Specially selected historic real estate for old house enthusiasts.

Gregory_K

Change your cover photo
Upload
Change your cover photo
Joined 11/01/2017
My passion for historic preservation has taken me to communities across the nation. My professional involvement began at age of 10, some 60 years ago.
As a 10-year old in 1963, I advised the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur on fund-raising opportunities for badly needed roof repairs for Ralston Hall, 1860s-1870s, the William Chapman Ralston mansion south of San Francisco. Under construction in phases from 1864 to 1875, it remains one of the largest (55,000 square feet) and finest Victorian mansions in America.
I have advised on the restoration of John Philip Sousa’s country house, ‘Wildbank,’ on long Island, New York.
As a University of Colorado student, I organized the effort to stop the demolition of the 1880s-1900s ‘Old Quad’ on the Boulder campus. I was curator of the 30 building open air South Park City museum in Fairplay, Colorado, worked on the restoration of the ‘Unsinkable Molly Brown’ house in Denver.
I have volunteered on many projects where my clients could not afford to pay a professional. I offered free structural and historical evaluations for any realtor or prospective buyer interested in saving endangered historic structures. As part of that work, I engineered the preservation of the Gothic Revival Methodist Church in Rolling Prairie, Indiana, and organized the historic properties survey for central Biddeford, Maine.
I organized the effort that saved Wallingford House in Kennebunk, Maine, built circa 1804-1808 for a framer of the Maine state constitution.
I worked on the renovation of the American Embassy in Tokyo and the restoration of the Rainbow Room in New York.
I was also consultant on the preservation of the auditorium at the Veterans Memorial in Lompoc, California.
Historic Preservation continues to be the primary interest in my life.
This user account status is Approved

This user has not added any information to their profile yet.

Name
Gregory
Gregory_K
Email, Social & Website
City, State & Country
CA
Chatsworth
About Yourself
My passion for historic preservation has taken me to communities across the nation. My professional involvement began at age of 10, some 60 years ago.
As a 10-year old in 1963, I advised the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur on fund-raising opportunities for badly needed roof repairs for Ralston Hall, 1860s-1870s, the William Chapman Ralston mansion south of San Francisco. Under construction in phases from 1864 to 1875, it remains one of the largest (55,000 square feet) and finest Victorian mansions in America.
I have advised on the restoration of John Philip Sousa’s country house, ‘Wildbank,’ on long Island, New York.
As a University of Colorado student, I organized the effort to stop the demolition of the 1880s-1900s ‘Old Quad’ on the Boulder campus. I was curator of the 30 building open air South Park City museum in Fairplay, Colorado, worked on the restoration of the ‘Unsinkable Molly Brown’ house in Denver.
I have volunteered on many projects where my clients could not afford to pay a professional. I offered free structural and historical evaluations for any realtor or prospective buyer interested in saving endangered historic structures. As part of that work, I engineered the preservation of the Gothic Revival Methodist Church in Rolling Prairie, Indiana, and organized the historic properties survey for central Biddeford, Maine.
I organized the effort that saved Wallingford House in Kennebunk, Maine, built circa 1804-1808 for a framer of the Maine state constitution.
I worked on the renovation of the American Embassy in Tokyo and the restoration of the Rainbow Room in New York.
I was also consultant on the preservation of the auditorium at the Veterans Memorial in Lompoc, California.
Historic Preservation continues to be the primary interest in my life.

It is vital to remember that every old building has it's own history and period architectural details. If you want to live in a period structure, then respect the style, surviving historic design and details. If you want wide-open suburban spaces, triple insulated walls, wildly efficient windows and baths the size of skating rinks, buy a new home. Don't buy an historic home, then beat it to death, gutting it to create a McMansion.