Conference Program – 2016

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Conference Program – 2016

National Trust Conference 2016

In association with the Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals

Conference Program

October 20-22, 2016 Hamilton Convention Centre, Experience Innovation Excellence

THE CLIFFORD GROUP

At Clifford Group, we’ve earned a sterling reputation as Our restoration division offers a full Our masonry division has built a solid leaders in masonry, cladding, and historical restoration. range of consultation, restoration, name for itself within the masonry and conservation services. We’re experts industry. Our masonry team works Over the years, our dedication to excellence has brought in all aspects of, and materials used in, diligently to produce consistently about revolutionary changes to the technology, product the construction and recovery of our high standards of quality, production, development, and equipment in our field. built heritage. and innovation.

1190 Birchmount Road 4500 Bankers Hall East, Scarborough ON M1P 2B8 855 - 2nd Street West [email protected] Phone 416.691.2341 Calgary AB T2P 4K7 www.cliffordrestoration.com Fax 416.691.1329 Phone 403.909.9481 www.cliffordmasonry.ca

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Conference Committees

Conference Coordinator Chris Wiebe – Manager, Heritage Policy and Public Programs, National Trust for Hamilton 2016 Program Advisory Committee Victoria Angel – Senior Heritage Planner, ERA Architects, , ON Natalie Bull – Executive Director, National Trust for Canada, Ottawa, ON Sean Fraser – Director, Heritage Programs and Operations, Ontario Heritage Trust, Toronto, ON Alissa Golden – Heritage Project Specialist, Planning and Economic Development, City of Hamilton, ON James Hamilton – Supervisor, Culture Services, Tourism Culture and Sport, Government of Ontario, Toronto, ON Kayla Jonas-Galvin – Heritage Operations Manager, ARA Heritage, Kitchener, ON Richard Moorhouse – Vice-Chair, National Trust for Canada, Toronto, ON Susan Ross – Assistant Professor, School of Indigenous and Canadian Studies, Carleton University, Ottawa, ON Carolyn Samko – Senior Project Manager, Tourism and Culture Division, City of Hamilton, ON Michael Seaman – Ontario Governor, National Trust for Canada & Director of Planning, Town of Grimsby, ON Gerry Zegerius – Director and Chair, Conference Committee, Canadian Association of Heritage Professionals, & Associate, Tacoma Engineers, Guelph, ON Hamilton 2016 Local Advisory Committee Richard Allen – Director, Renew Hamilton Project, Hamilton Chamber of Commerce Rebecca Beatty - Principal, Rebecca Beatty Architect, Adjunct Professor, Alissa Denham-Robinson – Chair, Hamilton Municipal Heritage Committee & Architectural Manager, KNYMH Inc. (Architecture + Solutions) Diane Gower Dent – President, Heritage Hamilton Foundation Walter Furlan – Furlan Conservation Martinus Geleynse – Creative Director/President, urbanicity Omnimedia Inc. Robert Hamilton – Chair, Hamilton Historical Board, Hamilton, ON Megan Hobson – Heritage Consultant, Megan Hobson & Associates, Heritage Consulting Services Nicholas Kevlahan – Durand Neighbourhood Association Lynda Lukasik – Executive Director, Environment Hamilton Robin McKee – Owner, Historical Perceptions & Vice-Chair, Hamilton Historical Board Graham McNally – Chair, Hamilton/Burlington Society of Architects & Principal, Toms + McNally Design Barbara Murray – Architectural Conservancy Ontario, Hamilton Region Branch Sonia Mrva – Curator, Heritage Policy, Tourism and Culture, Planning and Economic Development, City of Hamilton Ned Nolan – President, Kirkendall Neighbourhood Association Tim Potocic – Director, & Co-Owner, UP Holdings Donna Reid – Creator/Owner, The Hamilton Store Yonatan Rozenszajn – Director, Durand Neighbourhood Association Chelsey Tyers – Cultural Heritage Planner, Development Planning, Heritage and Design, City of Hamilton

Thank you to our Conference Partners

3 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising Conference at a Glance

Wed. Thursday Friday, October 21 Saturday, October 22 Oct. 19 October 20 Hamilton Convention Centre Hamilton Convention Centre

7:30 AM Continental Breakfast with Exhibitors Continental Breakfast with Exhibitors

Location: Chedoke Foyer, 7:30 – 8:30 am Location: Chedoke Foyer, 7:30 – 8:30 am

8:30 AM Session 1: Plenary– Big Bang: Heritage in an Session 5: Plenary – Hamilton Rising: Heritage & the Civic Renaissance

9:00 AM Expanding Universe Location: Chedoke BC, 8:30 – 10:00am Location: Chedoke BC, 8:30 – 10:00 am Keanin Loomis; Celeste Licorish; Sarah Wayland; Tim Potocic & Julian Smith Rodney Harrison & Franklin Vagnone 10:00 AM Break - Exhibitors & Poster Sessions Break - Exhibitors & Poster Sessions 10:00 – 10:30am 10:00 – 10:30am 2A: Power of 2B: 2C: CAHP- 2D: Indigenous 2E: National 2F: Field 2G: Tour 6A: Stimulating 6B: Recognizing 6C: Adding & 6D: New 6E: Parks 1.

Place: Revitalizing & Engineering in Heritage, Truth, Forum on Lister Block James Downtown Urban & Rural Subtracting: Relevance for Canada Heritage as Transforming the World of Reconciliation Heritage - Terracotta Street Revitalization - Indigenous Contemp. Historic Sites Heritage 11:00 AM Marketing Places of Faith Heritage Planning Repair North Smarter Niagara Heritage Layers in Conservation

Location: (Jean Tool Historic and Climate Departs Departs Contexts Change Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Ground Ground Location: Location: Location: Location: Room Location: Chedoke BC Webster AB Webster C Chedoke A Room 314 Floor Foyer Floor Chedoke A Chedoke BC Webster C 314 Webster AB

of Faith Location: H CC (Room 314) Foyer Building Strength: Regenerating Places 12:00 PM Lunch Lunch Lunch

Location: Lincoln Alexander Centre (160 King Location: Chedoke BC (12:00pm – 1:30pm) Location: Chedoke BC (12:00pm – 1:30pm) 12:00 -

Special Meetings – Heritage Organizations & Reconciliation Special Meetings – Heritage Certificate Discussion Group Location: Room 314 12:30pm (Room 314) & Places of Faith Lunch (Chedoke BC) 7G: Field

Location: (610 ) 3A: Spark 3B: Heritage, 3C: Preserving 3D: Urban 3E: CAHP- 3F: Field 7A: Revival 7B: Building 7C: Heritage & 7D: CAHP - 7E: Welcoming Exploring 1:30 PM Barton Session - Gentrification Rural Heritage: Exploration: Conservation Toronto, Challenges: Rural Sustainability Heritage New Voices: Historic and Working Buildings & Beyond the Challenges: Hamilton Balancing Resilience Bogeymen: Strategies for Street

Districts Class Neigh- Landscapes Aesthetics of Mixing New & Buffalo Economics & Debunking Making Departs bourhoods Decay and Old Station Conservation Building Path. Heritage Ground Myths Relevant Floor Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: (Box lunch provided) Departs Ground Floor Foyer Foyer Webster AB Chedoke BC Room 314 Chedoke A Webster C Departs Chedoke A Webster AB Webster C Room 314 Chedoke BC Session 6F & 7F: Field - Heritage Inventories: New Strategies and Ross Fischer Gallery) & HCC , Room 314 (Respectively) Ground Floor Foyer 3:00 PM Break & Exhibitors & Poster Sessions Break & Exhibitors & Poster Sessions 3:00 – 3:30 pm 3:00 – 3:30pm 4A: Piecing 4B: Spark 4C: Cultural 4D: Conserving 4E: 4F: Field the Puzzle: Session – Landscapes: Diversity: Conservation Hamilton Session 8: Closing Plenary – Vertical Lift: Heritage Places and Creation

Mighty Sites: Regenerating Historic Sites Heritage Community Managing Communities Education: City Hall Location: Chedoke BC

Shop Location: HCC (Room 314) Conservation and Diversity Change Stories, Making 3:30 – 5:00pm 3G & 4G: Field - Willowbank School (Bus Tour) Departs Ground Floor Foyer Tours - Bus & Walking Location: All tours depart from the Hamilton Convention Centre (1 Summers Lane) Districts Structures Connections Departs

Downtowns Rising: Creative Solutions to Save St. E E) Location: Location: Location: Location: Ground Clyde Wagner; Jennifer Jonas & Leonard Farlinger, Bob Doidge & Amy King

Conservation of Metal Finishes in Modern Architecture - Location: Mattawa Industries (1632 Burlington St. E) Chedoke A Chedoke BC Webster C Webster AB Location: Floor Foyer

4:00 PM Special Meetings – National Council & Roundtable on Heritage Education Hamilton Indigenous Heritage Roundtable – Going Beyond Consultation Location: Art Gallery of

Punching Above Your Weight: Fundraising for a Small Room 314 5:00 PM Dinner CAHP AGM National Trust for Canada AGM on your Room 314, 5:00 –6:30pm Dinner on your own Scottish Rite (4 Queen Street) 5:00 – 6:00pm 6:00 PM own Sponsor Appreciation Dinner on your own Cocktail Liuna Station National Trust Donor Reception 6:00 – 7:30pm The Round Room, Scottish Rite Club of Hamilton Invitation Only 7:00 PM (4 Queen St.) 6:30 – 7:30pm Invitation Only Closing Celebration Keynote & Reception Awards Ceremony and Reception Featuring “Barton Street” - Video/music installation by A Tale of a Town The Hamilton Club (6 Main St. E) Liuna Station The Grand Ballroom, Scottish Rite Club of Hamilton 8:00 PM 7:00 – 10:00pm 7:30 – 10:30pm (4 Queen Street) 7:30 – 9:30pm

4 National Trust Conference 2016 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising Conference at a Glance

Wed. Thursday Friday, October 21 Saturday, October 22 Oct. 19 October 20 Hamilton Convention Centre Hamilton Convention Centre

7:30 AM Continental Breakfast with Exhibitors Continental Breakfast with Exhibitors

Location: Chedoke Foyer, 7:30 – 8:30 am Location: Chedoke Foyer, 7:30 – 8:30 am

8:30 AM Session 1: Plenary– Big Bang: Heritage in an Session 5: Plenary – Hamilton Rising: Heritage & the Civic Renaissance

9:00 AM Expanding Universe Location: Chedoke BC, 8:30 – 10:00am Location: Chedoke BC, 8:30 – 10:00 am Keanin Loomis; Celeste Licorish; Sarah Wayland; Tim Potocic & Julian Smith Rodney Harrison & Franklin Vagnone 10:00 AM Break - Exhibitors & Poster Sessions Break - Exhibitors & Poster Sessions 10:00 – 10:30am 10:00 – 10:30am 2A: Power of 2B: 2C: CAHP- 2D: Indigenous 2E: National 2F: Field 2G: Tour 6A: Stimulating 6B: Recognizing 6C: Adding & 6D: New 6E: Parks 1.

Place: Revitalizing & Engineering in Heritage, Truth, Forum on Lister Block James Downtown Urban & Rural Subtracting: Relevance for Canada Heritage as Transforming the World of Reconciliation Heritage - Terracotta Street Revitalization - Indigenous Contemp. Historic Sites Heritage 11:00 AM Marketing Places of Faith Heritage Planning Repair North Smarter Niagara Heritage Layers in Conservation

Location: Art Gallery of Hamilton (Jean Tool Historic and Climate Departs Departs Contexts Change Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Ground Ground Location: Location: Location: Location: Room Location: Chedoke BC Webster AB Webster C Chedoke A Room 314 Floor Foyer Floor Chedoke A Chedoke BC Webster C 314 Webster AB of Faith Location: H CC (Room 314) Foyer Building Strength: Regenerating Places 12:00 PM Lunch Lunch Lunch

Location: Lincoln Alexander Centre (160 King Location: Chedoke BC (12:00pm – 1:30pm) Location: Chedoke BC (12:00pm – 1:30pm) 12:00 -

Special Meetings – Heritage Organizations & Reconciliation Special Meetings – Heritage Certificate Discussion Group Location: Room 314 12:30pm (Room 314) & Places of Faith Lunch (Chedoke BC) 7G: Field

Location: Dundurn Castle (610 York Boulevard) Exploring 1:30 PM 3A: Spark 3B: Heritage, 3C: Preserving 3D: Urban 3E: CAHP- 3F: Field 7A: Revival 7B: Building 7C: Heritage & 7D: CAHP - 7E: Welcoming Session - Gentrification Rural Heritage: Exploration: Conservation Toronto, Challenges: Rural Sustainability Heritage New Voices: Barton Historic and Working Buildings & Beyond the Challenges: Hamilton Balancing Resilience Bogeymen: Strategies for Street Districts Class Neigh- Landscapes Aesthetics of Mixing New & Buffalo Economics & Debunking Making Departs bourhoods Decay and Old Station Conservation Building Path. Heritage Myths Relevant Ground Floor Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: Location: (Box lunch provided) Departs Ground Floor Foyer Webster AB Chedoke BC Room 314 Chedoke A Webster C Departs Chedoke A Webster AB Webster C Room 314 Chedoke BC Foyer Session 6F & 7F: Field - Heritage Inventories: New Strategies and Ross Fischer Gallery) & HCC , Room 314 (Respectively) Ground Floor Foyer 3:00 PM Break & Exhibitors & Poster Sessions Break & Exhibitors & Poster Sessions 3:00 – 3:30 pm 3:00 – 3:30pm 4A: Piecing 4B: Spark 4C: Cultural 4D: Conserving 4E: 4F: Field the Puzzle: Session – Landscapes: Diversity: Conservation Hamilton Session 8: Closing Plenary – Vertical Lift: Heritage Places and Creation

Mighty Sites: Regenerating Historic Sites Heritage Community Managing Communities Education: City Hall Location: Chedoke BC

Shop Location: HCC (Room 314) Conservation and Diversity Change Stories, Making 3:30 – 5:00pm 3G & 4G: Field - Willowbank School (Bus Tour) Departs Ground Floor Foyer Tours - Bus & Walking Location: All tours depart from the Hamilton Convention Centre (1 Summers Lane) Districts Structures Connections Departs

Downtowns Rising: Creative Solutions to Save St. E E) Location: Location: Location: Location: Ground Clyde Wagner; Jennifer Jonas & Leonard Farlinger, Bob Doidge & Amy King

Conservation of Metal Finishes in Modern Architecture - Location: Mattawa Industries (1632 Burlington St. E) Chedoke A Chedoke BC Webster C Webster AB Location: Floor Foyer

4:00 PM Special Meetings – National Council & Roundtable on Heritage Education Hamilton Indigenous Heritage Roundtable – Going Beyond Consultation Location: Art Gallery of

Punching Above Your Weight: Fundraising for a Small Room 314 5:00 PM Dinner CAHP AGM National Trust for Canada AGM on your Room 314, 5:00 –6:30pm Dinner on your own Scottish Rite (4 Queen Street) 5:00 – 6:00pm 6:00 PM own Sponsor Appreciation Dinner on your own Cocktail Liuna Station National Trust Donor Reception 6:00 – 7:30pm The Round Room, Scottish Rite Club of Hamilton Invitation Only 7:00 PM (4 Queen St.) 6:30 – 7:30pm Invitation Only Closing Celebration Keynote & Reception Awards Ceremony and Reception Featuring “Barton Street” - Video/music installation by A Tale of a Town The Hamilton Club (6 Main St. E) Liuna Station The Grand Ballroom, Scottish Rite Club of Hamilton 8:00 PM 7:00 – 10:00pm 7:30 – 10:30pm (4 Queen Street) 7:30 – 9:30pm

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Conference Site Map

Hamilton Convention Centre Scottish Rite Club Lister Block Hamilton Club 1 Summers Lane 4 Queen Street South 28 James Street North 6 Main Street East

Sheraton Hamilton LIUNA Station Lincoln Alexander Centre Art Gallery of Hamilton 116 King Street West 360 James Street North 160 King Street East 123 King Street West

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Wednesday, October 19

Wednesday, October 19 as it is shared between peoples. • Dr. Ron Williamson (Chief • Articulating a new and productive Archaeologist & Managing 8:45 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. vision for engagement. How do Partner, ASI) Hamilton Indigenous Heritage we make it work effectively so that Roundtable 2016 it builds true understanding and 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Going Beyond Consultation: meaningful dialogue? Workshop – Building Strength: Navigating Worldviews in the Search Regenerating Places of Faith for Meaningful Engagement Going Beyond Consultation will provide a valuable and important Location: Hamilton Location: Art Gallery of Hamilton opportunity for exchange between Convention Centre, (123 King Street West) traditional Indigenous conservation Room 314 Joey and Toby Tanenbaum Pavilion practitioners and those involved in conventional heritage practice, with Places of faith anchor and shape our This event is made possible thanks to the goal of strengthening existing communities. Yet many congregations generous support from the Ontario relationships and forging new ones. are facing declining attendance and Ministry of Tourism, Culture and insufficient funding to maintain and Sport Roundtable Advisory Committee: operate their historic buildings. These • Paul General (Co-Chair, Wildlife important community assets are in a Manager, Six Nations Land & period of transition across the country, Resources) and the Hamilton Region is no • Carolyn King (Co-Chair, Former exception. What is their future? How Chief, Mississaugas of the New can they continue to contribute in a Credit First Nation) positive way to their communities? In October 2015, Moh-Kins-Tsis | • Lorna Crowshoe (Alberta Calgary Indigenous Heritage Governor, National Trust & Issues Whether it is to keep their doors open Roundtable brought together Strategist, Aboriginal Portfolio, through renewed focus on missional professionals and community City of Calgary) work, collaborations to generate new members to understand how • Beth Hanna (Chief Executive revenue streams, or making strategic Indigenous and non-Indigenous Officer, Ontario Heritage Trust) real estate decisions, or through protocols for protecting heritage • Rick Hill (Senior Project meeting community needs under a new places could be aligned. The Hamilton Coordinator, Deyohahá:ge: ownership structure, the future of these Indigenous Heritage Roundtable 2016, Indigenous Knowledge Centre, Six places depends on urgent collaboration Going Beyond Consultation, will build Nations Polytechnic) among faith group leaders, community on this momentum by drawing on • Ian Kerr-Wilson (Manager, organizations, elected officials, the Ontario case studies to understand Heritage Resource Management, heritage and business communities, how true relationships are built and City of Hamilton) universities and more. nourished over time. • Sheri Longboat (Assistant Professor, School of Enviro. Design The National Trust for Canada and Key themes for the Roundtable: & Rural Development, University Faith & The Common Good are excited • Advocating for strong of Guelph) to offer this half-day workshop that will relationships that are rooted in a • Dr. Gary Warrick (Associate share inspiring examples from across shared understanding of world Professor, Indigenous Studies, the country and proven regeneration views. Laurier Brantford) strategies and tools that can be applied • Understanding the meaning of • Paula Whitlow (Museum Director, to all types of places of faith, regardless place and the meaning of culture Woodland Cultural Centre) of their ownership

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Thursday, October 20

Workshop Leaders: 8:30 a.m. – 4:30 p.m. • Justine Posluszny Bello (Vice • Kendra Fry (Trinity-St. Paul’s Conservation of Metal Finishes in President of Operations, Centre for Faith, Justice and the Modern Architecture Conservation Solutions Inc.) Arts) Location: Mattawa Industries • Kelly Caldwell (Conservator, • Robert Pajot (Project Leader, (1632 Burlington St. E) Conservation Solutions Inc.) Regeneration, National Trust for • Kevin McSwain Canada) The analysis and restoration of (MattawaIndustrial Services Inc.) original decorative finishes on modern 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. architectural metals is not always well 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Punching Above Your Weight: understood. As a result, such testing National Council Meeting Fundraising for a Small Shop or treatment is less well integrated Location: Art Gallery of Hamilton Location: Hamilton Convention into regular preservation practice than (123 King Street West), Jean and Ross Centre, Room 314 that of other materials and finishes, Fischer Gallery particularly those in architectural By Invitation. Non-profits are under contexts such as decorative painting or pressure to achieve plasterwork. Leaders of province-wide increasing fundraising This workshop presents an heritage organizations goals with limited introductory approach to from across Canada meet resources in a sector where understanding, identifying, to discuss common issues competition for donations is fierce. investigating and restoring original and strategies. In this workshop learn how to make decorative architectural metal effective use of your resources to finishes. It includes case studies of For more information: Natalie Bull expand your audiences, attract successfully completed projects. [email protected] new donors, and take advantage of It will also demonstrate how a evolving fundraising trends. variety of instruments from the small and relatively inexpensive Workshop Leaders: (ultrasonic thickness gauge) to the • Alison Faulknor (Director, New large and highly sophisticated (x-ray Initiatives, National Trust for fluorescence) can be used to help 9:00 a.m. – 4:00 p.m. Canada) characterize both the nature and the Downtowns Rising: Creative • Nhanci Wright (Fund relative condition of these finishes and Solutions to Save Downtowns Development Specialist, National their substrates. Additionally, there Location: Lincoln Alexander Centre Trust for Canada) will be a hands-on workshop which (160 King Street East) will demonstrate different cleaning Thursday, October 20 methods and materials that are Downtowns Rising will available to the user. draw on expertise and case Workshops & Meetings examples from Hamilton Workshop Leaders: and , 7:00 a.m. – 5:00 p.m. • Joe Sembrat (Senior Executive inspiring participants to imagine what Registration Desk Vice President & Senior is possible and arming them with Location: HCC, 3rd Floor, Chedoke Conservator, Conservation creative solutions and best practices Foyer Solutions Inc.) for downtown revitalization. The • Mark Rabinowitz (Executive Vice day will combine inspired plenary President, Conservation Solutions presentations with a series of mobile Inc.) workshops.

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Thursday, October 20

Keynote speaker: Mathew Wagner, Many historic sites open Heritage academics and Vice President, National Main Street to the public are at a cross students meet to discuss Center, U.S National Trust for Historic roads, faced with limited issues relevant to heritage Preservation. government funding, education and training in major capital costs and increased Canada. Workshop Presenters: competition from more dynamic • Jim Mountain (Director of attractions. They must re-invent For more information: Chris Wiebe Regeneration Projects, National themselves or face a continued decline. [email protected] Trust for Canada) Groups trying to save a beloved • Kay Matthews (Executive Director, historic place at risk by opening it to Thursday, October 20 Ontario BIA Association) the public are faced with an uphill • Darren Shock (Director, battle to convince potential partners of Learning Tours Downtown Revitalization its viability. Program, Ontario Ministry of (Bus & Walking) Agriculture, Food, and Rural This workshop will explore creative Affairs) new operational models being All tours depart the Hamilton • Charles Ketchabaw (Tale of a implemented in Canada and the Convention Centre (1 Summers Town Productions Canada 150 United States, and will engage Lane) from the ground floor lobby Main Street) participants in exercises that promptly at times shown. No • Richard Allen (RENEW demonstrate how their historic site latercomers admitted. Please arrive HAMILTON, Hamilton Chamber can be transformed into a valued actor at least 15 minutes before scheduled of Commerce) in the social and commercial fabric of departure. All tours require • Glen Norton (Manager, City their community additional registration fees of Hamilton Urban Renewal, Planning & Economic Workshop Leaders: 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Development Department) • Ian Kerr-Wilson (Manager, Indigenous Heritage in Hamilton • Susie Braithwaite (Executive Museums and Heritage Bus Tour Director, Hamilton International Presentation, City of Hamilton) Village BIA) • Franklin Vagnone (Co-author, • Ashleigh Bell (Curator Hamilton The Anarchist’s Guide to House Re-Imagined Workshops) Museums & President, Twisted Preservation, New York, USA) • Robert Pajot (Project Leader, Regeneration, National Trust for Hamilton has a rich Indigenous Canada) heritage with many places of sacred • Julie Normandeau (Manager, Sites and cultural significance. This tour and Partnerships, National Trust will explore a variety of sites such as for Canada) the Paleo-Indian (ca 12000 BP) Mount 9:00 a.m. – 3:30 p.m. Albion West site, a rich legacy of sites Mighty Sites: Regenerating Historic 12:00 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. in the Red Hill Valley including two Sites National Roundtable on Heritage Middle/Transitional Woodland sites, Location: Dundurn Castle Education and the ancestral Neutral site in the (610 York Boulevard) Location: Hamilton Convention valley (ca AD 1350) at Kings Forest Centre, Room 314 Park.

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Thursday, October 20

Leaders: Robert MacDonald (Senior . Note this tour includes a lot of stairs. Archaeologist & Assistant Managing Leader: Robin McKee (Historian & Leader: Barbara Murray (President, Partner, ASI) & Carolyn King (Former Principal, Historical Perceptions, Vice- ACO Hamilton) Chief, Mississaugas of the New Credit Chair, Hamilton Historical Board) First Nation 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. 9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. Westdale Garden-City Suburb and 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Urban Renewal in Hamilton the Historic Village of Dundas Hamilton: The City Beautiful Walking Tour Bus Tour Bus Tour Led by local architectural journalist This tour will focus on the historic This tour explores the major City Thomas Allen, this tour will take you Town of Dundas, which is now part of Beautiful projects undertaken in the around the downtown core, starting at the amalgamated City of Hamilton but early 20th century that transformed City Hall, to look at the urban renewal the bus route will take us through the the North-Western Entrance to the projects and architecture of the late historic core of Westdale, a garden- City of Hamilton and created large ‘50s, ‘60s and ‘70s that drastically city suburb laid out in 1917 as the city scale public gardens and spacious new altered Hamilton’s cityscape. From expanded westward. Located at the residential suburbs in the east end. urban malls to brutalist architecture base of the Escarpment at the mouth Highlights include a guided tour of the and modern planning, the tour will of the , the “Valley newly renovated Rock Garden , and include insight about the architects, Town” of Dundas was an important the Memorial Garden, a little-known politicians and planners who changed milling and industrial town in the garden ruin, both designed by Carl the urban fabric for better or for worse. early 19th century. Highlights include Borgstrom and part of Royal Botanical Leader: Thomas Allen (Architectural tours of the Dundas District Lofts, Garden, the High Level Bridge, Gage Journalist, Rebuild Hamilton) a Collegiate Gothic high-school Park fountain, designed by John M. converted to residential lofts, the Lyle, and the St. Clair Boulevard 9:30 a.m. – 11:30 a.m. former Valley City Manufacturing Heritage Conservation District. Hamilton’s Core: 200 Years in the complex, still a project at the visioning Leaders: Megan Hobson Making stage, and the SHED Brewing Co., a (Architectural Historian/Conservation Walking Tour former skating rink converted to a Specialist) and Robert Hamilton Discover the continuous evolution of micro-brewery. Brief guided tours will (Chair, Hamilton Historical Board) Hamilton’s downtown core on a fast be provided at all three locations. paced walk of George Hamilton’s 1816 Following the guided portion of 9:00 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. town plan, Hamilton’s early industrial the tour, delegates will have the Burlington Heights and the War of heritage, railway and sixties-seventies opportunity to spend the remaining 1812 developments and recent rehabilitation time exploring downtown Dundas. Bus Tour and adaptive re-use projects. Threats Leader: Ann Gillespie (Principal, and successes on City Hall, Lister Gillespie Heritage Consulting) When is a cemetery not a cemetery? Block, Tivoli Theatre and the jaw When is a city not a city? In history. dropping Gore Park streetwall will 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. Find out about the events of the War be discussed from the perspective of Hamilton’s Black History: From of 1812 in the Hamilton area, the Fort a former long-time heritage permit Griffin House to Auchmar at Burlington Heights, its defensive committee citizen volunteer. You’ll Bus Tour positions and the Hamilton veterans see Hamilton’s series of federal/ from that war!.When is a castle not a dominion public buildings, the former Explore the extraordinary history of castle? When it’s in Hamilton. Visit Toronto, Hamilton and Buffalo Hamilton’s Black community. This Dundurn Castle and the Hamilton Railway Headquarters, courthouses, tour will include a visit to Griffin Military Museum pertaining to the Victoria (NHS) and Treble Halls. House National Historic Site and to

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Thursday, October 20

the Auchmar Estate. 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. you will pass the many high-rise Leaders: Adrienne Shadd (Research, King Street East apartment buildings that began to Curator and Author of We’re Rooted Walking Tour replace the Victorian neighbourhood Here and They Can’t Pull Us Up: Join an eclectic tour of Hamilton’s in the 1960s and 1970s until the Essays in African Canadian Women’s east downtown core, from its roots as neighbours organized to resist further History), Diane G. Dent (President, an indigenous trail, early commercial demolitions. Heritage Hamilton Foundation), support centre for current and long The walk will take in two designated and Carolyn Samko (Senior Project gone railways, one time and re- heritage districts, a national historic Manager, Heritage Facilities and emerging “theatre district” and major site, the first graded public school Capital Planning, City of Hamilton) transportation corridors. You will in Ontario and work by notable see Hamilton’s first and subsequent local architects John Lyle and James 1:30 p.m. – 4:30 p.m. heritage façade improvement projects, Balfour. This roughly 4 km tour will Made In Hamilton: Industrial adaptively re-used industrial buildings depart from outside at the Heritage of a Great Canadian Steel and theatres, intact residential areas corner of Jackson and MacNab. Town and the innovative for its time, First Leaders: Nicholas Kevlahan & Ned Bus Tour Place Hamilton. Joseph Connolly’s Nolan (Durand Neighbourhood This tour explores the rich industrial work in Hamilton will be discussed Association) heritage of Hamilton and some of at St. Patrick’s Roman Catholic the creative re-purposing of former Church, home to Hamilton’s only 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. industrial buildings that have “homeless Jesus”. Ghost signs, railway Adaptive Reuse in the Core: Meet the occurred in recent years. Known in themed public art and a refurbished Architects the 19th century as the Birmingham mid-century gas bar round out this Walking Tour of Canada and in the 20th century as overview. This walking tour will explore a the Electric City, this tour will show Leader: Barbara Murray number of downtown adaptive reuse how the “Ambitious City” located (Architectural Conservancy Ontario, projects which have utilized existing at the Head-of the-Lake became an Hamilton Region Branch) structures and repurposed them industrial powerhouse. This tour will for a new function. The tour will include guided tours of the Cotton 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. be led by local architect, Rebecca Factory, a 19th century garment factory Walking the Durand: From Beatty. Each site visited will have a on Sherman Avenue North that has Hamilton’s Stone Age to the representative from the architectural been re-purposed as Hamilton’s Mansions at the Escarpment’s Edge firm responsible for the project for an largest creative arts facility - and the Walking Tour in-depth discussion. The sites which Cannon Knitting Mills, a derelict Led by local residents Nicholas will be toured are: Witton Lofts, by industrial complex that was once a Kevlahan and Ned Nolan, this tour Lintack Architects Incorporated, foundry and then a garment factory, will take you from the downtown the offices of local architect Their + and is now undergoing redevelopment core to the edge of Hamilton’s Curran Architects Inc. and 95 King as a boutique hotel, commercial space escarpment. It will also travel through St. East, a mixed use project, also by and event venue. time, from Hamilton’s 1850s-1860s TCA. Additional sites may be added. Leaders: Megan Hobson “stone age” of buildings constructed Leader: Rebecca Beatty (Principal, (Architectural Historian/Conservation from locally quarried whirlpool Rebecca Beatty Architect & Past Vice Specialist), Robert Zeidler (Senior sandstone and dolomite, to the Chair, Hamilton Burlington Society of Partner, Dabbert Group) & impressive brick mansions built just Architects) Harry Stinson (Founder, Stinson under the escarpment by Hamilton’s Developments Inc.) captains of industry in the 1890s and early 1900s. On the way back down

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Thursday, October 20

2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. Leader: Madeline Wilson (Founder, Lane) every 15-20 minutes from 6:00- From Worker to Hipster: A Walking Front Room Entertainment, Hamilton, 7:30pm. Tour of the North End ON) Walking Tour Ry Moran (Director, National Throughout Hamilton’s history, 5:00 p.m. – 6:30 p.m. Centre for Truth and Reconciliation, waves of newcomers have added Canadian Association of Heritage Winnipeg, MB) layers to the history and culture Professionals Annual Ry Moran of the city. Settling in areas where General Meeting is the first work and affordable housing were Location: Hamilton Director of available, immigrants shaped the Convention Centre, the National landscape of North Hamilton in Room 314 Centre for particular. Community organizations Truth and and religious institutions were 6:00 p.m. – 7:30 Reconciliation established to support the needs of p.m. (NCTR). In these communities. “Worker” housing Sponsor Appreciation Cocktail this role, it is was built to provide immigrants with By Invitation Only for Conference Ry Moran’s homes close to the mills and factories. Sponsors and Their Staff job to guide Centers of entertainment, education Location: Liuna Station (360 James the creation and dining were tailored to the newly Street, N.) Continental Express of an enduring national treasure – a arrived. Ballroomw dynamic Indigenous archive built on Leaders: Sonia Mrva (Curator, City integrity, trust and dignity. of Hamilton) & Christopher Redford National Trust Governors and CAHP Ry came to the centre directly (Heritage Presentation Coordinator, Directors host an exclusive cocktail from the Truth and Reconciliation City of Hamilton) to thank the sponsors and funding Commission of Canada (TRC). On partners who made this year’s the TRC’s behalf, he facilitated the 2:00 p.m. – 4:00 p.m. conference possible. gathering of nearly 7,000 video/ This Ain’t Hollywood: Music in the For information: call 613-325-0642 or audio-recorded statements of former Hammer [email protected]. residential school students and others Walking Tour affected by the residential school This tour will explore the music 7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. system. He was also responsible for heritage of “The Hammer”; from Keynote Address gathering the documentary history performances by world-class jazz Location: Liuna Station (360 James of the residential school system from musicians and singers in the Ball Street, N.) Grand Central Ballroom more than 20 government departments Room of the Royal Connaught Hotel and nearly 100 church archives – to the riotous antics of Hamilton punk millions of records in all. bands Teenage Head, nicknamed the ‘Ramones of Canada,’ and the Before joining the TRC, Ry was the Forgotten Rebels in the 1970s, right up founder and president of YellowTilt to the vibrant and diverse alternative Walking: Liuna Station is a 20 minute Productions, which delivered services music scene today. Learn about walk north on historic James Street in a variety of areas including local legends, iconic music venues North. Window shop along the way! Aboriginal language presentation and outdoor music festivals such and oral history. He has hosted as , the Harvest Shuttle Bus: A shuttle bus to LIUNA internationally broadcast television Festival and Supercrawl. Station will depart the Hamilton programs, produced national cultural Convention Centre (1 Summers events, and written and produced

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original music for children’s television. edgy, visionary thinkers in heritage Franklin Vagnone (Twisted Ry’s professional skills and creativity conservation today as they probe Preservation, New York City, USA) have earned him many awards, the future of heritage and explore including a National Aboriginal opportunities for adaptation. Anticipating Change: The Changing Role Model Award, and a Canadian Face of Preservation and Cultural Aboriginal Music Award. Ry is a proud Moderator: Natalie Bull (Executive Sites member of the Metis Nation Director, National Trust) Franklin Vagnone 9:00 p.m. – 10:30 p.m. Featured Speakers: is a Public Opening Reception Historian Location: Liuna Station (360 James Rodney Harrison (Professor of labeled Street, N.) Grand Central Ballroom Heritage Studies, University College as a London, UK) domestic- Shuttle Bus: A shuttle bus to the Heritage Futures and the Future of archeo-anthropologist. Over 25 Hamilton Convention Centre will Heritage years, he has provided leadership in depart Liuna Station every 15-20 Rodney non-profit management, financial minutes from 9:15pm - 10:45pm. Harrison is oversight, fundraising, strategic a Reader in planning, cultural programming Friday, October 21 Archaeology, and creative place-making Heritage and development. His award-winning 7:00 a.m. – 5:30 p.m. Museum work through his thoughtful Registration Desk Studies at combination of philosophical and Location: Chedoke Foyer the UCL Institute of Archaeology practical experiences have allowed in London, UK. He is Principal him to consult, lecture and teach 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Investigator on the Heritage Futures internationally for an extensive list of Continental Breakfast (Sponsored by research program and Director of universities, cultural sites, museums Bull Wealth Management Group) the Heritage Futures Lab at UCL. He and community-based organizations. Exhibitors Available is the founding editor and editor-in- chief of the Journal of Contemporary Franklin maintains the blog Twisted Archaeology and Vice Chair of the Preservation, featuring the series Association of Critical Heritage “One Night Stand” about overnights Studies. He is the co-author or co- in historic house museums. He has editor of more than a dozen books also co-authored The Anarchist’s and special guest-edited journal Guide to Historic House Museums, volumes and over 60 refereed journal which explores innovative concepts for articles and book chapters on topics historic cultural sites. The book, now relating broadly to the material pasts, in its 3rd printing since November 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. presents and futures of anthropology, 2015, was voted best Museum Session 1: Plenary – Big Bang: archaeology, heritage, material culture Education-related book of 2015 by Heritage in an Expanding Universe and museums. He has previously held the Museum Educator’s Monitor, and Location: Chedoke BC teaching and research positions at the became the #1 bestseller (Museum- Open University, Australian National related) on Amazon for February 2015. Where is heritage conservation going? University, University of Western How to we respond to shifting ideas of Australia and New South Wales “heritage”? Learn from two of the most National Parks and Wildlife Service.

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10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. Towns: Paris Old Town Hall 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Break • Canadian Industrial Heritage Session 2B – Revitalizing & Exhibitors & Poster Presenters Centre Transforming Places of Faith _ Available Stream: Community 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Location: Webster AB Regeneration Works Coaches on Call Session 2A – Power of Place: Heritage Have a fundraising question? Need as Marketing Tool Places of faith anchor and shape our advice on how to kick-start or unstick Stream: Business and Planning communities. Yet many congregations your fundraising plans? Visit the Location: Chedoke BC are facing declining attendance and National Trust kiosk and pose your insufficient funding to maintain question to Nhanci Wright – one of Heritage buildings and districts and operate their buildings, and the National Trust’s Regeneration provide exceptional branding and these important community assets Works Coaches. marketing opportunities for property are facing an uncertain future. This developers and institutional leaders session will look at the special heritage Poster Presentations: alike. This session brings together value these places of faith have for • Lauren Archer (Cultural Heritage developers, a university president communities, new partnerships and Specialist, ASI Heritage, Toronto, and an expert in intangible heritage uses that are generating opportunities ON) - Learn to Re-Glaze Old to explore the special place-making for places in transition, and Wood Windows (in 5 Minutes or and city-building capacity of heritage development of faith properties where Less!) properties. mission and heritage value are part of • Jonathan Castellino – apophasis/ the equation. pursuing.the.insufficiency (A Moderator: George Dark (Partner, photo exhibit exploring the Urban Designer & Landscape Moderator: Robert Pajot (Project emotional landscape of city life) Architect, Urban Strategies Leader, Regeneration, National Trust • Diane G. Dent & Grant Head Inc.,Toronto, ON) for Canada) (Hamilton Heritage Foundation) Speakers: Speakers: - Hamilton Heritage Foundation: • Eve Lewis (CEO and President, • Scott Ashe (Heritage Planner, City Four Decades of Engagement Woodcliffe Landmark Properties, of Edmonton, Edmonton, AB) - • Alissa Golden (Cultural Heritage Toronto, ON) Preserving and Enhancing the Planner, City of Hamilton) – • Leo Groarke (President, Trent Special Character of Edmonton’s Forgotten Faces of King Street University, Peterborough, ON) – Church Street • Amber Mandich (Collections Downtown University Campuses • Paul Maka (Heritage Planner, Registrar, The Royal Canadian and Heritage Buildings City of Toronto, Toronto, ON) & Regiment Museum, London, ON) • Laurier Turgeon (Titulaire de la Georgia Kuich (Heritage Planner, - Adaptive Reuse in the High- Chaire de recherche du Canada City of Toronto) – From Narthex Tech Sector: Heritage Offices and en patrimoine ethnologique, to Nursery: Lessons Learned from Downtown Renewal Université Laval, Laval, QC) – The Ten Years of Adaptive Re-Use of • Mark Osbaldeston (Author, Spirit of Place: Between Tangible Churches in Toronto Unbuilt Hamilton) – Unbuilt and Intangible Heritage • Leanna Moussa (President, Hamilton • Joseph Mancinelli (Liuna All Saints Development Inc., • Kristy Wells (Assistant International VP & Regional Ottawa, ON) – Remaking All Conservator/Assistant Project Manager, Hamilton, ON) Saints Anglican Church into a Manager, Conservation Solutions Community Hub Inc., Ottawa, ON) – Financing • Lucy Cummings (Executive Conservation Projects in Small Director, Faith and the Common

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Good, Toronto, ON) – The Rural NB) – Unique Engineering Council, Edmonton, AB)– The Places of Faith Initiative Challenges Presented by Historic Charles Camsell Indian Hospital: Structures Reconciling Our Shared History 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. • Gerry Zegerius (Associate, • Karen Aird (Cultural Heritage Session 2C – CAHP Session - Tacoma Engineers, Guelph, ON) – Planner, Treaty 8 Tribal Engineering in the World of Heritage The Petrie Building Rehabilitation Association, Kamloops, BC) Stream: Adaptation and Renewal • Mark Shoalts (President & & Alain Fournier (Partner, Location: Webster C Principal Engineer, Shoalts EVOQ, Montreal, QC) – Sacred Engineering, Fenwick, ON) Indigenous Heritage Places: The importance of Developing an Indigenous sensitive engineering 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Approach design is often Session 2D – Indigenous Heritage, • Ry Moran (Director, National overlooked when Truth & Reconciliation Centre for Truth and tackling a heritage Stream: Diversity Reconciliation, Winnipeg, MB) project. With project Location: Chedoke A sizes ranging from a tiny cottage 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. of several hundred square feet to In 2015, the Truth and Reconciliation Session 2E – National Forum on prominent national landmarks, the Commission of Canada released 94 Heritage Planning – What is the Role approaches and methodologies used Calls to Action as part of its report, of Municipal Heritage Planning in to evaluate and assess these buildings Honouring the Truth, Reconciling Communities and Society? present unique challenges. Charged for the Future: Summary of the Final Stream: Discussion Hothouse with the task of protecting not only Report of the Truth and Reconciliation Location: Room 314 the visible aesthetic of the building, Commission of Canada. How but also with minimizing the impact have Canadian communities been What is the role of municipal heritage to the often unseen building systems, responding? This pan-Canadian planning in communities and the engineer works to strike a tenuous session will delve into a series of case society? Do we have an obligation to balance between the buildings of studies that illustrate both the promise meaningfully connect the conservation the past and the requirements of the and challenges of the road ahead. of tangible and intangible cultural present. During this session we will heritage to achieving broader social, dig deeper into the specifics of these Moderator: Lorna Crowshoe (Issues cultural, environmental and economic challenges and examine what is being Strategist, Aboriginal Portfolio, City of goals in community planning and done well, and what can be done Calgary) development projects? Where are better. Speakers: there success stories in Canada that • Michael Bryson (Senior Policy link heritage with other community Moderator: Jill Taylor (Co-Founder, Advisor, Culture Division, benefits such as special needs and low- Principal, Taylor Hazell Architects, Ontario Ministry of Tourism, income housing, protection of cultural Toronto, ON) Culture and Sport) and ethnic districts, climate change Speakers: • Rebecca Jansen (Historic Sites and energy resiliency, and inner city • Mike Pond (Principal, Building Registrar, Govt. of Yukon, and main street revitalization? This Science and Restoration, RJC Whitehorse, YT) – Change, Roundtable explores what we can learn Engineers, Kingston, ON) – Heritage and History: A Heritage from accomplishments around the Engineering Work on Canada’s Management Approach for country and how we might ‘change the Heritage Lighthouses Carcross, Yukon conversation’ in places where heritage • Tom Morrison (Principal, • Miranda Jimmy (Program is not seen as a priority through the Heritage Standing, Fredericton, Manager, Edmonton Heritage integration of heritage in community

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plans, policy, and projects. historic and modern, along with is home to a diverse set of buildings Session Leaders: Helen Cain current best practice in regards to representing the social, economic (Planner II, Policy Planning, City of the conservation of architectural and stylistic influences of the last 150 Richmond, BC) & Stephen Ashton terra cotta in historic buildings. This years. In decline for most of the late (Planner II, Downtown Development, session uses the rehabilitation of the 20th century, its unique collection of Town of Whitby, ON) iconic Lister block in Hamilton as an buildings and streetscape has been Speakers: example. recently embraced by artists and • Erik Hanson (Heritage the creative industries who are now Resources Coordinator, City of In this brief session we touch on undertaking the area’s renewal. The Peterborough, ON) the versatility of the material in tour will discuss the evolution of • Marcus Létourneau (Adjunct architecture and provide some the street’s recent revival, the stories Assistant Professor, Geography technical details of terra cotta of many of the small projects and and Planning, Queen’s University, fabrication and production methods businesses responsible for the change Kingston, ON) both historic and modern. The and will visit some of the landmark • Helen Cain (Planner II, Policy session also aims to highlight some adaptive re-use projects along the Planning Dept., City of Richmond, methodologies for the diagnosis of street including the Art Deco Piggott BC) faults in architectural terra cotta Building, the recently restored Lister • Susan Schappert (Heritage cladding on historic structures and Block, and the Beaux- Arts former Planner, Planning Services, Town typical failures. Traditional and CN Railway Station, now the LIUNA of Oakville, ON) modern repair methods are discussed Station banquet facility. • Clint Robertson (Senior Heritage along with the use of alternative Planner, Planner, Development & materials for the replacement of failed Leader: Ken Coit (Architect, Urban Assessment, City of Calgary, AB) original terra cotta units in the context Designer and Local Historian) • Maggie Holm (Planner III/ of the Lister Block rehabilitation/ Heritage Officer, Planning & adaptive use project. 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. Development, City of Halifax, NS) Lunch (Chedoke BC) Leader: Donovan Pauly (Architectural Pre-registration required. Conservator, Clifford Restoration, Toronto, ON) 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Session 2F – Field – Lister Block – 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Terracotta Repair Session 2G – Tour – James Street Stream: Offsite North: Renewal, Restoration and Special Meetings: Location: Field Session will depart the Adaptive Re-use Heritage Organizations and HCC’s ground floor lobby promptly at Stream: Offsite Reconciliation: A Sharing Session 10:30am. Location: Field Session will depart the (Room 314, 12:15 - 1:10pm) HCC’s ground floor lobby promptly at This field session consists of a tour 10:30am. Members of the National Trust’s of the Lister Block building and a National Council and attendees from discussion of the rehabilitation project This walking tour will explore James the Hamilton Indigenous Roundtable followed by a hands-on demonstration Street North, home to an emerging are invited to share highlights, of some terra cotta unit repair arts district and the area at heart of inspiration and new intentions from techniques. This session aims to give the current renewal of downtown their respective meetings on October the participants a basic introduction to Hamilton. The city’s main north-south 19 and 20. Leader: Natalie Bull the material and its use in architecture street since its founding, James Street (Executive Director, National Trust)

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Places of Faith Lunch (Chedoke BC) Neighbourhood Moderator: Carolyn Samko (Senior • Sarah King Head (Historian, Project Manager, Tourism and Culture Additional meetings TBA Thorold, ON) – Beaverdams: Division, City of Hamilton) Consideration of a Anthropogenic Speakers: 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Biome • Richard Harris (Professor, Session 3A – Spark Session – Historic • Nicole Nomsa Moyo (Graduate, Geography, McMaster University, Districts Master of Architecture, Hamilton, ON), Kathleen Kinsella Stream: Business and Planning Carleton University, Toronto, (MA, Geography, McMaster Location: Webster AB ON) - Organized Heritage: The University, Hamilton, ON), Sarah Challenges and Opportunities in Christensen (MA, Geography, Hold onto your seats, this fast and Southern African Townships and McMaster University, Hamilton, furious “Spark” session brings you Canadian First Nation Reserves ON) – Tracking Gentrification nine presentations in 90 minutes. • John Terpstra (Writer & with Google Street View in Always popular, watch ideas collide Cabinetmaker, Hamilton, ON) - Hamilton and unexpected solutions emerge as Daylighting Chedoke: Tracing the • Kathy Stacey (Director, Hamilton heritage practitioners from across Path of an Urban Creek. CLT, Hamilton, ON) – The Canada step into the ring. • Katie Brightwell (Heritage Hamilton Community Land Trust: Cartographer, Archaeological Sustainable Urban Renewal Moderator: Lloyd Alter (Journalist & Research Associates Ltd., • Michael Ripmeester (Professor, Adjunct Professor, Ryerson School of Kitchener, ON) – Pump that Georgraphy, Brock University, Interior Design, Toronto) Map Up: A New Approach to St. Catharines, ON) – Economic Speakers: Publishing Heritage Information Change, Intangible Heritage, • Maggie Holm (Heritage Planner, Material Spaces and Factory Halifax Regional Municipality, 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Employment in St. Catharines, ON Halifax, ON) – Barrington Street Session 3B – Heritage, • Marie-Claude Landry (Executive Heritage Conservation District: Gentrification, & Working Class Director, Héritage Montréal, QC) Conservation or Revitalization Neighbourhoods – Heritage, Gentrification, and the • Sandy McIntosh (Senior Project Stream: Community Tensions in Montreal Architect/Urban Designer, Perkins Location: Chedoke BC + Will, Hamilton, ON) – Real 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. People & Real Buildings & Real Canadian cities like Hamilton are Session 3C – Preserving Cities experiencing the challenges that Rural Heritage: Buildings & • Amber Polywkan (MA, Heritage come with the “gentrification” of Landscapes Conservation, Canadian Studies, inner city neighbourhoods, including Stream: Adaptation and Renewal Carleton University) – Historic the displacement of long-term Location: Room 314 Districts and Those Within Them: residents and businesses. But what A Reflection on Consultation in role does heritage conservation Conserving rural built heritage and Nakusp, B.C. and Carleton Place, play in this dynamic? This wide- protecting traditional farmland Ont. ranging session will explore such presents unique challenges. • Suneeta Millington (Chair, PM topics as the difficulties of measuring This session will explore such diverse Row Initiative, Ottawa, ON) - neighbourhood change, the promise topics as the value of preserving Prime Ministers’ Row, Ottawa that community land trusts hold for traditional farmland and farm • Helen Cain (Heritage Planner, ensuring diversity, and understanding buildings, the repurposing of farm City of Richmond, BC) – the heritage value of working class structures engulfed by suburban Burkeville: 1940s Richmond neighbourhoods. expansion, and the tension between

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the high cost of small town building exploration serves to educate our life heritage value with constrained restoration relative to income and and place within cities. Influential budgets and real estate economics. capital growth. beyond mere ruin aesthetics, it has This wide-ranging session looks at shaped both academic and artistic case studies on a variety of scales, Moderator: Catherine Nasmith conceptions of what it means to live in from restoration and rehabilitation (Principal, Catherine Nasmith contemporary urban environments. projects, to Heritage Impact Architect, Toronto & President, While largely ignored by the Assessments, or municipal heritage Architectural Conservancy of Ontario, mainstream conservation community, policy. Toronto, ON) what can we learn from these rogue Speakers: historians and guerilla artists? This Moderator: Christopher Andreae • Heather Thomson (Manager, session will explore the meeting points (Principal, Historica Research, Heritage Program, NCC, Ottawa, between mainstream conservationists Delaware, ON) ON) & Patricia Talbot (Real and urban explorers where a Estate Management Agricultural transformation can occur. Speakers: Officer, NCC, Ottawa, ON) - A Moderator: Julian Smith (Julian • Terry White (Partner, +VG Living Legacy – Conserving the Smith & Associates, Architects, Architects, Toronto, ON) & Agricultural Heritage of Canada’s Huntsville, ON) David Ecclestone (Partner, +VG Capital Speakers: Architects, Toronto, ON) – St. • Marie Voisin (Historian and • Jonathan Castellino Michael’s Cathedral Master Plan Owner, Imperial Hotel, New (Photographer, Toronto, ON) for Renewal: Rebuilding the Hamburg, ON) & Don Zehr (CEO, • Patrick Cummins (Photographer, Tower & Spire According to Pugin Zehr Group, Kitchener, ON) & Toronto, ON) Design Principles and Decision- Philip Hoad (Empire Restoration, • Andrew Emond (Photographer, Making for Interior Modifications Toronto, ON) – The Imperial Hotel Toronto, ON) • Charlton Carscallen (Manager, in New Hamburg: The Challenges • Dan Iaboni (Owner, The Monkey CRM Department, AECOM, of Adapting and Renewing in Vault Parkour Training Centre, Richmond Hill, ON) – Common Small Town Ontario Toronto, ON) Practice or Best Practice? The • Matthew Somerville (Heritage and • Tong Lam (Associate Professor, Development and Application Urban Design Planner, Town of History, University of Toronto, of S&Gs for Evaluating Heritage Richmond Hill, Richmond Hill, Toronto, ON) Engineering Assets ON) – Adaptation and Renewal of • Don Luxton (Principal, Ontario’s Heritage Barn Resources 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Donald Luxton and Associates, • Ella Haley (Executive Director, Session 3E – CAHP Session - Where Vancouver, BC) – Where Value Langford Conservancy, Brantford, Value Lies: Challenges in Heritage Lies: Rethinking the Heritage ON) – Preserving Farmland for Identification, Assessment, and Register in the Vancouver New Organic Farmers Execution Heritage Action Plan Stream: Adaptation and Renewal • Jeff Feswick (President, Historia 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Location: Webster C Building Restoration Inc., Session 3D – Urban Exploration: Hamilton, ON) Beyond the Aesthetics of Decay Explore the challenges Stream: Diversity and opportunities Location: Chedoke A presented to heritage professionals and Beyond a pretty picture or an practitioners as they architectural archive, urban attempt to balance

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1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. in 1931-32, the construction of a train Join Willowbank and members of Session 3F – Field Session – The station and railway headquarters in the Indigenous community for a Toronto, Hamilton & Buffalo Station: 1932-33, and the sympathetic and tour of the Willowbank grounds Adaptation and Conservation successful adaption of the former train and building, located in beautiful Stream: Offsite station to a rail/bus terminal in 1993. Queenston, Ontario. The visit will Location: Field Session will depart Leaders: Peter Stewart (Partner, focus on how heritage sites have from the HCC’s ground floor lobby George Robb Architect, Toronto, ON) the ability to be a part of solving promptly at 1:30pm. and Paul Dilse (Heritage Planner & national and global issues through Historian, Toronto, ON) grassroots endeavours, one of Gain insights into the adaptation of which is reconciliation with our the historic former Toronto, Hamilton 1:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Indigenous communities. Learn & Buffalo train station and railway Session 3G & 4G – Field Session – about Willowbank’s new and growing headquarters in downtown Hamilton Willowbank School for Restoration relationship with the local Indigenous to a rail-and-bus terminal called Arts – Bus Tour community and how together they are the Hamilton GO Centre Station. Stream: Offsite rejuvenating the site’s aboriginal layer Learn about the station’s cultural Location: Field Session will depart through the Willowbank Community heritage value as the combination of a from the HCC’s ground floor lobby Love Garden. After, enjoy a light snack sophisticated grade separation project promptly at 1:30pm. where we will discuss the multiple

NATIONAL TRUST FOR CANADA

Recognizing the next generation of heritage leaders. Congratulations!

Alicia Ghadban (Ottawa, ON) Arlin Otto (Fergus, ON) vote ¬ fund ¬ save

Meet our scholarship recipients at the Awards Ceremony (Friday, Oct 21). The 2016 this place matters competition gives communities the chance to win $40,000 Make a donation today. to revitalize their main streets.

In person at Registration or online at nationaltrustcanada.ca/HerbStovel www.thisplacematters.ca

National Trust A project of for Canada National Trust for Canada

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layers of Willowbank and the benefits Moderator: Jennifer Keesmaat (Chief Entopia: Our Places in Europe of creating sustainable relationships Planner, City of Toronto, ON) • Émile Chazelas (Commissaire that will help Willowbank continue to Speakers: en développement local, MRC grow and evolve. • Antonio Gomez-Palacio Pontiac, QC) – Creating a Leaders: Crystal Bossio (Executive (Principal, DIALOG, Toronto, Heritage Guide for Elected Director, Willowbank) & Indigenous ON) Officials in Pontiac, Quebec Representative (TBA) • Dima Cook (Senior Associate, • Émilie Vézina-Doré (Directrice EVOQ, Toronto, ON) générale, Action patrimoine, 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. • Richard Longley (Resident & Quebec City, QC) Break Co-Founder, Harbord Village • Alex Tu (Bachelor of Engineering Exhibitors & Poster Presenters Heritage Conservation District, Student, Carleton University, Available Toronto, ON) Ottawa, ON) – Architectural Regeneration Works Coaches on Call • Tamara Anson-Cartwright Solution to Poverty (Program Manager, City of • Mark Osbaldeston (Author, Have a fundraising question? Need Toronto – Heritage Planning/ Unbuilt Hamilton, Toronto, ON) – advice on how to kick-start or unstick Urban Design, Toronto, ON) Unbuilt Hamilton your fundraising plans? Visit the • Alissa Golden (Cultural Heritage National Trust kiosk and pose your 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Planner, City of Hamilton, question to Alison Faulknor– one Session 4B – Spark Session - Hamilton, ON) – Tabula Rasa: of the National Trust’s Regeneration Community and Diversity Unravelling the Past, Present, Works Coaches. Stream: Community and Future of Hamilton’s Jackson Location: Chedoke BC Square Urban Renewal Scheme 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Session 4A – Piecing the Puzzle: Hold on to your seats! This fast and 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. Heritage Conservation Districts furious “Spark” session brings you Session 4C – Cultural Landscapes: Stream: Business and Planning nine presentations in 90 minutes. Managing Change Location: Chedoke A Always popular, watch ideas collide Stream: Adaptation and Renewal and unexpected solutions emerge as Location: Webster C Urban heritage is of vital importance heritage practitioners from across for our cities – there is growing interest Canada step into the ring. Those working to conserve cultural for heritage districts as a planning tool landscapes face the increasingly that municipalities can use to manage Moderator: Victoria Angel (Senior challenging questions of how to and guide change in historically Heritage Planner, ERA Architects, retain their authentic resources important areas. In this session, we will Toronto, ON) and how to balance the tangible discuss the strategic approach taken by Speakers: and intangible dimensions of these Toronto City Planning in developing • Juan Andrés Bello (Documentary complex places. Dr. Pollock-Ellwand Heritage Conservation Districts Filmmaker, London, ON) – The will reflect on the latest thinking (HCDs) under the Ontario Heritage Dominion Public Building: A around cultural landscapes, drawing Act and with our consultants examine Web-Based Documentary Project on her international involvements. The recent HCDs in the downtown core (St. • Lauren Archer (Cultural Heritage session will then focus on three case Lawrence Neighbourhood, Historic Specialist, ASI Heritage, Toronto, studies – Lunenburg, Royal Botanical Yonge and King/Spadina) and how ON) – Hockey as a Cultural Garden, and Vancouver’s Chinatown they contribute to a new planning Heritage Landscape – that reflect these broader, systemic framework for highly dynamic urban • Laurie Neale (Heritage challenges. areas. Consultant, Montreal, QC) –

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Moderator: Nancy Pollock-Ellwand and environmental diversity in urban between individuals and institutions (Dean and Professor, Faculty of conservation; (5) parallels between of all kinds form part of many Environmental Design, University of biodiversity and cultural diversity in educational initiatives. What are the Calgary) creating resilient communities;(6) and examples of successful partnerships of Speakers: deeper understanding of place through colleges and universities with heritage • Brian Arnott (Learning the interwoven layers of time and organizations, industry, governments? Lunenburg, Lunenburg, NS) & culture. Each participant will provide Brief presentations that include critical Bill Plaskett (Heritage Officer, short introductory remarks followed commentary and lessons learned will Town of Lunenburg, Lunenburg, by a facilitated discussion. form the basis of the session, followed NS) & Terry Drisdelle (Planner, by a discussion. Project Manager, Waterfront Panel Facilitator: Sean Fraser Development, Halifax, NS) - (Director, Heritage Programs and Moderator: Shabnam Inanloo Dailoo Learning from Lunenburg, Nova Operations, Ontario Heritage Trust, (Athabasca University)\ Scotia Toronto) Speakers: • Dr. David Galbraith (Head of Panelists: • Claudine Déom (Association Science, Royal Botanical Gardens, • Jill Taylor (Co-Founder, Principal, Professor, School of Architecture, Burlington, ON) – Understanding Taylor Hazell Architects, Toronto, Université de Montréal) Significance and Managing ON) • Chris Hahn (Dean, Perth Campus, Change at Royal Botanical • Nikki Clarke (President, Ontario Algonquin College, Perth, ON) Gardens Black History Society, Toronto, • Andrew MacAdam (Faculty, • Bill Yuen (Manager, Heritage ON) Carpentry Heritage, NSCC, Vancouver Society, BC) & June • Michael McClelland (Founding Lunenburg, NS) Chow (Youth Collaborative Principal, ERA Architects, • Shannon Kyles (Professor, Retired, for Chinatown, Vancouver, Toronto, ON) Mohawk College, Hamilton, ON) BC) - Vancouver Chinatown: • Holly Martelle (Principal, • Miranda Angus (Program Living Heritage in a Changing Archaeologist, Heritage Planner, Coordinator, Cultural Neighbourhood TMHC Archaeological and GIS Management Programs, Services., London, ON) University of Victoria, BC) 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. • Fawn D. Sault (Department • Amy Calder (Capacity Planner, Session 4D – Conserving Diversity: of Consultation and Heritage BC, Vancouver, BC) Communities, Stories and Structures Accommodation, Mississaugas of • Laurie Smith (Program Stream: Discussion Hothouse the New Credit First Nation) Coordinator, NSERC Create Location: Webster AB Heritage Engineering, Carleton 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. University) This discussion will touch upon Session 4E – Conservation Education: • Julian Smith (Willowbank School a number of themes and ideas Making Connections of Restoration Arts, Queenston) including: (1) connecting story and Stream: Diversity community with historic place; (2) Location: Room 314 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. use of historic places to educate and Session 4F – Field Session – spread awareness of/on cultural Hosted by the National Roundtable on diversity;(3) role of community Heritage Education Stream: Offsite engagement in identifying heritage Consulting, contracting, community Location: Field Session will depart value and developing conservation work and government practice are from the HCC’s ground floor lobby approaches to historic places; (4) all key components of heritage and promptly at 3:30pm importance of architectural, cultural conservation careers; collaborations

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Hamilton City Hall (71 Main St. 5:00 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. Business attire. Additional tickets are W., Hamilton) is a testament to the Dinner (on your own) available. A cash bar will be available resiliency of mid-century modernist before and after the ceremony. buildings in Canada and an indication 6:30 p.m. – 7:30 p.m. of how the heritage movement in Heritage Patrons Circle Donor Saturday, October 22 Canada is also changing – it is one Appreciation Event of few buildings from the 1960s to By Invitation Only 7:00 a.m.- 5:00p.m. receive a heritage designation under Location: Round Room, Scottish Rite Registration Desk the Ontario Heritage Act. Built Club of Hamilton (4 Queen Street S.) Location: Chedoke Foyer in 1960, Hamilton City Hall was An opportunity for National Trust designed by then City Architect Governors and staff to say “thank you” 7:30 a.m. – 8:30 a.m. Stanley Roscoe in the International to our donors in the Patrons Circle. Continental Breakfast Style. The building is defined by its For information: call 613-325-0642 or Exhibitors Available formal qualities, use of curtain wall [email protected] and flat roof, and the elimination of 8:30 a.m. – 10:00 a.m. elaborate ornamentation. 7:30 p.m. – 9:30 p.m. Session 5: Plenary – Hamilton Rising: National Trust and CAHP National Heritage & the Civic Renaissance In 2007 the City elected to update Heritage Awards Ceremony and Location: Chedoke Ballroom BC Roscoe’s design to 1) create a Reception civic centre for the amalgamated Location: Grand Ballroom, Scottish Hamilton is a resilient city with an municipality; 2) improve the building’s Rite Club of Hamilton, 4 Queen Street exceptional heritage legacy that has energy performance; 3) enable physical South) bounced back from the decline of its accessibility for all citizens and; 4) industrial sector. It now boasts one of meet contemporary technological Walking: The Scottish Rite Club is a Canada’s fastest growing economies. and service requirements. Paul 10 minute walk west on King Street. Propelled by a growing creative sector Sapounzi from +VG Architects will and a blend of grassroots and public lead the tour around the grounds and Experience the traditions of the projects, heritage-led regeneration is through the restored and rehabilitated Scottish Rite Club which was built in transforming the city’s urban fabric interiors. Paul will share some of 1895 as a grand family home known and creating a dynamic new civic the challenges the project team faced as “The Towers” and owes its design to identity. This session brings together during the design and construction renowned Hamilton architect James a variety of voices to explore this process including 1) the relocation Balfour. The magnificent woodwork extraordinary rise and assess its social of services; 2) provision of insulation throughout the building was done by impact. It will begin with a brief for exterior walls and installation of John Hoodless and Sons, prominent presentation, “Hamilton: Reading the high efficiency systems; 3) upgrades Hamilton furniture manufacturers. Past” presented by Nina Chapple, to meet current O.B.C. requirements, In 1920 the property was acquired by former Senior Heritage Planner, City including accessibility and; 4) the The Scottish Rite Masons who added of Hamilton and Megan Hobson, numerous separate heritage permits the Cathedral portion of the building Heritage Consultant. that were processed by the City for the in 1922. project. Moderator: Paul Berton (Editor- Join us for the presentation of in-Chief, The Hamilton Spectator, Leader: Paul Sapounzi (Partner, +VG Canada’s top heritage awards, Hamilton, ON) Architects, Brantford, ON) including the Ecclesiastical Insurance Cornerstone Awards for Building Heritage.

22 National Trust Conference 2016 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising

Saturday, October 22

Speakers: of sparking an economic revival, Moderator: Chris Murray (City • Keanin Loomis (CEO, Hamilton improving quality of life and tourism Manager, City of Hamilton) Chamber of Commerce, Hamilton, potential of Niagara’s 11 municipalities Speakers: ON) by making downtowns destinations • Paul General (Wildlife Manager, • Celeste Licorish (Philanthropic once again. Presenters will discuss Six Nations Land & Resources, Services, Hamilton Community their experiences with developing and Oshweken, ON) – We’re Not Foundation & Hamilton implementing the Smarter Niagara Hunting on Your Farm, You’re Roundtable for Poverty Reduction, Incentives program as a tool for Farming on Our Hunting Hamilton, ON) sparking downtown revitalization Territory • Sarah Wayland (Global Hamilton, including success stories, lessons • Susan Roy (Assistant Professor, Economic Development, City of learned and how to ensure that the History, University of Waterloo, Hamilton) investment achieves desired and Waterloo, ON) & Representative • Tim Potocic (Owner, Sonic Unyon sustainable results. from Musqueam First Nation Records & Director, Supercrawl Moderator: Michael Seaman (Ontario (TBA) – “c̓ əsnaʔəm The City & Co-Owner UP Holdings, Governor, National Trust for Canada, Before the City” Exhibition: Hamilton, ON) Grimsby, Ontario) Groundbreaking Exploration of an • Julian Smith (Julian Smith & Speakers: Ancient Landscape and a Living Associates, Architects, Huntsville, • Marian Bannerman (Coordinator, Culture ON) Community and Corporate • Brian MacLean (First Story Initiatives, Niagara Region, St. Toronto, Native Canadian Centre 10:00 a.m. – 10:30 a.m. Catharines, ON) of Toronto, Toronto, ON) & Break • Adele Arbour (Heritage Planner, Paul Cote (Tecumseh Collective, Exhibitors & Poster Presenters City of Thorold, Thorold, ON) Toronto, ON) - Indigenous Tours Available • Nick DiFlavio, (Alderman, Town in Toronto: Unpacking Indigenous of Grimsby, Grimsby, ON) Layers in the Metropolis Regeneration Works Coaches on Call • Denise Horne (Heritage Advisor, • Rodney Harrison (Professor Looking for advice on downtown Town of Niagara-on-the-Lake, of Heritage Studies, University revitalization? Visit the National Trust Niagara-on-the-Lake, ON) College London, UK) - Shared kiosk and pose your question to Jim Landscapes: Recognizing Mountain – one of the National Trust’s 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Indigenous and Settler Australian Regeneration Works Coaches. Session 6B – Recognizing Urban Pastoral Heritage Indigenous Sites 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Stream: Community 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. Session 6A – Stimulating Downtown Location: Chedoke BC Session 6C – Contemporary Layers Revit: Smarter Niagara in Historic Contexts Stream: Business and Planning Canadian cities have a rich Indigenous Stream: Adaptation and Renewal Location: Chedoke A heritage with many places of sacred Location: Webster C and cultural significance, most Faced with the challenge of decline of which are unrecognized and Successful examples of adaptive reuse of the traditional manufacturing unprotected. This session explores aim to creatively integrate the old economy across the region over the how groups across Canada are and the new. But what constitutes past decades, while at the same time working to reveal and honour “success”? And what kinds of experiencing growth in the tourism the rich archaeological layers and tensions are we seeing in Canadian sector, the Region of Niagara has been contemporary Indigenous culture in communities over modern additions investing in downtowns as a means urban areas. to heritage structures? This pan-

23 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising

Saturday, October 22

Canadian session looks at case studies Speakers: • What policy and advisory tools where the old and the new have been • Larry Ostola (Director, Museums & could be developed to address these brought together in innovative ways. Heritage Services, City of Toronto) challenges? • Jennifer Kirchner (Planner, City of • What opportunities exist for Moderator: Christopher Borgal Lacombe, Lacombe, AB) – Strike leadership and collaboration? (Principal, GBCA Architects, Toronto, While the Metal’s Hot: Achieving • Are there legal, policy or ON) Sustainability at the Lacombe organizational barriers to Speakers: Blacksmith Shop developing climate change • Louise McGugan (Partner, • Janis Monture (Executive solutions? Senior Architect, Barry Padolsky Director, Woodland Cultural Associates Ltd. Architects, Centre, Brantford, ON) – “Save The session will be hosted by the Ottawa, ON) – Ogilvy Façade the Evidence” Campaign for the Climate Change Working Group of Dismantling and Reinstatement Mohawk Indian Residential School the Federal-Provincial-Territorial Project Building Collaboration on Historic Places • Laura Waldie (Heritage Planner, in Canada and moderated by City of Cambridge, Cambridge, 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. representatives from Parks Canada. ON) – Thomas Fuller in the Session 6E – Heritage Conservation Digital Age: The Adaptive Reuse of and Climate Change Moderator: Ellen Bertrand, Acting the Old Post Office in Cambridge, Stream: Discussion Hothouse Director, Cultural Heritage Policies, Ontario Location: Webster AB Parks Canada Agency • Javier Campos (Principal, Campos Speakers: Studio & President, Heritage • William Gerrard (Senior Policy Vancouver, Vancouver, BC) Advisor - Culture Policy Unit, • Steve Kulakowsky (Partner, Core Ontario Ministry of Tourism, Urban Inc. Hamilton, ON) Culture & Sport) • David Scarlett (OAQ, MRAIC) 10:30 a.m. – 12:00 p.m. (Chief Architect Built Heritage, Session 6D – New Relevance for Presented by the Federal-Provincial- Cultural Heritage Policies Branch, Historic Sites Territorial Collaboration on Historic Parks Canada) Stream: Business & Planning Places in Canada • Other speakers TBA Location: Room 314 Canadian historic sites are successfully Conference attendees are invited to 10:30 a.m. – 3:00 p.m. reinventing themselves in the face participate in a dialogue about the Session 6F & 7F – Field Session – of financial pressures and shifting current and potential role of heritage Heritage Inventories: New Strategies audiences. This session will capture a conservation policy in climate change and Tools (Part 1) Offsite snapshot of the issues facing historic adaptation and mitigation. We invite the Stream: Discussion Hothouse sites, and hear from a range of exchange of ideas between colleagues Location: Lister Block (28 James Street presenters on the creative solutions in the federal, provincial, territorial, North) they have come up with to meet those municipal, non-profit, academic, challenges. volunteer and private sectors. Field Session will depart from the HCC’s ground floor lobby promptly at Moderator: Robert Pajot (Project Questions to guide the discussion: 10:15am Leader, Regeneration, National Trust • What are the challenges that climate for Canada) change brings to the conservation of cultural heritage resources?

24 National Trust Conference 2016 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising

Saturday, October 22

Heritage conservation is increasingly Toronto, ON) Hamilton’s Largest Creative Arts at the forefront of dialogue around • Beasley Neighbourhood Community development pressures and changing Community Member (TBA) • Jerry Dick (Executive Director, patterns of urban development. Heritage Foundation of Each municipality faces unique Space limited. Advanced registration Newfoundland & Labrador, St. challenges that are best met with required. A box lunch will be provided John’s NL) – Finding New Uses for unique solutions for identifying and for participants. Old Buildings conserving community-focused • Harry Stinson (Founder, Stinson heritage. Sophisticated and sensitive For detailed agenda and more Developments Inc., Hamilton, ON) approaches to managing pressures information go to - Reality Break: Practical Strategies while preserving social and cultural http://nationaltrustconference.ca & Lessons Learned from 40 Years values are necessary. This workshop of Revitalizing Historic Buildings. is intended to serve as a discussion 12:00 p.m. – 1:30 p.m. • Crystal Bossio (Executive Director, forum and brainstorming session for Lunch (Chedoke BC) Willowbank, Queenston, ON) – heritage conservation practitioners Finding the Balance: Economic who work with urban heritage. Special Meetings (12:20 – 1:10pm) Sustainability in Non-Profit and Heritage Credentials Discussion Public Heritage Projects. During this workshop, heritage Group (Room 314) conservation staff at the City of 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Hamilton will discuss one of the 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Session 7B – Building Rural ways they are responding to urban Session 7A – Revival Challenges: Resilience development pressure at a citywide Balancing Economics and Stream: Community level, using emerging inventory, Conservation Choices in Adaptive Location: Webster AB characterization, consultation Reuse Projects and mapping strategies, as well Stream: Business and Planning Beyond urban boundaries and bright as new digital technologies, to Location: Chedoke A lights, people in First Nations, rural understand neighborhood heritage settlements, and more remote regions in cost-effective, but integrative ways. Those undertaking adaptive reuse are having to innovate to stay alive Following the classroom session, projects often face challenges economically, socially, and culturally. there will be a walk around Beasley, balancing financial considerations with To do so, increasingly people are one of Hamilton’s historic downtown sound heritage practice. What are the tapping into their wellsprings of neighborhoods that has been trade-offs that need to be considered? natural and cultural “living” heritage inventoried and assessed. What does a successful heritage project that all places have intrinsic to them Workshop Leaders: look like? This session brings together in varying forms. In many cases this • Sonia Mrva (Curator, Heritage developers and members of the non- heritage is being discovered for the Policy, City of Hamilton, profit community to examine the first time through initiatives such as Hamilton, ON) challenges of honouring place while digital mapping and cultural planning. • Alissa Golden (Heritage Project not losing your shirt. In other instances, the work of Specialist, City of Hamilton, community curators and First Nations Hamilton, ON) Moderator: Clinton Brown (President knowledge keepers is being renewed, • Victoria Angel (Associate, ERA and Principal, CBCA, Buffalo, NY) built upon and celebrated through Architects, Toronto, ON) Speakers: events, performances, cultural heritage • Angela Garvey (ERA Architects, • Robert Zeidler (Senior Partner, tourism, education and interpretation Toronto, ON) Dabbert Group, Toronto, ON) - projects, conservation of sites, and • Mikael Sydor (ERA Architects, The Cotton Factory: Developing developing protocols and strategies

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Saturday, October 22

for conserving their collective heritage Moderator: Mark Thompson Brandt Moderator: Tom Morrison (Principal, into the future. (Principal, Senior Conservation Heritage Standing, Fredericton, NB) Architect & Urbanist, MTBA Speakers: Moderator: Jim Mountain (Director, Associates Inc. & Co-Chair (Canada), • Stephen Collette (Principal, Your Regeneration Projects, National Trust APT Technical Committee on Healthy House, Lakefield, ON) - for Canada, Ottawa, ON) Sustainable Preservation, Ottawa, ON) Mould in Heritage Buildings Speakers: Speakers: • Carly Connor (Project Manager, • Deb Fleming (President, Texas • Suzanne Poohkay (Director, Building Science, WSP Canada Dance Hall Preservation Inc., Capital Planning & Strategic Inc., Burlington, ON) – Poor Dripping Springs, Texas, USA) – Project Development, UBC, Water Shedding Preserving the Cultural Heritage Vancouver, BC) – Findings from • Robert Lovegrove (Senior Project of Rural Texas Dance Halls the UBC Renew Program – “Every Manager, ECOH Inc., Mississauga, • Lynda Lafleur (Manager, Third Building is Free!” ON) – Hazardous Materials Columbia Basin Trust, Nakusp, • Alan Stacey (Heritage Mill • Judy Jeske (Vice-President, Code, BC) Historic Building Conservation, Life Safety and Security, Morrison • Jamie Lavallee (Director, Dundas, ON) - Material Hershfield, Ottawa, ON) – Indigenous Governance, Law and Durability & Sustainability Building Code Policy, File Hills Qu’Appelle Tribal • David Waverman (Landscape Council, Regina, SK) - Living Architect, Stantec, Guelph) 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Skies Heritage Region & Meaghan Nelligan-Rivard Session 7E – Welcoming New Voices: • Julie Harris (Principal, (Heritage Specialist, Stantec, Strategies for Making Heritage Contentworks, Ottawa, ON) – Kitchener) – Sustainability on a Relevant in New Contexts Alaska Highway Neighbourhood Scale Stream: Diversity Location: Chedoke BC 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. 1:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Session 7C – Heritage & Session 7D – CAHP Session - Three teams of presenters will share Sustainability Heritage Bogeymen: Debunking their perspectives on broadening the Stream: Adaptation and Renewal Building Pathology Myths heritage community, from engaging new Location: Webster C Stream: Adaptation and Renewal audiences and opening up pathways to Location: Room 314 heritage careers, to attracting the next The heritage and sustainability generation of volunteers. Teams will discussion is expanding from a Bogeyman (noun) – an then respond to practical questions building by building view (often imaginary evil monster on the transfer of knowledge, creating exclusively energy focused) to one used to frighten people. experiences for youth, and the next looking at the built environment as a This CAHP Session generation’s shifting definition of whole. At the same time, the disussion discusses four topics “heritage”. is becoming more nuanced, embracing that commonly come such considerations as the durability up in conservation practices: water; Moderator: Judy Oberlander (Judy of materials. This wide-ranging session mould; hazardous materials; and Oberlander and Associates, Vancouver, will examine extraordinary case life safety. Speakers will dispel the BC) studies like UBC’s methodical renewal imaginary and help those attending Speakers: of its mid-century modern campus, distinguish between real threats and • Mallory Wilson and Hélène Santoni and will unpack the very latest red herrings. (co-founders, Vivre le Patrimoine! thinking on sustainable conservation. Montréal Héritage Fest - The voice of the next generation) – Vivre Le

26 National Trust Conference 2016 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising

Saturday, October 22

Patrimoine! Montreal Héritage Fest 3:00 p.m. – 3:30 p.m. festival is energized by its plan to turn • Kristy Wells (Assistant Conservator Break the massive Hearn generating station & Assistant Project Manager, Exhibitors & Poster Presenters into a temporary arts centre. An Conservation Solutions Inc., Ottawa, Available internationally accomplished Producer, ON) & Manja Horner (Toronto, ON) Clyde Wagner returned to Toronto in - Six Paths to the Heritage Field Regeneration Works Coaches on Call 2014 after an 18 month contract in New • Jocelyn Kent (Chair, ACO NextGen, Kick-starting the regeneration of a York as Senior Producer at the Park Toronto, ON) – Creating Space for historic site? Need advice? Visit the Avenue Armory. Prior to joining the Young Volunteers in Our Heritage National Trust kiosk and pose your Armory Mr. Wagner served as General Organizations question to Rob Pajot – one of the Manager at the Luminato Festival since • Judy Oberlander (Judy Oberlander National Trust’s Regeneration Works 2006. During that tenure he was part of and Associates, Vancouver, BC) Coaches. the management team that created the – Regenerating Our Heritage current Festival Strategic Plan, which Organizations for the Next 3:30 p.m. – 5:00 p.m. specified the need to diversify revenue Generation Session 8: Plenary – Vertical Lift: sources and increase earned income. In Heritage as a Creative Force his role as Executive Producer, Wagner 12:30 p.m. – 3:00 p.m. Location: Chedoke Ballroom BC oversees all aspects of production Session 7G –Field – Exploring Barton while also taking on responsibility for Street In communities across Canada, the customer service, ticketing functions Stream: Diversity creative industries are often housed in and the volunteer program. Location: Field Session will depart from heritage places. But do these buildings the HCC’s ground floor lobby promptly offer more than just attractive shelter? Do Jennifer Jonas & Leonard Farlinger at 12:30pm these places generate a creative energy (New Real all their own , an energy that feeds the Films, Barton Street is truly the most authentic art itself? This session brings together Toronto, and diverse sector of Hamilton. This filmmakers, art impressarios and music ON) field session offers a glimpse at a layered producers to explore how heritage places Leonard area from the Aboriginal footprint, can inspire and transform. Farlinger inlet topography, to the once bustling and commercial district It will provide Moderator: Chris Wiebe (Conference Jennifer insight into a neighbourhood whose built Coordinator, National Trust) Jonas are a co-founders of Canadian form was designed with people and a Speakers: production company New Real Films, public realm as a priority for a society, Clyde Wagner (Executive Producer, which won the Canadian Media and where heavy industry, commercial Luminato Festival, Toronto, ON) Production Association’s Producer’s and residential historically have co- Clyde Wagner Award in 2013. They have just released existed. is the Executive their 14th feature film Born To Be Producer of Blue starring Ethan Hawke and The field session will also tour a window the Luminato written and directed by Rob Budreau. conservation studio and discuss the Festival in Leonard and Jennifer’s recent films issues such as the link between the Toronto. include Gerontophilia, named the craft person and the academic, or the In 2016, to Best Canadian Feature at Montreal’s carpenter and the architect. celebrate its 2013 Festival du nouveau cinema and 10th edition, Trigger, selected as one of the Toronto Leader: Walter Furlan (Furlan the city’s International Film Festival’s Top 10 Conservation, Hamilton, ON) annual arts films for 2010 and was the inaugural

27 National Trust Conference 2016 Heritage Rising

Saturday, October 22

film chosen to open the TIFF Bell founded by Bob Doidge, and Daniel St. This presentation melds oral history, Lightbox. Other films include I’m and Bob Lanois. As a sound engineer, archives, cinematography, live music Yours, written and directed by Leonard and producer, Amy has received and heart to create an immersive and Farlinger, Leslie, My Name Is Evil, Up several Hamilton Music Awards for her transportational experience taking us With Dead People and Monkey Warfare, engineering and musical collaborations. back in time and into the future. which won a Special Jury Prize at the Amy’s training for a career in music Toronto International Film Festival in started at the age of five. As an The Tale of a Town – Canada is 2006. accomplished pianist, Amy has received an innovative storygathering and fifteen awards for piano performances, storytelling project that aims to capture Bob Doidge & Amy King (Grant a background which has served her well the collective community memory of Avenue in working with musicians from Gordon main streets and downtowns across Studio, Lightfoot to regional and nationally the country. This year the project has Hamilton, emerging musicians, to area schools and successfully completed its three year ON) community performance groups. journey visiting all ten provinces and Bob Doidge three territories. and Amy 5:00 p.m. – 6:00 p.m. King, National Trust for Canada A cash bar will be available throughout producers, recording engineers and Annual General Meeting the event. Please note that only debit and musicians at Hamilton’s Grant Avenue (Chedoke BC) credit payments can be accepted. Studio, have worked with countless local talents and international artists. 6:00 p.m. – 7:00 p.m. Dinner (on your own) Bob Doidge began his musical career working with Canadian artists such 7:30 p.m. – 10:00 p.m. as Ian Thomas and Sylvia Tyson in the Closing Celebration 1970s. Bob and his bandmates Daniel Location: The Hamilton Lanois and Bob Lanois soon found Club themselves recording artists such as (6 Main Street East) Raffi, Bruce Cockburn and countless other local acts, and so began Grant Meet your new friends Avenue Studio. Bob took ownership from across Canada Providing clear, independent investment advice to of the studio in the early 1980s when and enjoy exclusive foundations and not-for-profit organizations Daniel Lanois went abroad to work with access to the historic since 2000 the rock band, U2. Bob’s discography as Hamilton Club, founded a producer and engineer boasts a long in 1873. Enjoy a food and Proud Supporter of list of artists, such as Gordon Lightfoot, extraordinary video/music The National Trust for Canada U2, Johnny Cash, Ani DiFranco, Bob installation ”Barton Street” Dylan, Bruce Cockburn, Blackie and by The Tale of a Town. Conference 2016 the Rodeo Kings and many more. For information, contact: In collaboration with Kevin Van Dyk, Managing Partner Originally from Newfoundland, Amy Cobalt Connects, The (416) 223-2053 King graduated from the Recording Tale of a Town has been [email protected] Arts of Canada Institute in 2002.She engaging with the citizens landed a post graduate internship at the of Hamilton to capture the www.bullwealth.com famous Hamilton Grant Avenue studio living memory of Barton

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