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2006:
The Lake House Today
A
Place for Everyone
The Trust has teamed up with Bev Watson, a
Burlington restaurateur and inn owner, to run the day-to-day
operations. The rehabilitation is now partially complete, and the
hotel is now used for retreats and training with special emphasis
on nonprofit users, and for family gatherings and weddings.
Visit the Grand
Isle Lake House Web Site for more information.
A Special Place for
Preservationists
For the past four years, the Preservation
Trust of Vermont has hosted two-day retreats for volunteers who
are working on community preservation projects. The retreats are
tied closely with the work of the Field Services Program, a
partnership of the Preservation Trust of Vermont and the
National Trust. The Field Services Program provides direct
assistance to groups undertaking community preservation
projects. The retreats are a way to bring together six or seven
community groups working on similar kinds of projects. A goal is
to have a good mix of interesting projects at different points
along their timeline.
According to Paul Bruhn, Executive
Director for the Preservation Trust of Vermont, “The
participants mentor each other, learn that they are not the only
ones working on very challenging projects, and see that they are
all part of the process of building better communities and
helping to protect the character of Vermont."
The retreats are structured so that each group
of two-to-four individuals is invited to present a 10-15 minute
case study about their preservation project. The case study is
meant to frame a specific problem or situation that once solved
will catapult that project to a higher level. Following the case
study is about 45 minutes of brainstorming and cross-mentoring.
Along with community preservationists, two or
three resource people are part of the mix. Depending on the
projects, they might include someone from the State Historic
Preservation Office or National Trust Northeast Office, or a
fund-raising consultant, developer, architect, or someone from
the Vermont Arts Council. But by-and-large, it is the community
volunteers who bring collective thinking and experience to one
another’s projects. At times, mentors have challenged the
credibility of the problem, turning a project on its head before
sending it down another path. Other times they have validated a
group’s intuition. But always, participants have been generous
with advice, often going beyond the retreat to visit one another’s
projects and provide ongoing support.

Besides the structured case studies, the
retreats allow time, before and after dinner, for more casual
discussion-maybe during a walk, or sitting on the porch, or
gathering around a scrapbook or display. During those special
moments, ideas continue to flow with even more out-of-the box
thinking. According to Sandy Kilburn, a retreat participant from
Swanton, Vermont, “It’s so important to get together-to be
inspired by what other towns are doing and to learn from them so
that we don’t reinvent the wheel. It’s invaluable!”
 
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