|
HISTORIC PRESERVATION : MILWAUKEE a website by SCHOOL OF ARCHITECTURE AND URBAN PLANNING UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN - MILWAUKEE PHONE: 414-229-5686 |
||
|
The School of Architecture and Urban Planning at the University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee offers this website as both a description of the Historic Preservation Degree Program as well as a tool for pro-active preservation. Our intent is to combine academic work with historic preservation activities in the professional community. To that end, we offer the following sections as a consolidation of many areas of concern that make Milwaukee an active and important center for architectural historic preservation. |
City Hall Restoration Downtown Milwaukee 9/2/06 Click here/image to view pictures of the restoration process |
|
![]() |
Program Requirements and Faculty
UWM - SARUP offers a degree in Historic Preservation through the Masters of Architecture in the School of Architecture and Urban Planning. |
|
![]() |
Preservation Projects and Jobs
UWM-SARUP's Historic Preservation Institute gives students the chance to gain hands on experience in the field of preservation. Activities include local as well as international projects that range from documentation to adaptive reuse feasability. |
|
![]() |
A photographic inventory and architectural evaluation of historic Milwaukee Buildings.
|
|
|
UPCOMING EVENTS!!! UWM - Japan Preservation / John Randall McDonald, Oct. 16, 2006 City of Milwaukee - Lost Milwaukee - City Hall Rotunda, Oct. 22, 2006 State of Wisconsin - Madison Preservation Workshops, Fall 2006 National - Chicago - NCPT Workshops, Fall 2006 International - Australia - Historic Cities Conference, Oct. 30-Nov. 6, 2006
Student Projects Unity Temple Addition
|
||
![]() |
Endangered Buildings & Sites
Reference the following categories to see the latest in preservation activities around the city of Milwaukee.
|
|
| City of Milwaukee | ||
![]() |
The City as a Laboratory
SARUP is located in a dense urban tapestry of historic buildings and neighborhoods dating back to the mid-19th century. Milwaukee is on the western sore of Lake Michigan, 70 miles north of Chicago.
|
|