Rypkema is coming to town
Tuesday, April 15th, 2008National preservation expert Donovan Rypkema is coming to Seattle on May 8.
Historic Seattle is hosting the lecture as part of its celebration of National Historic Preservation Month in May. Rypkema is recognized as the leader in the economics of preserving historic structures. The lecture will be from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. on Thursday, May 8 at the Chapel of the Good Shepherd Center at 4649 Sunnyside Avenue N.
The event is co-sponsored by Daniels Development. Tickets cost $15 for Historic Seattle members, $10 for students and $20 for eveybody else.
Rypkema is a principal of PlaceEconomics, a Washington, D.C.-based real estate and economic development-consulting firm that specializes in downtown and neighborhood commercial district revitalization and reuse of historic structures.
Here is an excerpt from a speech Rypkema gave two years ago in Portland, at the National Trust for Historic Preservation’s annual conference:
“Razing historic buildings results in a triple hit on scarce resources.
First, we are throwing away thousands of dollars of embodied energy. Second, we are replacing it with materials vastly more consumptive of energy. What are most historic houses built from? Brick, plaster, concrete and timber — among the least energy consumptive of materials. What are major components of new buildings? Plastic, steel, vinyl and aluminum – among the most energy consumptive of materials.
Third, recurring embodied energy savings increase dramatically as a building life stretches over fifty years.
You’re a fool or a fraud if you claim to be an environmentalist and yet you throw away historic buildings and their components.”










