Submit your nomination for Historic Salem, Inc.’s 2011 Preservation Awards

The Nathaniel Bowditch House, HSI headquartersTo Salemites, 17th, 18th and 19th century dwellings and buildings are part of the everyday backdrop we see on our way to the post office, coffee shop, and park. Historic architecture is part of our daily lives. So much so that we often forget how unique the fabric of our port city is. Now’s your chance to recognize those projects and people who have helped preserve it in the context of how we live now.

Take a look around your neighborhood, street, or even your own home and nominate a recently completed renovation project, preservation-minded person, or group of preservation-minded people for an Historic Salem, Inc. (HSI) 2011 Preservation Award. The deadline for submissions is April 15, 2011. Find the nomination form here.

Hannah Diozzi, the Chair of the Salem Historical Commission and one of the approximately seven jurors on the Preservation Awards Selection Committee, notes that the criteria for the project awards are generally based upon a combination of The Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties from the National Park Service and the Salem Historical Commission Guidelines Notebook. She summarizes, “The kind of thing we look for is that the renovation is appropriate to the period when the house was built.”

Nominations for projects located in the four historic districts: McIntire, Salem Common, Derby Street and Lafayette Street are welcome as are projects located elsewhere in the city, like North and South Salem, the Willows, Bridge Street, and Gallows Hill.

Categories for nomination include: private residences, commercial properties, publicly-owned properties, properties owned by non-profits, landscape projects, and individuals/groups (companies, institutions, organizations) who have made notable contributions to Salem’s historic preservation.

Last year’s winners included D.I.Y homeowners, homeowners working with home professionals, developers, and the Peabody Essex Museum along with the Salem Fire Department for their respective disaster-management plan and response to the two-alarm fire at the Ropes Mansion in the summer of 2009.

This year’s winners will be recognized on May 18, 2011 at Historic Salem, Inc.’s Annual Meeting and will receive a certificate as well as a one year membership (or membership renewal) to Historic Salem, Inc.

You can support Salem’s historic preservation by making a nomination. Spread the word.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast and North Shore Art Throb

The threshold of exterior gateways

Image excerpt from Fine Homebuilding Drawing Board column about exterior gateways.

An exterior gateway leading to your home can set the tone for what to expect within. Visit your local newsstand to find my latest Fine Homebuilding "Drawing Board" column, in the April/May 2011 issue, about shaping exterior gateways that shape expectation. Click here for a PDF of the column. "Transitioning with exterior gateways", Issue #218, April/May 2011.  Reprinted with permission copyright 2010, The Taunton Press, Inc.

Visit the KHS publications page to see other magazine columns and articles I've written.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

101 things Katie Hutchison Studio (KHS) has learned designing homes, Part eight of ten

Brewster Long House: Include a screen porch where possible.See Part seven of this series here.

71.  Know when a phone call (rather than an email) is warranted.

72.  Attend to air sealing and weather stripping.

73.  Anticipate structural layout/issues from the roof down, not the other way around.

74.  Include a screen porch where possible. (See Brewster Long House above.)

75.  Small projects generally cost more per square foot of construction than larger projects.

76.  Design breathable construction which doesn’t trap moisture.

77.  Neighbors can derail a project; respect them.

78.  Creativity thrives amidst constraints.

79.  The budget can be your friend; respect it.

80.  Ask three general contractors to participate in the bid process.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Napkin sketches of home

"Home is where we live." by Isabel, age 8Find an introduction to this series here.

I would love to see a "napkin sketch of home" created by you, your family, and/or friends -- both young and old.

Please submit sketches via a scan or photo to Katie@katiehutchison.com for possible inclusion in the series. Include the artist's name and age, and a title for the sketch, if there is one.

Share your ideas of "home". Let's get sketching.

by Katie Hutchison for House Enthusiast

Ask Katie: Kitchen keepers and cost savers in a rental

cover photo courtesy of Amazon.comQ: We’re planning to build a kitchen in a house we’re renting. The space is in a new addition (roughly 16x22) in a 1930s Sears kit house. Since we are never going to resell the house, we are looking for ways to do this cheaply with an eye towards investing in pieces we can take with us. As an example, I would rather use inexpensive flooring and invest in a good looking rug. Any other ideas?

Tim from Brookeville, MD

A:  This is a great question for a thrifty Yankee -- especially one who appreciates vintage Sears Roebuck kit houses. I have a few recommendations to offer. First, use and/or convert furniture and/or salvaged items to function as kitchen worksurfaces and storage units. Then, team these with affordable, stock, built-in cabinet cases and open shelves. Finally, round out the kitchen with economical fixture and finish alternatives. When it’s time to move, you could either take some of the items with you or be happy for the savings they offered as you leave them behind.

furniture/salvage accents
For example, sizable farm tables and baking cupboards served their purposes well in kitchens of yore. Why not put them to work in today’s kitchen -- particularly one added to your 30’s home? A sturdy table makes for a great

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