Real Estate July 7, 2010 12:05 AM

Larkin District Gets National Register Recognition

Larkin District Gets National Register Recognition

The Larkin District has a new nationally registered landmark.  The Kamman Building at 755 Seneca Street, being renovated by architectural firm Chantreuil Jensen Stark as its local office, has been added to the National Register of Historic Places (entry image).  In addition, a Multiple Property Documentation Form has also been listed laying the groundwork for property owners to designate other buildings in the neighborhood as historic.  Chantreuil Jensen Stark can pursue Historic Preservation Rehabilitation Tax Credits with the listing.

Architectural Historian Jennifer Walkowski of Clinton Brown Company Architecture prepared the documentation necessary for the National Register listing.  She had help from planner and blogger Chris Hawley and Daniel McEneny, Historic Preservation Program Specialist with the New York State Historic Preservation Office.

spotlightL.jpg"Jennifer did an outstanding job with this pioneering Multiple Property Documentation Form that provides the framework for designating buildings as historic," says firm president Clinton Brown, AIA. 

"The work was commissioned by Bob Stark at Chantreuil Jensen Stark for tax credits for their rehabilitation of the Kamman Building, and Bob generously made it available as a gift to other building owners to use for their properties," says Brown.  "Bob and his colleagues deserve a lot of credit for this."

DSC_0025.JPGAccording to Daniel McEneny, the National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Documentation Form (MPDF) is a planning document that is meant to streamline and guide the process of the National Register (NR) program for a community or property owner.  A MPDF captures the broad themes and contexts of an area or a property type.

For example, McEneny says an MPDF can identify an architecture method or subtype such as stone houses in Lockport or Lustron Houses in New York State, or it can identify areas that share the same architectural contexts such as architectural resources of the Village of Lancaster or industrial resources in the City of Syracuse.

Larkin/Hydraulics is not a National Register District.  A district is a neighborhood such as Allentown or the West Village that lists contiguous properties within a defined boundary that maintain historic integrity and are linked by a historic context.  Each property after the district listing is complete is individually listed on the National Register.  Not so in Larkin.

DSC_0206.JPG"Since the Hydraulics/Larkin neighborhood is clearly not cohesive enough to be a National Register district, the MPDF planning document provides an excellent tool for those individual property owners looking to designate their properties on the NR," says McEneny. 

"These properties must maintain architectural integrity and share one of the indentified themes in the MPDF," adds McEneny.  "Instead of having to reinvent the wheel every time a property owner wants to list their building, they can refer to the MPDF for guidance.  Essentially the MPDF is a cover document which brings short and concise National Register nominations under its wing."

McEneny says developers are already expressing interest in additional redevelopment projects in the neighborhood.  "We have already received a handful of calls about upcoming projects in Larkin," he says. "There are more good things to come."

 

-HISTORIC RESOURCES OF THE HYDRAULICS/LARKIN NEIGHBORHOOD, BUFFALO, ERIE COUNTY, NY was accepted by National Park Service on March 1, 2010. 

 

Get Connected:

Chaintreuil Jensen Stark, 716.856.6448

Clinton Brown Company, 716.852.2020 

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Comments

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The thing I admire about the Larkin District is the intelligence behind the approach to everything they do.

The Larkin District embraces density, they embrace the period architecture, they embrace the street layout, they embrace the history.

I remember seeing the proposed infill for the Larkin District and they ranged from period brick warehouses to FLW rowhouses.

Its sad that downtown doesnt have the same stewardship.

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It is summer in Bufflo. With all the pictures you have available to you of the Larkin District, why was it necessary to use one with snow?? Buffalo has enough of a negative snow image.

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I can just see someone looking at the picture and going... See I told you they have snow in July in Buffalo

replied to lfh
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Agreed, and swapped/edited out (for the most part). I used the most recent I had, which in this case was January.

replied to lfh
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Please folks, let's not have the thread go permanently off-topic over a snow picture.
Would this preservation tool work for Rocco and the Lafayette Hotel project? Waiting for Paterson and the State Legislature to resolve the historic preservation tax credit situation is so aggravating. Why do whiny state legislators from the NYC area try to screw up everything that could help Upstate's economy? Now that I've gotten that off my chest, I have to say that what is happening in the Larkin/Hydraulics area is so exciting. Besides the Kamman building, work is moving forward on gutting and renovating the "U" Building and the old gas station property continues its rehabilitation work. The street scape work is about to get underway also. I love what Donn Esmonde said about the redevelopment going on in the Larkin District a couple of weeks ago in one of his columns. To paraphrase what Esmonde wrote, Howard Zemsky and his partners are not following the usual time line in Buffalo project development of talking about and delaying the start of a project for 5 years. Instead, they are doing the unconventional, they are moving forward from project announcement to work begun in less than a year. Very untypical for the way things are done in WNY. You gotta love it.

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come on give the guy a break. Thanks WC!

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which gives me an idea. if someone wanted to make their photostream at snapfish or whatever available to bro, how might they do that?

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Drop me a line- w.c.p@sbcglobal.net

replied to grad94
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If the reality of Buffalo's weather must be represented in these photos, then the way this summer has been going, it might be more accurate to show pictures with rain in the background.

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Quick review of the NYS Rehab Tax Credit program situation in Albany:

Expanded program passed in 2009. Limited to distressed census tracts (90+% of Buffalo qualified), no more than $5m available per rehab project (20% of qualified rehab costs), and program sunsets in 2014 - these limitations put in place in recognition of state's fiscal situation.

Legislation passed this year - not yet signed by Governor - allows banks and insurance companies (most frequent investors in federal rehab credit program projects) not directly incorporated in NYS to apply NYS credit against their NYS franchise tax liabilities.

Together, a big step forward for NYS, and as above article depicts, incentivizing listing of properteis on NR to access the federal and state credits.

More recently, Governor, Senate and Assembly have proposed state tax credit deferral plans. State rehab tax credit included in the target list. Will make it difficult to attract investors to the program to provide up-front equity to rehab projects, as the return on their investment will now be deferred until 2013-2016.

The rehab tax credit program - poised to fuel so much long forestalled redevelopment in Buffalo and other WNY cities - has already been tailored for the state's fiscal status. Deferral guts the program and leaves it unworkable.

Call Mayor Brown's office and request that he weigh in with Assembly and Senate leadership, and the Governor, to request a "carve out" for the rehab tax credit program. And give some kudos to MofA Hoyt, for leading an aggressive effort in the Assembly to fend this off.

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Clint Brown is a joke. I give it another year before people start figuring out what a shady 'businessman' he really is. ps - all for preservation efforts in the city

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nothing like a little hit-and-run libel to spice up the day at bro.

replied to buffalo prophet
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Great news for the historic Hydraulics! Congrats to Jennifer, Clint, and Bob!

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looking good! would love to see the hydraulics become a dense urban area with new mixed use warehouse type buildings and rowhouses

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