Are These the New Traditional Buildings, or Tomorrow’s Main Street?
During a recent trip to Charleston, SC, to participate in the Masters of the Building Arts Festival, followed by a timber-framing workshop at Savannah Technical College, we spent the night just south of Charlotte, NC, in hopes of avoiding heavy morning traffic on our way south.
As usual, I Googled local restaurants and found quite a few in a little town called Fort Mill about five miles south of our hotel. After reading a few reviews, we decided to try an Asian place called Liu Liu’s.

These buildings on Market Street in Baxter Village, SC, were designed to have the architectural appeal of buildings of the Old South. They are actually 21st-century buildings, as are all of the commercial and residential buildings in the village.
The directions were pretty easy to follow, and as we turned onto Market Street, we were greeted with the Classical architecture typical of the South, with large galleries and bracketed eaves. What seemed strange was how crisp and clean everything looked. Instead of the typical streetscape, where some buildings are well maintained and newish looking while others are waiting for some important maintenance, all of the buildings on Market Street looked brand new; in fact, they were. It was as if Fort Mill had been designed to look Classical, a modern creation built to replicate the feel of the Old South, which in fact was a 21st-century fabrication.
Since that evening, which aroused my curiosity, I have learned that Fort Mill is a settlement that dates from the early 1800s and was established in 1873. The town center is actually about three miles to the east of the Market Street development we had been directed to by Google. Some web research turned up the city’s website, which proudly displays the city’s “comprehensive plan” containing its “community node descriptions” that include node 4a, which is actually called Baxter Village, where Market Street is located, and node 5, which is downtown Fort Mill.
The plan lists advantages and challenges for each node. For Baxter Village, the advantages are “community identity, new site of Fort Mill’s first hotel,” and the challenges are “traffic congestion, lack of pedestrian infrastructure.” For downtown Fort Mill, the advantages are listed as “building stock, downtown parks,” and the challenges are “lack of draw for many residents.”
Clearly, the bias for development of the area is toward constructing new buildings, rather than investing in the old ones, even though the result is congestion and lack of sidewalks. But in the process, entire new neighborhoods, including residential subdivisions, are being constructed, devouring huge quantities of resources, while the historic building stock languishes in the unattractive environment of poorly maintained buildings. This is a reality that can be seen all over America in areas where developers have chosen to invest. The question for me goes well beyond how “green” this growth is; it goes to whether or not it makes any sense at all in the long run.
In the last ten years, our little town of Wooster, OH, has seen a Lowe’s big-box store built and then abandoned when the corporate overlord’s market research showed that what was really needed was a Lowe’s super-big box instead. This is becoming the norm across the country as commercial developments become temporary in response to fluctuations in the economy and corporate competition. In Baxter Village, it is well disguised behind a façade of traditional architecture. In this world of shiny new old buildings, the Stepford wives can enjoy sushi and Starbucks any time they want.
Lisa Sasser, past president of the Preservation Trades Network and current president of the Timber Framers Guild, and I have been part of many discussions about the fact that one real value of keeping the traditional trades alive and viable is the fact that it enables building tomorrow’s historic buildings today. The concept that historic building stock should only consist of buildings that have already been built assumes we no longer know how to construct buildings which can last for centuries. In truth, we should be questioning why we aren’t. Obviously, this isn’t an easy question to answer, but what concerns me about Baxter Village, USA, is the faux nature of the buildings.
Interestingly, we seem to have taken a curious route to get to this point. In the mid-20th century, we witnessed the creation of shopping centers followed by shopping malls, which were built in suburban areas where huge parking lots supported the crowds of shoppers. As more and more people were drawn away from downtown, the historic buildings there received makeovers to appear more like the modern ones where people now went to shop.
Unfortunately, the historic character of many American towns and villages was badly damaged in the process due to modern methods and materials being applied to old buildings, and as these modern façades began to fade, downtown areas began to look shabby and unattractive instead of historic.
Many cities have seen an attempt to solve this problem through “Main Street” programs, which are working to counteract the sprawl created by the suburban malls and subdivisions that grow up around them. But the concept of returning shopping traffic to historic downtowns that long ago lost their public transit infrastructure to the pressures of big oil companies is problematic at best. Ultimately, construction financing, approval and contracting mechanisms can convince investors that creating new commercial districts is more financially viable than investing in the restoration and reuse of existing ones.
For me, these types of fabricated communities are a waste of resources beyond justification. The idea that a Classical façade is somehow the new authenticity is little more than public brainwashing. Unlike historic towns and villages, which supported traditional tradespeople, we become immersed in a completely manufactured environment.
Instead of traditional methods and materials being used to construct buildings that are meant to last, what exists is the appearance of traditional building, and I have little doubt that these buildings will do anything but age gracefully. When they begin to show their weaknesses, their maintenance will require the latest iron-on patches applied with the latest greatest spooge.
Unfortunately, the creation of these manufactured villages is doing little more than undermining the belief that we still know how to build for the future. Instead, the concept of building for the future is replaced with the concept of building simply for the here and now.
How can it possibly matter how many LEED points are attached to these modern atrocities when in fact the materials used to manufacture them will end up in a landfill long before the historic buildings in downtown Fort Mill cease to exist? And can we expect anything else than the loss of the traditional trades when the world we manufacture has no need for them?
I feel strongly that if we want to see our historic built environment survive, we need to invest both in the buildings we have today and the builders who will take care of them today and tomorrow. In a perfect world, those same builders will also be building the historic built environment of the future.
Since 1983, Building Conservation International, the technical, non-profit educational organization that received the first President of the United States’ Historic Preservation Award for innovative research and training in dealing with pre-1940 structures, has been trying to establish an Academy of Building Conservation.
Based on the very successful Academy programs in Philadelphia’s public high schools of over twenty years ago, it would prepare youths, and unemployed craftsmen, to enter the huge, untapped market of maintaining and upgrading the millions of structures erected in this country prior to 1940, and still in use. Subjects from roof to foundation would be taught, with emphasis on the modern mechanical/electrical systems expected by today’s occupants to be present in every property of any age. Knowledge of how to do the job on time, on budget and sensitive to original design and fabric, presents a life long lucrative career. Two-dimensional drawings have to be executed into three-dimensional sustainable, affordable and acceptable Shelter.
With selected instructors, in the mornings, basic practical academic subjects would be taught. In the afternoons, attendees would work on real life jobs on actual projects, supervised by experienced mentors (often retired professionals).
Although topics in addition to the original Academy of Applied Electrical Sciences, supported by the then Bell Telephone and Philadelphia Electrical Company, were added, like Business, Medical and Automotive, the one most appropriate to conserve cultural heritage was missed – that of extending the life, value and usefulness of existing properties = Conservation.
This country really needs more recognition that imagination can help cure our economic ills. Successful education is thinking out-of-the-box, in addition to rote learning, plus the European method of being “in the trenches”, medieval apprentice-style.
For decades, the innovative Philadelphia Academy Program took disadvantaged high school students to a bright future. Attendance was double that of ordinary classes. The Academy Program was replaced by Charter Schools.
Then, students were paid a minimum salary to keep them able to attend school daily. Projects could be completed with lower budgets, while Youth experienced the real world. Dedicated teachers developed rapport with the kids, who are encouraged to come up with many novel ideas.
Perhaps this approach has not been taken because it is too simple?
Needed are enlightened entrepreneurs to provide projects for this undertaking. In addition to receiving the utilities’ and local/state/federal incentives/rebates, developers would benefit from the federal 20% Investment Tax Credit for Rehabilitation of Income-producing Historic Properties.
Of course, practical codes and standards, geared to both contemporary and existing structures, are also important, always keeping safety uppermost.
Similar activity during the Great Depression raised handsome, still- employed buildings across the country, that are beloved by the public. Willing workers and affordable equipment and materials profited their creators.
Increased productivity, profits, job, tax revenues, energy conservation, and improved quality of life would be gained.
Why isn’t this positive, common sense action being taken today?
Traditional buildings are only preserved when they are appreciated. And they are only appreciated by those with an educated eye. In Singapore, where I live, when I try to make conversation by bringing up restoration projects I have completed, even local architects say, “why fix something old?” and change the subject. As a result, Singapore has very little historic architecture left. What has replaced it (outside of the office building and shopping malls) is a mix of featurelessness and kitch. No one even knows what history to ape, since they are so unfamiliar with even the concept of historic architecture. I agree that there is more that is lost when historic structures are abandoned than just the buildings themselves; the ability to recognize and appreciate authenticity is an equally tragic loss.
Gersil-Thank you for your poignant and enlightened comment. I completely agree that the real reason we aren’t investing in our existing historic building stock is that, for the most part, we aren’t being educated to do so. As you point out, the common sense in educating young people in conservation is somehow not recognized in the US. Those in the work force who do receive an education in “preservation” (a very misused word) are more often than not architects, engineers etc. and their education is in classrooms and laboratories, with no field time to speak of built into the curriculum. Field experience comes afterward.
Education at all levels needs to include working with traditional building materials and this is often best learned hands on. The lack of this experience often results in applying modern materials and methods with disastrous results. In truth, building old looking new buildings with modern materials is easier. It fits what the designers and builders understand and comes with fewer “unknowns” which can adversely affect schedules and budgets. If the unknowns were revealed in the educational system, the problem would cease to exist.
@Gersil N. Kay, IESNA, AIA/HRC
Vanya- Very good observations with an interesting perspective. At the workshop in Savannah I mentioned in the blog I met two folks who came to observe who are currently living in Boston. They have an interest in starting a traditional trades school in Singapore, were they are from, to try to begin rebuilding the needed skilled workforce to enable conservation of what does remain. Sounds like your perspective indicates it will be much more of an uphill battle than we see so many programs in the US trying to win. Thanx for your comment!
@Vanya Wright