Resource Directory-Preservation Consulting/Historical Research
Los Angeles Landmarks

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Los Angeles Conservancy, 523 W. 6th Street, Suite 826, Los Angeles, CA  90014
tel: 213-623-2489, fax: 213-623-3909
info@laconservancy.org

Preservation Resources
Archaeology

ASM Affiliates
260 S. Los Robles Ave., Suite 310
Pasadena, California 91101

www.asmaffiliates.com


Phone: (626) 793-7395
Fax: (626) 793-2008

Email: info@asmaffiliates.com


ASM offers a full range of professional, cultural resource management (CRM) services including constraints-feasibility analyses, overviews, predictive modeling, field surveys, archaeological sampling and testing, archaeological overview, artifact processing and curation, significance and National Register eligibility evaluations, Architectural History, Native American consultation and ethnography, archival studies, construction monitoring, data recovery, preservation planning, and custom designed. Geographic Information Systems (GIS) for municipal, state, and federal agencies, as well as private and tribal environmental and planning departments.

 

ICF International
811 W. 7th Street, Suite 800
Los Angeles , CA 90017

www.jonesandstokes.com

Phone: (213) 627-5376
Fax: (213) 627-6853
Contact: Richard Starzak
E-mail: rstarzak@jsanet.com

ICF International (ICF), formerly known as Jones & Stokes Associates, is one of California’s premier full-service environmental and cultural resources consulting firms. Since its creation in 1969, ICF has supported a broad range of local, state, and federal government and private-sector clients on historic preservation and planning projects, infrastructure improvement projects, and compliance with mandated government programs

ICF staff members are experienced in the identification of architectural/historical resources that are, or may be, eligible for the National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) and California Register of Historical Resources (CRHR), as well as related impacts analyses to ensure compliance with Sections 4(f)/106, CEQA, and NEPA. In addition, ICF can prepare architectural plans, design studies, and adaptive use scenarios. ICF also has specialized capability in the preparation of historic resources surveys and documentation. Many of ICF’s Historians have special expertise in the evaluation of Post World War II and recent past resources.

 

PCR Services Corporation
233 Wilshire Boulevard, Suite 130
Santa Monica, CA 90401

www.pcrnet.com

Phone: (310) 451-4488
Fax: (310) 451-5279
Contact: Dr. Margarita Wuellner
E-mail: m.wuellner@pcrnet.com

PCR’s Historic Resources Division provides public and private clients with professional assistance in meeting historic resources requirements for preservation, rehabilitation and redevelopment projects pursuant to federal, state, and local regulations. PCR’s highly qualified and experienced architectural historians meet and exceed the Secretary of the Interior’s Historic Preservation Professional Qualifications Standards, as set forth in 36 CFR 61. PCR’s Historic Resources Division is an established full-service historic preservation practice with comprehensive in-house capabilities for research, analysis, documentation, management and treatment of historic resources. PCR’s Historic Resource Division is also advantageously situated within the context of a mid-size Southern California environmental planning firm. From single-issue studies to complex projects, our clients benefit from the range and depth of services offered by PCR’s environmental planning and multi-disciplinary technical divisions.


Sapphos Environmental, Inc.
430 North Halstead Street
Pasadena, CA 91107-3124

www.sapphosenvironmental.com

Phone: (626) 683-3547
Fax: (626) 683-3548
Contact: Leslie J. Heumann
E-Mail: lheumann@sapphosenvironmental.com

 

 

 

Sapphos Environmental, Inc. offers a range of archaeological and paleontological services and the team of qualified archaeologists assists clients in ensuring compliance with federal, state, and local regulations, including the California Environmental Quality Act (CEQA), National Environmental Policy Act (NEPA), and National Historic Preservation Act (NHPA) Sections 106 and 110. The firm has excellent working relationships with both the State Office of Historic Preservation and the National Park Service, and coordinates with the Native American Heritage Commission on all projects involving the consideration of cultural resources. Services include: records searches; ethnographic research; archaeological field surveys (Phase I), testing and evaluation (Phase II), and data recovery (Phase III); paleontological resources assessments and mitigation programs; archaeological paleontological construction monitoring; fossil salvage and recovery in accordance with Society of Vertebrate Paleontology (SVP) protocols; spatial analyses using GIS techniques; and in-house archaeological and paleontological laboratory analyses.
LA Conservancy
photo

Pershing Square
Downtown Los Angeles
Pershing Square is the oldest public park in Los Angeles. Its history extends back two hundred years when it was a vacant lot known as block number 15. In 1866, an ordinance was signed declaring the park "...a public square for the use and benefit of the citizens of the common." Over the last century the park has undergone numerous changes including the addition of underground parking in the 1950s. In the 1990s, the park was significantly remodeled by a design team led by architect Ricardo Legoretta and landscape architect Laurie Olin.

Photo courtesy of California Historical Society / Ticor Title Insurance


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