 2015 39 The Society was created by an Act of the Alberta Legislature in 1907. It encourages the study of the history of Alberta and Canada, to rescue from oblivion the memories of the original inhabitants, the early missionaries, fur traders, explorers, and settlers of the north and west of Canada, to obtain and preserve narratives in print, manuscript or otherwise of their travels, adventures, labour and observations, to secure and preserve objects generally illustrative of the civil, religious, literary and natural history of the country.

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41 National Trust Conference 2015 41 Let yourself be guided Laissez-vous guider Heritage Lighthouse Program Le programme des phares patrimoniaux

Honour the past Shape the present Envision the future

42 National Trust Conference 2015 42 Thank you to our sponsors!

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44 National Trust Conference 2015