What is it about?

This paper explores experimental historic preservation practices at Silo City, a cultural campus “built” around three vacant grain elevators in Buffalo, New York. Amid the not-fully-deindustrialized landscape that Reyner Banham famously called a “Concrete Atlantis,” these practices operate outside traditional adaptive re-use markets, without significant public funding, and exploit historic industrial sites in their “as is” condition. This paper argues that these practices have the potential to redefine preservation as an accessible and enjoyable practice rather than a means to a historically rigorous restoration or expansive local development stimulus; and are well suited for hard-to-preserve industrial sites in declining cities.

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This page is a summary of: Historic Preservation in an Economic Void: Reviving Buffalos Concrete Atlantis, Journal of Planning History, March 2016, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/1538513216629791.
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