Los Angeles Times

Seeking Black heritage sites

African American history across L.A. is focus of a project to preserve landmarks.

- By Makeda Easter

Getty and the city of Los Angeles are expected to announce Tuesday the launch of the African American Historic Places Project, a threeyear initiative to identify and preserve landmarks that represent Black heritage across L.A.

Led by the Getty Conservati­on Institute and the Office of Historic Resources within L.A.’s Department of City Planning, the project will address a disparity in local landmark designatio­ns: Only about 3% are connected to African American heritage.

The goal of the project is to more accurately reflect the history of the city.

The Office of Historic Resources knows that its landmark designatio­n programs

do not yet reflect “the diversity and richness of the African American experience in Los Angeles,” said Ken Bernstein, principal city planner and manager of the office. “There’s much work to be done to rectify that disparity and ensure that the heritage of African Americans in Los Angeles is fully woven into our historic designatio­n and recognitio­n of historic places in Los Angeles.”

The project is a continuati­on of a nearly 20-year partnershi­p between the Getty Conservati­on Institute and the city on local heritage projects.

In 2005, a city-matched grant of $2.5 million from the Getty Conservati­on Institute launched a program to identify and map places of social importance, including historic districts, bridges, parks and streetscap­es.

Data from surveys conducted between 2010 and 2017 led to the creation of Historic Places LA (historic placesla.org/), a digital portal designed to inventory, map and contextual­ize the city’s cultural heritage sites. In 2018, the Office of Historic Resources developed a model to guide preservati­on work in Black communitie­s, using themes including civil rights, visual arts, and religion and spirituali­ty.

The African American Historic Places Project was also driven by the deaths of Breonna Taylor and George Floyd, the global uprisings last summer and a reckoning within the conservati­on sector, said Susan Macdonald, head of the buildings and sites department at the Getty Conservati­on Institute.

The institute began thinking more deeply about “how might what we do and why we do it and how we do it actually be somehow contributi­ng to ongoing biases in relation to planning and historic preservati­on,” she said. “How might some of the processes and practices that we undertake be really barriers to social justice and how might it be contributi­ng to social injustice?”

Getty and the city will soon launch a search for a project leader and will convene an advisory group made up of local leaders and cultural institutio­ns within Black communitie­s. According to a Getty spokespers­on, the organizati­on is contributi­ng about $500,000 toward the project.

Over the next three years, the project will work with local communitie­s and cultural institutio­ns to identify landmarks for official historic designatio­n. Bernstein anticipate­s 10 additional sites associated with Black history will receive city historic-cultural monument designatio­n.

Among the 3% of landmarks connected to Black history are the Lincoln Theatre on Central Avenue, Maverick’s Flat on Crenshaw Boulevard and the 28th Street YMCA, designed by architect Paul Revere Williams.

Another goal of the project is broadening the idea of what can be considered a landmark. Many in the city received their designatio­n based on architectu­re, but preservati­on is not only about buildings, Bernstein said. Landmark designatio­n can “extend beyond the physical to take in what might be considered more intangible heritage.”

Traditiona­l approaches to historic preservati­on often did not take into account that “the sites associated with many of our communitie­s of color in Los Angeles had not been the subject of previous research or scholarshi­p that elevated, lifted up those voices and those histories,” Bernstein said.

With only about 6% of the city’s 1,200 historic-cultural monuments associated with communitie­s of color, Bernstein said, the project could also serve as a model for future initiative­s.

Cultural heritage and landmarks represent history, Macdonald said.

“If they don’t accurately reflect that history and past, then you’re getting an impoverish­ed or a misreading of history. So I think what identifyin­g cultural heritage places does, it actually tells the true story,” she added. “It can be used as a vehicle to rectify erasures of history.”

 ?? Elizabeth Daniels J. Paul Getty Trust ?? ST. ELMO VILLAGE, an artists enclave, is a landmark linked to Black heritage.
Elizabeth Daniels J. Paul Getty Trust ST. ELMO VILLAGE, an artists enclave, is a landmark linked to Black heritage.

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