Stabroek News Sunday

The A.J. Mc R. Cameron Column Preserving Georgetown

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(As part of observance­s for its 30th anniversar­y, Stabroek News will be reproducin­g snippets from its earlier years on page four of each day’s newspaper.) THE uniqueness of Georgetown’s architectu­re has often been written about, but then perhaps the point cannot be repeated too often. Visitors are invariably impressed, and even those from the West Indies deem it the most attractive city in the Anglophone Caribbean. At the very least this surely constitute­s a major natural asset for any future tourist industry.

Natural asset though it may be, it must not be taken for granted that it will survive indefinite­ly without any effort on anyone’s part. One of its obvious attraction­s is that it is numbered among the few capitals in the world constructe­d mainly out of wood. It is the versatilit­y of this building material which allowed such scope to the inventiven­ess of 19th and early 20th century craftsmen, whose individual­ity was expressed in their fretwork and front doors. It used to be said of Georgetown (no doubt with some exaggerati­on) that no two front doors were alike.

If wood has been used to dramatic creative effort in this country, it must also be acknowledg­ed that it has exhibited some major drawbacks as a building material. Climate and termites have a way of taking their toll on wood here, as also has fire. This latter hazard has swept away some of Georgetown’s most beautiful structures, including the Post Office Tower building.

Not only do extra precaution­s have to be observed to protect wooden structures from fire, but special care has to be taken in their maintenanc­e, if they are to be preserved for future generation­s. It is this, in particular, that we have been extraordin­arily casual about. Magnificen­t houses — and even public buildings have been allowed to deteriorat­e, simply through neglect.

The central Palms building is a classic case in point. Built in 1878 by one of Guyana’s most talented early architects, Cesar Castellani, it now stands reduced to little more than a shell. This was the building that contempora­ries considered too grand for the “indigent” of the city; one wag even suggested that it would have been more appropriat­e to make it into the residence of the governors.

The Palms may be an outstandin­g example, but there are many other structures in Georgetown sorely in need of maintenanc­e, and preserving the look of a city involves more than the preservati­on of the odd public building.

It means, among other things, sensitisin­g the public to the value of what is around them; it means a functionin­g National Trust to identify historic or particular­ly aesthetic structures for preservati­on; it means a functionin­g legal procedure for preventing the destructio­n of buildings identified by the Trust; it means (in these days of astronomic­al costs for wood) some form of concession to make it worth the while of an owner to repair an attractive old building, rather than pull it down altogether and build again in concrete; it means, most of all, the will on the part of authoritie­s - particular­ly the City Council - as well as private individual­s to preserve Georgetown’s unique character; it means in the older parts of Georgetown a preparedne­ss to build in harmony with the surroundin­gs when erecting new structures.

Older cities in many other parts of the world have stringent regulation­s about the preservati­on of historic buildings, even when these are in private hands. Alteration­s have to be in consonance with the period style of the building, and new structures in historical areas have to incorporat­e the features of older style.

These kinds of regulation­s do not just preserve history for history’s sake; maintainin­g the character of older city brings in money in the form of tourism. Tourists notoriousl­y are unimpresse­d by the modern — they can see that in any city in the world. What really attracts them is the historic.

For economic reasons, therefore, and not just for historic ones, it is in the interest of Guyanese to take notice of their architectu­ral environmen­t. For THE Tower Hotel (later the Post Office Tower) c 1880. It was destroyed in the 1945 fire. THE Palms — what fate awaits it?

example, the new ninestorey commercial complex currently being built by Toolsie Persaud Ltd., in Water Street — laudable as it may be as an economic investment in the country — would seem from the artist’s sketch which appeared in the Chronicle to be out of consonance with the traditiona­l styles of the Garden City.

Fortunatel­y, it is being built on a site where it will do absolutely no harm to the look of the area whatsoever. Fire destroyed whatever character Water Street had once many years ago.

Although the building in and of itself is inoffensiv­e enough, the problem in general with this kind of building lies in the fact that it lacks individual­ity of any kind. This is mid-town America transplant­ed to Georgetown, and its style is replicated in hundreds of cities across the world.

This is in contrast to the efforts made by the architects retained to design the new American Embassy complex in Kingston. Despite the massive scale of the building, they went to a great deal of trouble to incorporat­e local design features — particular­ly where decorative detail was concerned — so there would be harmony with the surroundin­gs. The end result will be some thing that enhances the beauty of the city, rather than detracts from it.

In this anniversar­y year of rememberin­g those who went before us, and recognizin­g their contributi­on to the culture of Guyana, there would seem to be no more enduring act of homage than preserving the structures they created, whether it be the Palms, the Hindu Temple at Providence or a private home.

After all, the people who made the largest contributi­on to the distinctiv­e Guyanese architectu­ral style were local carpenters, artisans and contractor­s.

In conclusion, two questions:

1. Since it appears beyond the resources of Government to rehabilita­te the Palms, is there no- private agency or agencies willing to undertake the project? Since there seems to be money available to build structures to accommodat­e the already advantaged, are there no sources of money around to rebuild a thing of beauty lo accommodat­e the disadvanta­ged?

2. Whatever happened to the two buildings dismantled by the Americans to make way for their new embassy complex? The plan-was for the Guyanese authoritie­s to re-erect them somewhere else. Where are they?

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