Tag Archives: historic buildings

Understanding the Veracity of In-Situ Data Acquisition on Historic Buildings

Many historic preservation, restoration, renovation, and/or adaptive reuse projects require the analysis of existing building materials. This could be to meet demands for repair treatments, ensure energy performance targets, or research the history and authenticity of a building or site (amongst many others). Projects often call for advanced analytic techniques such as infrared thermography, RILEM tube water absorption, acid-dissolution of mortar, petrography, x-ray diffraction, and a plethora of other scientific tests to ensure a proper understanding of the chemical and physical properties of the existing building materials. These tests are often costly and time-consuming. For these reasons, many projects rely on results from a single test, or a small handful of tests. This begs the question, are the results from a few analytical or forensic tests representative of the entire building (either in its performance or historical characteristics)?
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HISTORIC BUILDING MATERIAL PROPERTIES
Historic buildings present unique challenges. Unlike modern construction, historic buildings were built in a time without the same levels of standardization and mass-production that we see today. Home Depot was not a thing yet, and in its place, contractors were reliant on local hardware stores or local/regional distribution sources for building materials. In many cases, they made their own! As a result, when analyzing historic buildings today, the material properties are generally unknown and undocumented.

TIME AND THE ELEMENTS
Adding to the unknown is the process of time. Mother nature and the elements are a continuous impact – weathering historic buildings and changing the chemical and physical nature of extant materials. Different parts of a building will also weather at different rates, depending on several variables such as orientation, exposure, occupation, micro-climates, site and neighboring elements, water migration, and so on. There is also a good chance that over the years many repairs have been made, creating a patchwork of different materials. This creates buildings with highly varying characteristics and performance when measured in-situ.





Written by Daniel Castele, Designer and Conservator.

Research Internship Opportunity

pmapdx-research-Internship blog 2_2020From historic to existing built infrastructure, our goal is to strengthen and enhance properties and sites that already exist. We bring together people who share our vision of delivering projects that contribute to and enhance our built environments. We are looking for individuals that share in our joy of working with owners, agencies, and other consultants, in meeting the challenges of re-investing in properties to create long-term success.

POSITION OVERVIEW
Peter Meijer Architect, PC (PMA) is looking for a part-time intern. Qualified candidates will be currently pursuing a graduate degree in either architecture or historic preservation and have experience with architecture, design, intensive research and formal writing. Ideally candidates will have enthusiasm for the proposed tasks and an interest in publishing their findings at the end of their internship.

JOB DUTIES
Develop a research schedule
Complete comprehensive topical research
Synthesize research arguments with supporting evidence
Draft reports and graphic data representations
Present findings to the PMA team at regular intervals

EXPERIENCE
Comfortable working with both qualitative and quantitative data analysis
Ability to write formally and concisely on a variety of topics
Familiar with contemporary research strategies, sources, and standards
Proficient in Microsoft Word; Microsoft Excel; Adobe InDesign; Adobe Illustrator; Adobe Photoshop

TIME & COMPENSATION
~20 hours/week
Flexible schedule (choose which weekdays you want to work)
Fixed amount of hours (part-time)
Hourly Rate: $18/hour for first three months;Initial term: June/July – August/September 2022; Subsequent term: Remaining calendar year

TO APPLY
Please submit a cover letter, resume, and relevant writing samples to info@pmapdx.com
Zip files are not accepted, please keep submissions to 10MB or less.