The Secretary of the Interior’s
STANDARDS FOR REHABILITATION
In reviewing applications for the façade incentive grant
program, the Chapel Hill Downtown Partnership will use the below rehabilitation standards
from the Secretary of the Interior as well as the Design Guidelines adopted
by the Town of Chapel Hill and part of the small area plan for downtown Chapel
Hill.
The Standards for Rehabilitation, a section of the
Secretary’s Standards for Historic Preservation Projects, address the most
prevalent preservation treatment today: rehabilitation. Rehabilitation is
defined as the process of returning a property to a state of utility, through
repair or alteration, which makes possible an efficient contemporary use while
preserving those portions and features of the property which are significant to
its historic, architectural, and cultural values.
The Standards that follow were originally published in 1977
and revised in 1990 as part of Department of the Interior regulations (36 CFR
Part 67, Historic Preservation Certifications). They pertain to historic
buildings of all materials, construction types, sizes, and occupancy and
encompass the exterior and the interior of historic buildings. The Standards
also encompass related landscape features and the building’s site and
environment as well as attached, adjacent or related new construction.
The Standards are to be applied to specific rehabilitation
projects in a reasonable manner, taking into consideration economic and
technical feasibility.
- A property shall
be used for its historic purpose or be placed in a new use that requires
minimal change to the defining characteristics of the building and its site and
environment.
- The historic
character of a property shall be retained and preserved. The removal of
historic materials or alteration of features
and spaces that characterize a property shall be avoided.
- Each property
shall be recognized as a physical record of its time, place, and use. Changes
that create a false sense of historical development, such as adding conjectural
features or architectural elements from other buildings, shall not be
undertaken.
- Most properties
change over time; those changes that have acquired historic significance in
their own right shall be retained and preserved.
- Distinctive
features, finishes, and construction techniques or examples of craftsmanship
that characterize a property shall be preserved.
- Deteriorated
historic features shall be repaired rather than replaced. Where the severity of
deterioration requires replacement of a distinctive feature, the new feature
shall match the old in design, color, texture, and other visual qualities and,
where possible, materials. Replacement of missing features shall be
substantiated by documentary, physical, or pictorial evidence.
- Chemical or
physical treatments, such as sandblasting, that cause damage to historic
materials shall not be used. The surface cleaning of structures, if
appropriate, shall be undertaken using the gentlest means possible.
- Significant
archeological resources affected by a project shall be protected and preserved.
If such resources must be disturbed, mitigation measures shall be undertaken.
- New additions,
exterior alterations, or related new construction shall not destroy historic
materials that characterize the property. The new work shall be differentiated
from the old and shall be compatible with the massing, size, scale, and architectural
features to protect the historic integrity of the property and its environment.
- New additions and
adjacent or related new construction shall be undertaken in such a manner that
if removed in the future, the essential form and integrity of the historic
property and its environment would be unimpaired.