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Sustaining Our Legacy <br />The Future of Ramsey Town Hall <br />PREVIOUS PRESERVATION IN RAMSEY <br />PRESERVATION <br />HISTORY <br />In 1977, the newly incorporated City of Ramsey moved its municipal offices to a new <br />building on Nowthen Boulevard. At that time, there was some interest in restoring the Old <br />Town Hall to its schoolhouse glory. Based on our archival research, however, it appears <br />that this preservation effort has produced very little success. <br />TIMELINE OF PRESERVATION WORK: What went wrong? <br />INACTION <br />The Old Town Hall was placed on the National Register of Historic Places in <br />1980. Fifteen years later, the city secured a grant from the Minnesota Historical <br />Society (MHS) for restoration, which it matched with local funds. Work got <br />underway in 1996, but was halted soon after. The matching funds were <br />reallocated and some of the grant money was returned to MHS. <br />• The City was not interested in spending grant money. <br />14 <br />MINNESOTA <br />HISTORICAL <br />SOCI ETY <br />INERTIA <br />During the 1980s and 1990s, historically minded residents regularly had their say <br />in City Council meetings and letters to city hall. Despite this, there does not <br />seem to have been much political interest in doing anything significant with the <br />old building. <br />• The City was not interested in working with its citizens. <br />INDIFFERENCE <br />The arrival of the Northstar Commuter Rail and the COR initiative in 2012 saw <br />plans to move the building to this exciting transit -oriented development. This <br />was more problematic than it appeared, as posters 10 and 11 will show. <br />• The City was not interested in including the building in its flagship <br />development. <br />Applicahon for Nohonal Register, 1979 <br />RAMSEY <br />RESTORATION PROJECT 2R <br />ANOKA EOUNIY NISTON!CAL SOCIETY <br />NOR1N STAR FEDERATED <br />All of which leads us to the obvious, unasked question: WHY NOT JUST KNOCK IT DOWN? <br />Over the years, as tepid preservation efforts have come and gone, the obvious question <br />keeps coming back: Why not demolish the building and be done with it? Well... <br />• The building is an irreplaceable historical asset in a community that has precious few <br />of them. <br />• This is perhaps the most iconic symbol of Ramsey's rural heritage, a heritage of which <br />the city is very proud and protective. <br />• Although no preservation project is cheap, demolition costs money, too, and in the <br />process destroys an asset that could be turned into a revenue generator as well as a <br />source of local pride. <br />Enthusiasm for restoring the Old Town Hall has been intermittent at best over the past forty <br />years. How could things have gone differently? In the next poster, we look at one way to <br />ensure that historic buildings are respected and preserved. <br />PA5211: Land Use Planning / Instructor: Fernando Burga PhD. <br />Mary Cutrufello, Katona Molasky, Amy Van Gessel <br />RAMSES. <br />