Economics, Sustainability,
and Historic Preservation
National Trust
Conference
Portland, Oregon
October 1, 2005
by Donovan D. Rypkema
Good morning. I am honored to be
part of this closing plenary. As we've heard all week, the theme
of this conference is Sustain America: Vision, Economics, and
Preservation. So I'd like to expand the vision of the
relationship among those things – economics, sustainability, and
preservation.
Last fall I attended the World
Urban Forum in Barcelona. The World Urban Forum is UN Habitat’s
biennial gathering of people from around the world who are dealing
with issues of cities.
In Barcelona, there were 5000
people from 150 countries. During the week there were 300 sessions
– workshops, plenary addresses, panel discussions – and
thousands of less formal interactions. Not surprisingly, the most
commonly heard phrase was sustainable development. But you
know what the second most common phrase was? heritage
conservation. There were perhaps a dozen sessions specifically
about historic preservation, so hearing the phrase there was no
surprise. But heritage conservation permeated the sessions
that on the surface weren’t about historic preservation at all
– sessions about economic competitiveness, job creation,
housing, public private partnerships, social cohesion.
Much of the world has begun to
recognize the interrelationship and the interdependency between
sustainable development and heritage conservation.
Much of the world, but much less
so in the United States. With one notable exception, I’m not so
sure we’ve really connected the dots. Too many advocates too
narrowly define what constitutes sustainable development. Let me
give you an example.
Last September in Boulder,
Colorado, a homeowner in a local historic district applied to
paint his window sash and trim and approval was given the same
day. Two weeks later the Landmarks Commission learned that the
historic windows had all been removed – a clear violation of the
local ordinance – and had been replaced with new windows. This
was done by contractor who claims to specialize in
"ecologically sound methods" and bills himself as
"Boulder’s greenest contractor."
The Landmarks Commission sent a
letter directing that the original windows be retained and their
condition documented. The contractor responded saying that the
greater energy efficiency of the new windows should outweigh the
regulations that apply to houses within the historic district. A
subsequent Commission hearing upheld the staff position and a City
Council hearing supported the Commission’s ruling.
Here’s the next chapter – a
reporter for the local alternative newspaper decided to take
matters into his own hands. He went to the house, picked up the
historic windows, took a sledgehammer to them, hauled them to the
dump and arranged to have a bulldozer run over them. Sort of a 10
year old’s version of civil disobedience.
Now I want to stop the story for
just a minute. I’m not necessarily sure that the Landmark
Commission’s decision was right. But I’m telling you the story
to demonstrate our ignorance about what sustainable development
really is.
First from an environmental
perspective:
- The vast majority of heat
loss in homes is through the attic or uninsulated walls,
not windows.
- Adding just 3 1/2 inches
of fiberglass insulation in the attic has three times the
R factor impact as replacing a single pane window with no
storm window with the most energy efficient window.
- Properly repaired historic
windows have an R factor nearly indistinguishable from
new, so-called, "weatherized" windows.
- Regardless of the
manufacturers’ "lifetime warranties", thirty
percent of the windows being replaced each year are less
than 10 years old.
- One Indiana study showed
that the payback period through energy savings by
replacing historic wood windows is 400 years.
- The Boulder house was
built over a hundred years ago, meaning those windows were
built from hardwood timber from old growth forests.
Environmentalists go nuts about cutting trees in old
growth forests, but what’s the difference? Destroying
those windows represents the destruction of the same
scarce resource.
- Finally, the diesel fuel
to power the bulldozer consumed more fossil fuel that
would be saved over the lifetime of the replacement
windows.
The point is this – sustainable
development is about, but not only about, environmental
sustainability.
- Repairing and rebuilding
the historic windows would have meant the dollars were
spent locally instead of at a distant manufacturing plant.
That’s economic sustainability, also part of sustainable
development.
- Maintaining the original
fabric is maintaining the character of the historic
neighborhood. That’s cultural sustainability, also part
of sustainable development.
Most of you know of the LEED
certification system of the US Green Building Council. Currently
circulating is a draft of a proposed rating system for
neighborhood developments. To their credit, they have assigned
weight for adaptively reusing an historic building – up to 2
points…out of 114. Well, at least it’s a step in the right
direction.
But if we don’t yet get it in
the United States, others do. King Sturge – an international
real estate consulting firm headquartered in England – has been
at the forefront of broadening the concept of sustainable
development. Their framework for sustainable development certainly
includes environmental responsibility but also economic
responsibility and social responsibility. I’m going to take the
liberty of expanding the third category into social and cultural
responsibility.
They further identify these
important nexus: for a community to be viable there needs to be a
link between environmental responsibility and economic
responsibility; for a community to be livable there needs to be a
link between environmental responsibility and social
responsibility; and for a community to be equitable there needs to
be a link between economic responsibility and social
responsibility.
When we think about sustainable
development in this broader context the entire equation changes
– and includes more than simply, "Is this building LEED
certified?" or "Is the snail darter habitat being
protected?"
When we think about sustainable
development in this broader context, the role of historic
preservation becomes all the more clear.
How does historic preservation
contribute to the environmental responsibility component of
sustainable development?
Let’s start with solid waste
disposal. In the United States we collect almost one ton of solid
waste per person annually. Around a fourth of the material in
solid waste facilities is construction debris, much of that from
the demolition of older and historic buildings.
We all diligently recycle our
Coke cans. It’s a pain in the neck, but we do it because it’s
good for the environment. Here is a typical building in an
American downtown – 25 feet wide and 120 feet deep. Today we
tear down one small building like this in your downtown. We have
now wiped out the entire environmental benefit from the last
1,344,000 aluminum cans that were recycled. We’ve not only
wasted an historic building, we’ve wasted months of diligent
recycling by the people of your community.
Driven in part by concerns for
sustainable development there is an emerging movement of planners,
architects, landscape architects and some developers. The movement
wants us to stop building endless sprawl and start building better
cities. Everybody has their own name for it – New Urbanism,
Traditional Neighborhood Development, Transportation Oriented
Development – slightly different names but largely the same
goals and principles. At the National Governors Association, they
call it New Community Design. In their publication – New
Community Design to the Rescue – they establish a set of
principles, and they are these:
- Mixed use
- Community interaction
- Transportation/walkability
- Tree lined streets
- Open space
- Efficient use of
infrastructure
- Houses close to the
street
- Diverse housing
- High density
- Reduced land consumption
- Links to adjacent
communities
- Enhances surrounding
communities
- Pedestrian friendly
Great list. Building cities in
that fashion would certainly advance the sustainable development
agenda. But you know what? We don’t need new community design to
rescue us. That list of principles is exactly what our historic
neighborhoods are providing right now. We just need to make sure
they are protected. Oh, and by the way, the number of times the
phrase "historic preservation" appears in their
publication? Exactly zero.
If we want to slow the spread of
strip center sprawl, we have to have effective programs of
downtown revitalization. Throughout America, we have seen
downtowns reclaim their historic role as the multifunctional,
vibrant, heart of the city. Downtown is where I do most of my
work. I visit 100 downtowns a year of every size, in every part of
the country. But I cannot identify a single example of a sustained
success in downtown revitalization where historic preservation
wasn’t a key component of that strategy. Not one. Conversely,
the examples of very expensive failures in downtown revitalization
have nearly all had the destruction of historic buildings as a
major element. The relative importance of preservation as part of
the downtown revitalization effort will vary, depending on the
local resources, the age of the city, the strength of the local
preservation groups, and the enlightenment of the leadership. But
successful revitalization and no historic preservation? It ain’t
happening.
Next is the concept of embodied
energy. I hadn’t paid much attention to embodied energy, not
until oil hit $70 a barrel. So I did a bit of research. Embodied
energy is the total expenditure of energy involved in the
creation of the building and its constituent materials. When we
throw away an historic building, we simultaneously throw away the
embodied energy incorporated into that building. How significant
is embodied energy? In Australia they’ve calculated that the
embodied energy in their existing building stock is equivalent to
ten years of the total energy consumption of the entire country.
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.
The World Bank specifically
relates the concept of embodied energy with historic buildings
saying, "…the key economic reason for the cultural
patrimony case is that a vast body of valuable assets, for which
sunk costs have already been paid by prior generations, is
available. It is a waste to overlook such assets."
I said earlier that in the US we
haven't generally made the connection between sustainable
development and historic preservation, but that there was one
notable exception. The exception is Smart Growth. Dick Moe brought
the preservation movement – with many of us kicking and
screaming – into the forefront of Smart Growth…as well we
should be. There is no movement in America today that enjoys more
widespread support across political, ideological, and geographical
boundaries than does Smart Growth. Democrats support it for
environmental reasons, Republicans for fiscal reasons, big city
mayors, rural county commissioners, there are Smart Growth
supporters everywhere.
The Smart Growth movement also
has a clear statement of principles, and here it is:
- Create range of housing
opportunities and choices
- Create walkable
neighborhoods
- Encourage community and
stakeholder collaboration
- Foster distinctive,
attractive places with a Sense of Place
- Make development decisions
predictable, fair, and cost effective
- Mix land uses
- Preserve open space,
farmland, natural beauty and critical environmental areas
- Provide variety of
transportation choices
- Strengthen and direct
development toward existing communities
- Take advantage of compact
built design.
But you know what? If a community
did nothing but protect its historic neighborhoods it will have
advanced every Smart Growth principle. Historic preservation IS
Smart Growth. A Smart Growth approach that does not include
historic preservation high on the agenda is stupid growth, period.
Historic preservation is vital to
sustainable development, but not just on the level of
environmental responsibility. The second component of the
sustainable development equation is economic responsibility. So
let me give you some examples in this area.
An underappreciated contribution
of historic buildings is their role as natural incubators of small
businesses. It isn’t the Fortune 500 that are creating the jobs
in America. 85% of all net new jobs are created by firms employing
less than 20 people. One of the few costs firms of that size can
control is occupancy costs – rents. In downtowns and in
neighborhood commercial districts a major contribution to the
local economy is the relative affordability of older buildings. It
is no accident that the creative, imaginative, start-up firm isn’t
located in the corporate office "campus" the industrial
park or the shopping center – they simply cannot afford those
rents. Historic commercial buildings play the natural business
incubator role, usually with no subsidy or assistance of any kind.
Pioneer Square in Seattle is one
of the great historic commercial neighborhoods in America. The
business management association there did a survey of why Pioneer
Square businesses chose that neighborhood. The most common answer?
That it was a historic district. The second most common answer?
The cost of occupancy. Neither of those responses is accidental.
I’m often introduced as a
preservationist, but I’m really an economic development
consultant. The top priorities for economic development efforts
are creating jobs and increasing local household income. The
rehabilitation of older and historic buildings is particularly
potent in this regard. As a rule of thumb, new construction will
be half materials and half labor. Rehabilitation, on the other
hand, will be sixty to seventy percent labor with the balance
being materials. This labor intensity affects a local economy on
two levels. First, we buy an HVAC system from Ohio and lumber from
Idaho, but we buy the services of the plumber, the electrician,
and the carpenter from across the street. Further, once we hang
the drywall, the drywall doesn’t spend any more money. But the
plumber gets a hair cut on the way home, buys groceries, and joins
the YMCA – each recirculating that paycheck within the
community.
Many people think about economic
development in terms of manufacturing, so let’s look at that.
Here in Oregon for every million dollars of production by the
average manufacturing firm 24.5 jobs are created. But that same
million dollars in the rehabilitation of an historic building?
36.1 jobs. A million dollars of manufacturing output in Oregon
will add, on average about $536,000 to local household incomes.
But a million dollars of rehabilitation? $783,000.
Of course the argument can be
made, "Yeah, but once you’ve built the building the job
creation is done." Yes, but there are two responses to that.
First, real estate is a capital asset – like a drill press or a
boxcar. It has an economic impact during construction, but a
subsequent economic impact when it is in productive use.
Additionally, however, since most building components have a life
of between 25 and 40 years, a community could rehabilitate 2 to 3
percent of its building stock per year and have perpetual
employment in the building trades. And these jobs can’t be
shipped overseas.
There are some economists and
politicians who argue that in economic downturns public
expenditures should be made to create employment. As you all know,
politicians’ favorite form of public works is building highways.
David Listokin at the Center for
Urban Policy Research calculated the relative impact of public
works. Let’s say a level of government spends $1 million
building a highway. (And these days that means a highway not quite
the length of this room) but anyway a million dollar highway –
what does that mean? 34 jobs, $1.2 million in ultimate household
income, $100,000 in state taxes and $85,000 in local taxes.
As an aside, Congress finally
passed the five-year transportation bill. It took them two years,
primarily because of the differing amounts n the Senate bill and
the House bill. But I’d just like to point out that the
difference between the two bills – not the entire amount, just
the difference – would be sufficient to fund the revenue loss
from the Historic Rehabilitation Tax Credit program for the next
335 years.
Anyway, we could build a short
length of highway or we could build a new building for $1 million.
36 jobs, $1,223,000 in household income, $103, 000 in state taxes
and $86,000 in local taxes. Or we could spend that million
rehabilitating an historic building. 38 jobs, a million three in
household income, $110,000 in state taxes and $92,000 in local
taxes. You tell me which public works project has the most
economic impact.
Another area of preservation’s
economic impact is heritage tourism. In a Virginia study a few
years ago, we analyzed the patterns of heritage visitors. We
defined heritage visitors as those who did one or more of the
following: visited a museum (in Virginia around 90% of the museums
are history museums), visited a Civil War battlefield, or visited
an historic site. We contrasted those patterns with visitors to
Virginia who did none of those things. Here’s what we found:
heritage visitors stay longer, visit twice as many places, and on
a per trip basis spend 2 ½ times as much money as other visitors.
Wherever heritage tourism has been evaluated this basic tendency
is observed: heritage visitors stay longer, spend more per day
and, therefore, have a significantly greater per trip economic
impact.
The University of Florida and
Rutgers did an economic analysis of historic preservation in
Florida. Florida is not a state that immediately comes to mind as
being heritage tourism based. We think of Disney World, beaches,
and golf courses. Tourism is the largest industry in Florida. But
just the heritage tourism portion of that industry has impressive
impacts, with over $3 billion in expenditures, half a billion in
taxes, and over 100,000 jobs. While most of the jobs, predictably,
are in the retail and service industries, in fact nearly every
segment of the economy is positively affected.
The area of preservation’s
economic impact that’s been studied most frequently is the
effect of local historic districts on property values. It has been
looked at by a number of people and institutions using a variety
of methodologies in historic districts all over the country. The
most interesting result is the consistency of the findings. By far
the most common conclusion is that properties within local
historic districts appreciate at rates greater than the local
market overall and faster than similar non-designated
neighborhoods. Of the several dozen of these analyses, the
worst-case scenario is that housing in historic districts
appreciates at a rate equivalent to the local market as a whole.
Like it or not we live in an
economically globalized world. To be economically sustainable it’s
necessary to be economically competitive. But to be competitive in
a globalized world a community must position itself to compete not
just with other cities in the region but with other cities on the
planet. A large measure of that competitiveness will be based on
the quality of life the local community provides, and the built
heritage is a major component of the quality of life equation.
This is a lesson that is being recognized worldwide. Here’s what
the Inter American Development bank has to say, "As the
international experience has demonstrated, the protection of
cultural heritage is important, especially in the context of the
globalization phenomena, as an instrument to promote sustainable
development strongly based on local traditions and community
resources."
What neither the supporters nor
the critics of globalization understand is that there is not one
globalization but two – economic globalization and cultural
globalization. For those few who recognize the difference, there
is an unchallenged assumption that the second is an unavoidable
outgrowth of the first. Economic globalization has widespread
positive impacts; cultural globalization ultimately diminishes us
all. It is through the adaptive reuse of heritage buildings that a
community can actively participate in the positive benefits of
economic globalization while simultaneously mitigating the
negative impacts of cultural globalization.
So there are some ways that
historic preservation contributes to sustainable development
through environmental responsibility and through economic
responsibility. But I saved the third area – cultural and social
responsibility – for last, because in the long run it may well
be the most important.
First, housing. In the United
States today we are facing a crisis in housing. All kinds of
solutions – most of them very expensive – are being proposed.
But the most obvious is barely on the radar screen – quit
tearing down older and historic housing. Homes built before 1950
disproportionately house people of modest means – the vast
majority without any subsidy or public intervention of any kind.
So you take these two facts – there is an affordable housing
crisis and older housing is providing affordable housing and one
would think, "Well, then, there must be a high priority to
saving that housing stock." Alas, not so.
For the last thirty years, every
day, seven days a week, 52 weeks a year we have lost 577 older and
historic houses, over 80 percent of them single-family residences.
The vast majority of these houses were consciously torn down, were
thrown away as being valueless.
For our most historic houses –
those built before 1920 – in just the decade of the 1990s,
772,000 housing units were lost from our built national heritage.
Affordable housing is central to
social responsibility; older and historic homes will continue to
provide affordable housing if we just quit tearing them down.
At least as important as housing
affordability is the issue of economic integration. America is a
very diverse country – racially, ethnically, educationally,
economically. But on the neighborhood level our neighborhoods are
not diverse at all. The vast majority of neighborhoods are all
white or all black, all rich or all poor. But the exception –
virtually everywhere I’ve looked in America – is in historic
districts. There rich and poor, Asian and Hispanic, college
educated and high school drop out, live in immediate proximity,
are neighbors in the truest sense of the word. That is economic
integration and sustainable cities are going to need it.
Economic development takes many
forms – industrial recruitment, job retraining, waterfront
development, and others. But historic preservation and downtown
revitalization are the only forms of economic development that are
simultaneously community development. That too is part of our
social responsibility.
Finally, I’d ask you to take a
moment and think of something significant to you personally.
Anything. You may think of your children, or your spouse, or your
church, or your childhood home, or a personal accomplishment of
some type. Now take away your memory. Which of those things are
significant to you now? None of them. There can be no significance
without memory. Those same things may still be significant to
someone else, but without memory they are not significant to you.
And if memory is necessary for significance, it is also necessary
for both meaning and value. Without memory nothing has
significance, nothing has meaning, nothing has value.
That, I think, is the lesson of
that old Zen koan, "If a tree falls in a forest and no one
hears, did it make a sound?" Well of course it made a sound;
sound comes from the vibration of molecules and a falling tree
vibrates molecules. But that sound might as well not have been
made, because there is no memory of it.
We acquire memories from a sound
or a picture, or from a conversation, or from words in a book, or
from the stories our grandmother told us. But how is the memory of
a city conveyed? Here’s what Italo Calvino writes, "The
city ... does not tell its past, but contains it like the lines of
a hand, written in the corners of the streets, the gratings of the
windows, the banisters of the steps … every segment marked in
turn with scratches, indentations, scrolls."
The city tells it own past,
transfers its own memory, largely through the fabric of the built
environment. Historic buildings are the physical manifestation of
memory – it is memory that makes places significant.
The whole purpose of sustainable
development is to keep that which is important, which is valuable,
which is significant. The definition of sustainable development is
"…the ability to meet our own needs without prejudicing the
ability of future generations to meet their own needs." We
need to use our cities and our historic resources in such a way
that they are available to meet the needs of future generations as
well.
Historic preservation makes
cities viable, makes cities livable, makes cities equitable.
I particularly appreciate that
the broadened concept of sustainable development is made up of
responsibilities – environmental responsibility, economic
responsibility, and social responsibility.
Today throughout America there
are thousands of advocacy movements. Most of them are
"rights" movements: animal rights, abortion rights,
right to life, right to die, states rights, gun rights, gay
rights, property rights, women’s’ rights, and on and on and
on. And I’m for all of those things – rights are good. But any
claim for rights that is not balanced with responsibilities
removes the civility from civilization, and gives us an
entitlement mentality as a nation of mere consumers of public
services rather than a nation of citizens. A consumer has rights;
a citizen has responsibilities that accompany those rights.
Historic preservation is a responsibility movement rather than
rights movement. It is a movement that urges us toward the
responsibility of stewardship, not merely the right of ownership.
Stewardship of our historic built environment, certainly, but
stewardship of the meanings and memories manifested in those
buildings as well.
Sustainability means stewardship.
Historic preservation is sustainable development. Development
without historic preservation is not sustainable. That’s what
your stewardship is assuring today, and future generations will
thank you for it tomorrow.
Thank you very much.
© Donovan D. Rypkema, 2005
PlaceEconomics
1785 Massachusetts Avenue, NW
Washington, DC 20036
202-588-6258
DRypkema@PlaceEconomics.com
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