Austin American-Statesman

LIGHTS ARE ON

Gateposts at Barton Springs Pool restored

- By Michael Barnes mbarnes@statesman.com

“Two bulbs … two years.” That’s how architect Emily Little describes the circuitous and eventually rewarding efforts to reillumina­te the 1928 stone gateposts at Barton Springs Pool.

On a recent November night, a crowd of about 100 supporters of the Barton Springs Conservanc­y, a nonprofit advocacy group, gathered with sparklers in hand around the sturdy posts to witness them light up for the first time in decades.

You mean you never noticed those tapered gateposts on William Barton Drive at the entry of the lower parking area at the pool? You are not alone. Visitors often passed right by them without bothering with the formerly dingy stone posts topped by empty metal lamp casings.

It took a lot of teamwork to find out what they were and how they were constructe­d, and then to restore and clean the geological­ly varied stones and bring them back to the light each night.

Making it happen

Early in its history, the Conservanc­y made a list of possible projects to help the city of Austin at the springs, including a big overhaul of the 1947 bathhouse. Following up on that big goal, the nonprofit recently presented a $350,000 check to city officials to complement bond money set aside for the bathhouse efforts, which will include reorientin­g ticket sales to their original location at the art deco rotunda.

When Conservanc­y Director J.J. Langston came on board a few years ago, however, the group decided to tackle some of the smaller projects on the list, then gain momentum. After all, it’s not easy executing even the easiest projects on protected parkland while dealing with multiple city offices.

A mother who grew up in Austin but lives in Houston and a daughter who grew up in Houston but now lives in Austin played key roles in this signal effort.

The choice of the gateposts began to take solid shape when it was championed by Conservanc­y board member Marian Moore Casey, who dedicated the $50,000 campaign to her mother, Nancy Powell Moore, a native Austinite from a famed local family who has neverthele­ss spent her most productive philanthro­pic years in Houston.

“Nancy celebrated many University of Texas skip days there in her youth,” Langston says of the honoree and the pool. “She’s the daughter of the Powell Foun-

dation founding directors Kitty King Corbett Powell and Ben Powell (attorney, businessma­n and investor). The whole family has shared a deep love for the springs.”

In October, this reporter met with Little, Langston, Casey and Moore on benches in front of the pool’s rotunda. It turne dintoasort­oflove fest.

Moore, who speaks in honeyed accents that bring one lineage of Old Austin to spirited life, carried with her all sorts of evocative materials, such as old yearbooks from O. Henry Junior High School.

We talked of Moore’s and Casey’s ancestral homes that came with views of the Capitol in Old Enfield, of grilled cheese sandwiches gobbled at the pool, of taking a course about the Great Plains from distinguis­hed University of Texas historian Walter Prescott Webb, and of “Nightswim,” a play by Steve Moore about Webb and his buddies Roy Bedichek and J. Frank Dobie, the three authors depicted in the “Philosophe­r’s Rock” statue near the current pool entrance.

Turns out that Moore is in the process of going through a whole room of precious memorabili­a and research at her Houston home in preparatio­n to give the most salient archives, much of them about Austin history, to the Briscoe Center for American History.

“Marian gave the contributi­on for the lampposts restoratio­n as a Mother’s Day gift in my honor,” Moore says. “I was enchanted.”

“Mama has done so much for Houston,” says her daughter, who grew up in River Oaksandnow­livesin West Lake Hills. “But she adores Austin, and I adore it through her eyes.”

What is that?

“The first thing we did was dig down into the lamp cas

ing,” preservati­onist Little says of the 1928 gateposts once the project was funded and underway. “We didn’t

know the most basic things, such as, were they originally lit by gas or by electricit­y? Then we discovered some wiring, but where did it go down in the posts, and where did it come out? That was not easy to find out.”

More digging gave Little’s team a sense of where the wiring could lead, but attached to which possible power source? Since the backers wanted the restored lamps to come on at the same time, they considered trenching William Barton Drive to connect the posts directly, but instead dug lines to sep- arate sources, one near the Zilker Zephyr train station, the other near the former Zilker bandstand.

The stone posts presented another conundrum: Why all these differentl­y sourced rocks? Some of the limestone turned out to be related to what was used to face the nearby caretaker’s cottage, itself recently renovated and

opened to the public. But it took a consulting geolo- gist, Earle McBride, to identify all the area rocks, leav-

ing a mystery as to why the builders employed such a variety. ATC Contractor­s stepped up with the sensitive masonry repair and cleaning, and Jesse Malone of Malone Wheeler played an important role in securing proper permits for the project.

Tracking back the origins of things like an actual lamp casing is among any preservati­onist’s most frustratin­g challenges. Historical archives — as well as the internet — provide all sorts of clues from old catalogues, receipts, drawings, photograph­s and descriptio­ns. With the help of local artisans, Little’s team was able to track down the basic pat- tern of the casings, including links to plants in the Upper Midwest that were located near each other.

Joe Parham of Light Fix- ture Restoratio­n and Jim Berry of Blue Moon Glassworks, along with workers with the Alterman Elec-

tric co mpany, were able to take what were decrepit lamp casings and turn them into a semblance of their 1928 beauty. And they work magnificen­tly.

“The gatepost project speaks to our vision for improving the visitors’ experience throughout Zilker Park,” Langston says. “And it sheds light on the majestic, historic and natural beauty of the city’s

most visited and beloved park.”

 ?? STEPHEN SPILLMAN FOR AMERICAN-STATESMAN ?? A lighting ceremony celebrates the two-year project that led to the restoratio­n of two gateposts on William Barton Drive, leading into Barton Springs Pool.
STEPHEN SPILLMAN FOR AMERICAN-STATESMAN A lighting ceremony celebrates the two-year project that led to the restoratio­n of two gateposts on William Barton Drive, leading into Barton Springs Pool.
 ?? CONTRIBUTE­D BY J.J. LANGSTON ?? Three of the leaders of the gatepost restoratio­n project at Barton Springs Pool: architect Emily Little, primary gateway donor Marian Moore Casey and project honoree Nancy Powell Moore, who is Casey’s mother.
CONTRIBUTE­D BY J.J. LANGSTON Three of the leaders of the gatepost restoratio­n project at Barton Springs Pool: architect Emily Little, primary gateway donor Marian Moore Casey and project honoree Nancy Powell Moore, who is Casey’s mother.
 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Research and digging helped the team find a way to relight the lamps going into Barton Springs Pool.
Research and digging helped the team find a way to relight the lamps going into Barton Springs Pool.
 ?? STEPHEN SPILLMAN FOR AMERICAN-STATESMAN PHOTOS ?? Loretta Stiles, 12, attends the ceremony celebratin­g the restoratio­n of two gateposts on William Barton Drive, leading into Barton Springs Pool.
STEPHEN SPILLMAN FOR AMERICAN-STATESMAN PHOTOS Loretta Stiles, 12, attends the ceremony celebratin­g the restoratio­n of two gateposts on William Barton Drive, leading into Barton Springs Pool.

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