Lorna Nowve: an Oral History Interview
KATIE NOLAN: This interview is going to be on October 13, 2007, at the Kress Foundation at 174 East 80th Street in New York City. This is Katie Nolan interviewing Lorna Nowvé.
LORNA NOWVÉ: No-vay.
KATIE NOLAN: Nowvé. Thank you. So this interview is going to focus on the major events in preservation that happened during the 1970s and ‘80s in New York. And we’re particularly interested in the Municipal Arts Society and Historic Districts Council and the role you played in these two organizations. So just to kind of get started, what drew you to preservation and when did you begin it in your life?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I grew up in New York City. So I think it sort of gets into your bones. You’re aware of everything that it has, all the textures, et cetera. And I went to college in Wisconsin, which was a great, very different experience for me. But I missed New York, and I started to study architectural history and such out there, which was strange, because it was very rural. So I was designing parks and doing a lot of open space planning. And yet I was also trying to figure out how I was going to apply my interest in architecture and history when I moved back home, to New York City. And that’s when New York was starting to go through its fiscal crisis. So it was very interesting to read about the city that I really loved, that was my home, struggling so. I came back to New York, and I started to look for work and I wrote Margot Wellington, who was then the executive director, the first executive director, of the Municipal Art Society, a note. I had read a profile about her getting her new job in the New York Post, which back then was actually a very reputable newspaper. I think perhaps Roberta Gratz had written the profile. And I just wrote a letter to Margot explaining that my love for the city was drawing me to try to find a way to work to make the city better. And Margot responded--I got the job, which was pretty incredible. It was a dream job coming to New York to work at MAS, which was then holed up on the 45th floor of 30 Rockefeller Plaza. With this incredible view of midtown Manhattan, so in a way you saw your work cut out for you. And so that’s how I got to MAS.
KATIE NOLAN: about what year was that?
LORNA NOWVE: …this was around 1976?
KATIE NOLAN: What position did you have when you went to MAS?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Whatever the lowest position was. IThere was a staff of maybe four people. It was Patricia Jones, Laurie Beckelman, Margot, me, Joan Altman, and a part time bookkeeper named Gloria Troy, and then one of the board members, Ron Friedman, who had been active with the Asia Society, and was retired. Ron made it his business to come in and look over the books, as it were. But he also produced a a weekly radio program on WNYC called ‘The Livable City’. Those archives might be very interesting for you to go through, because every week they interviewed people in the preservation and planning movements and architecture in New York City. So it was a very small office. We were cramped together. We would have board meetings in fabulous locations, and it was, as you know, an amazing board of directors back then. It always has been so. These were people who were really very much a part of New York. So there was really no glamour back then. They didn’t have the Urban Center. We had our public programs. At that time we were organizing the fight to save Grand Central. We had a satellite office in the bowels of Grand Central. We had weekly classes on New York architectural history. I don’t know if you have talked to Barry Lewis. Barry Lewis is an amazing resource. He basically taught me everything I know about New York City architecture. Some of the classes were held down in Grand Central. Other times we had one at the Merchants Institute and other places in the city. And then we were organizing our walking tours. So we had our weekly tours in Grand Central, and we had walking tours in different parts of Manhattan. And I was involved with those as well. We had volunteers whom we trained. All of that out of these little cramped offices in 30 Rock.
KATIE NOLAN: And do you – like what specifically what role that you played?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I helped organize the tours and all the public programming and I worked with Laurie Beckelman on those. I gave tours. We had volunteer staff at the Grand Central office. Did a lot of advocacy work. I worked with Ron on the radio program and did some interviews. We had a weekly or monthly newsletter that I worked on. And then it just sort of grew and grew and grew. I was very interested in public advocacy. So I loved access to the public. It was very interesting to see what their interests were, because that helped guide the bigger missions of MAS in terms of how it was going to go public, because it had been about eighty years since it had started. Some would say it was an elite organization, because it tapped into a very rarified group of New Yorkers who were very connected and very devoted. But they never had a large membership. The whole notion of membership for MAS was rather new. One of the things that really spearheaded and helped grow its membership was the sale of that famous, Saul Steinberg poster, The New Yorker cover of The New Yorker’s View of New York. Pete Spellman, was one of the board members, worked at The New Yorker, and he was able to get us these incredibly beautiful glossy ads in The New Yorker stating that if you bought a poster, you got a membership at MAS. And our membership rolls tripled. It was amazing to see the mailman come in with money for us. And not necessarily people who were in New York City. Some people just wanted posters. But then we started to really build a membership base. And of course the Committee to Save Grand Central was brewing then. That was really, from my perspective, because I was just starting, what helped put MAS on the map. Especially in terms of public perception and in terms of what muscle MAS could contribute to saving the city. And I was very much involved with that. And it was very exciting to see what we were doing. We were handing out leaflets around Grand Central, we organized an enormous rally. This was around the time of the Supreme Court case.
KATIE NOLAN: Right.
LORNA NOWVE: It was very interesting to think about raising public awareness. People looking at Grand Central and looking at the renderings of what the Breuer Building might do to it, and getting people really angry about the prospects. And talk about grassroots! We leafleted outside by Grand Central. People would buy t-shirts; we sold all sorts of gorgeous, very funky handmade T-shirts. They’re real collectors’ items. And then of course we held this huge rally on 42nd Street, right before the Supreme Court hearing. We shut down 42nd Street outside the terminal at lunchtime. Mrs. Onassis, who as you know was a very public advocate for all of this, came to the rally. We had performances, we had all sorts of speeches. And there, were hordes of people. Of course everybody came to see Jacqueline Onassis. I mean, let’s not fool ourselves, but they realized that this was a challenge to a landmarks law that nobody really quite understood. And people were afraid of what the implications were going to be. So on one level, it was important because we were trying to save a building, but of course the lawyers were very interested because of what the legal ramifications might be. So you took a very public event, a very emotional event and you realized that it had potential to have very, very far reaching legal implications in terms of eminent domain and everything else.
So then we somehow managed to wrangle a train. It had an Amtrak locomotive and cars, as well as private, old railroad cars that were donated for the trip by collectors. And we brought people down to Washington the day or the day before the hearing. One of my most memorable parts of that whole thing is of a beautiful observation car, which was the last car. And sitting there was Rogers Whitaker, who wrote the E. M. Frimbo stories about train travel in The New Yorker—a legendary New Yorker writer. And there I was, this kid right out of college, sitting with this elder statesman of train travel and everything that The New Yorker meant, talking about history and watching cities go by. It was pretty incredible. And then we got to Washington. There was a rally. Those who could, attended the Supreme Court hearing. And then months later the decision was handed down and Grand Central was saved, and that was a huge moment really. And that’s when I think MAS changed in terms of the public’s perception. In terms of our believing that it was okay to engage in public advocacy
We were still looking for other crusades. People were coming and telling us about endangered buildings. And I was very much involved with that. People would call me and I was the one who would be in touch with the Landmarks Commission. Worked very closely with their staff, as was Laurie Beckelman. I’m sure you’re talking with Laurie. We also went to hearings. I was often the one who testified before the Landmarks Commission, so that we would come to the board – the board had various committees – and ask permission to go and speak on behalf of MAS in favor of the designation of a building or a district of whatever. So that was amazing for me, because that was a cross pollination. I was able to talk to people doing similar things--at the Landmarks Conservancy, there was Carol Clark who was doing that. And other people. And then dealing closely with the Landmarks Commission staff. And they had a pretty fairly sized staff back then. So they were able to do the research. And of course they needed us to rally the community and testify and what have you. And our board members were so resourceful, because we had some of the top architects at our beck and call. So they, if we needed them, would come and either write a letter or testify on behalf of a designation or potential designation or a certificate of appropriateness and such.
Do you want me to elaborate on anything?
KATIE NOLAN: You’re actually touching on everything that I want to talk to you about. So it’s just working out.
LORNA NOWVÉ: That’s good.
KATIE NOLAN: Did you, I don’t really know where to go now. So then you became involved in HDC?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes. HDC I don’t remember how it evolved. Tony [Wood] and I would have these long breakfast meetings about it. Because HDC existed already. But it was a way to see what the various districts, or potential districts, were facing. They all had similar problems in terms of enforcement, as well as perhaps expansion, as well as public information. Informational signs started to show up and the Landmarks Commission finally decided ‘hey we could actually change streets sign colors, and put those little signs up so people know what on earth we’re doing.” It was interesting, for people realized how many historic districts there were in the city, and helped ascertain what the districts needed, because they’re all volunteers, I think they needed a unified voice. It was something like group therapy for them to understand what everybody else was going through. And so that was a very active and very diverse organization, because you had some communities, like Brooklyn Heights with Evelyn Ortner and everybody else who had always been there and always fought, and were really at the vanguard of creating historic districts. And then you had small districts that were saying you know, “Can we do that? Can we do that?”
And the biggest, I’m jumping ahead in a way chronologically because I think the most controversial one in a way was the Committee to Save the Upper East Side, because that sounds so elitist. People would say “You don’t need to save the Upper East Side. Look at it.” And if you realize, wait a minute. There’s a lot of pressure there. Especially development pressure on the commercial spine of Madison Avenue, for example. And we made people understand, “Yeah, it’s the Upper East Side, but look at it!” Look at what a little gallery of architectural styles, and single-family dwellings it is. So that was a very controversial and very interesting effort. Also how do you define boundaries of historic districts? As I recall there was one designation that expanded, I think. I’m not really sure. But Holly Whyte as instrumental in that. I don’t know if you’ve been reading about William Hollingsworth Whyte. Holly Whyte, was a writer. He was a very, very interesting man. Also from The New Yorker. He wrote a very famous book called The Organization Man. It’s great to read his writing. Do you know Fred Kent? Of Project for Public Spaces. I don’t know if they’re still around. They had a lot of financing from the Rockefeller Foundation. Holly actually filmed people’s activities of New York City. I hope you can get a hold of these films. They’re classic films on the way people use New York City streets and other public places. And he studied Paley Park, which used to be off 53rd Street off Fifth. He would film people using it and going through the thought process of, do I enter or do I not? What drew them in was the open space (I think it was on the site of The Stork Club) and there was a waterfall. And it was hilarious to watch footage of people when they decided to sit down. But first they had to move a chair a half an inch, then sit down. They had to mark their space.
And he used that kind of people studies to talk about the importance of the first- and second-storey life of Madison Avenue. That you couldn’t just look at preserving the storefront, you had to look up and understand that Madison Avenue is a very major spine. And of course I was learning all this. I mean talk about an education. I applied and got in to the Historic Preservation program at Columbia. I decided not to go, because everybody wanted my job and I didn’t even have a degree in it. Because I was learning from Fred Papert, I was learning from Hugh Hardy, I was learning from Holly White. I was learning from Mrs. Onassis. That was my classroom. And to sit with Holly Whyte and for him to get people excited about looking at Madison Avenue as a major part of the Upper East Side Historic District. And saying you there can be change. We understand that it’s all about economics on Madison Avenue. We’re not going to make them have pretty little storefronts. But if Fendi or whomever wants to make a statement, make a statement that’s going to be somewhat respectful of the scale, but also make Madison Avenue exciting. And that was very interesting. I think it helped people understand what historic preservation needed to be in terms of the fact that it was not to freeze things in time. That it was flexible. And that the landmarks law was flexible. That it wasn’t going to be so rigid. It wasn’t going to make you run screaming from the room and say to hell with it all. Holly’s one of those people who said Madison Avenue can change appropriately. And it also meant the Landmarks Commission had to be a little more flexible. They couldn’t be set in their ways -- that they had to be sort of Modernists in a way and understand and have a sense of humor. That you could have beautiful side streets like East 71st Street, and you could have Madison Avenue and say that it was an historic district. So we did it.
Fred Papert was one of my biggest idols. He was a Board Member of MAS, and had a very strong background in advertising. He was very connected to the Kennedy family. Which is how Mrs. Onassis got involved with the Municipal Art Society in the first place. He was an ad man, even though he wasn’t doing advertising anymore. He was the guy who wanted to save 42nd Street, and did. He got Theater Row started. I remember Theater Row. I forget…there was one landlord I think who owned all those buildings off 9th Avenue they were going to be condemned and I remember there was a struggle to save them. If somebody could write a check to the landlord, they could save that row. And Fred had this idea well that if you could save those buildings, you could turn them into off Broadway theaters, and save them and create an Off-Broadway theater district. That’s the kind of thing that Fred Papert did. And Fred Papert started to talk to board members about the fact that MAS had this little office, it needed a more public space. So I was one of those people who was sent out with a camera to look at potential spaces that could house a public focal point for MAS. We’d go out and photograph potential spaces, and we had real estate brokers doing it as well.
Of course I knew that that wasn’t going to be the way it was going to happen. That somebody behind the scenes was going to make a call or have an idea. Lo and behold, people start to look at the Villard Houses. What the heck was Harry Helmsley going to do with the Villard Houses and what on earth -- how was he going to incorporate that hideous hotel into these five attached residences on Madison Avenue? Well, what if you put an urban center in one of them? And you could preserve some interior spaces in the other parts of the Villard Houses. That’s the deal that was brokered to allow him to erect the Helmsley Palace. Before we knew it, we all had hard hats and this thing was being built -- in back of St.Patrick’s Cathedral. How about that? And I mean it took a long time. It was funny to go 2 blocks from 30 Rock and realize that we were going to have a home. And we got that home and that changed everything.
KATIE NOLAN: When was the…When was that?
LORNA NOWVÉ: You’ll have to look it up. I don’t remember.
KATIE NOLAN: Okay. What was ummm . . . what would you say was the reason for the creation of the Urban Center?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I think just its name. We needed an Urban Center, we needed a public place. It’s interesting that the Jane Jacobs exhibit is up there now. How timely. People knew about Urban Center Books, but we never had crowds, we never had a blockbuster event. They’ve got two gorgeous galleries on Madison Avenue.. We finally had spaces for classes. We had office space. We could expand our workspaces. We had the Information Exchange. We had this room, maybe a hundred by twenty feet. It was started by a graduate of the Columbia preservation program named Darlene McLeod. Who I think is a preservationist now in Florida. She was involved with the Preservation League of New York for a while. Darlene and some volunteers would assemble all of this stuff, clippings. Of course you have to remember this was before the internet. This was before really sophisticated computers where you actually had to cut out newspaper clippings, file them, so that if a student or a planner or architect wanted to find out about preservation or history, they’d go to this little room and have access to journals, magazines, clippings, letters, photographs, whatever. And it was this funky little thing called the Information Exchange, which was just that. People used it. We had volunteers who helped. So the Urban Center was interesting because it gave the Municipal Art Society a place for such activities. .
And then we had extra room, so in moved The Parks Council, The Architectural League and The AIA of New York. We could share the space. We could have group programs. So there was this crosspollination. I don’t really know how many people came. We had our newsletter, which was sent to an extensive mailing list. One challenge was trying to get our events listed in the New York Times every week, and New York Magazine. And calling up and pitching ideas and getting little listings here and there. Just to get the word out. And it was an attempt to get people to know what we were doing. Because there was no internet. You really had to do mailings. We had a mailing house. We had people who stuffed envelopes and put out the word, and they came the Urban Center.
I curated an exhibit for the Historic Districts Council. We had 6-foot high panels with photographs depicting the character of each district. And I wrote text describing the various districts and what have you. And hopefully it let people know that they existed, and perhaps they then went on the weekend and went to explore Cobble Hill and went out to look at Mott Haven. We also had gotten a small grant from the National Endowment for the Arts to do a series of maps so people could actually do self-guided walking tours, of just the different districts.
KATIE NOLAN: How influential do you think the press was in all of the things that happened in the seventies and eighties?
LORNA NOWVÉ: That’s a great question. It was very important. There was Ada Louise Huxtable, who was on the board at that point. She was not that active, but you knew that something written by Ada Louise Huxtable was going to get attention. Then there wasPaul Goldberger. You had all these people who would sometimes fight with our board. So the press was very important. Both, not just in terms of public information, but in terms of editorial comment. And suddenly it was hip and happening to write about preservation. One of the things that really interested me, and still interests me, is how to make things sexy and palatable to the public. And preservation was very hot back then. I think you had to make it accessible, you couldn’t make it elitist. You needed people to write about different buildings and issues. I think New Yorkers felt proud and started to appreciate what they saw in the City, mainly because they did read about it more and more. There were writers like Roberta Gratz. There were a lot of local papers back then. SoHo Weekly, The Upper Westsider. If you could get an article in the local papers about a preservation issue, people talked about it. So yes, the press was very important I think MAS had a problem originally because it was seen as elitist. And it was sometimes interesting to go to a public debate at the Landmarks Commission and hear the truth and then see how it was interpreted in some newspapers. So that the press continues to be important. It’s just how often do we read preservation issues in the New York Times anymore?
KATIE NOLAN: I seem to think that there is at least one article a day or very little bits in the real estate section.
LORNA NOWVÉ: But there were more then. I think or maybe it was my bias. We didn’t have the internet. I think we started to get more writers on the board, which helped. Joseph Mitchell was a member of our board at that point. Advertising was important. What kinds of grants can you get? What kinds of donations you could get from various posters and such. Do you know about the Committee to Save St. Bart’s? Have you touched on all of that? That was a disturbing thing, because we got involved with a fight, which eventually we won, I think more because of internal politics of the church. But we got involved in an effort to block the building of a tower over St. Bart’s and the congregation itself was torn. It was a question of whether landmark designation created a hardship for the financial viability of the church. And the head of the church, Tom Bowers, was the dividing force. He really was the one who wanted to build a building, and some of the older parishioners were against doing it. We got involved on the merits of the fact that it was a bad idea. Mrs. Onassis was very involved in that. And from my perspective it was fascinating to watch her work, because you knew that if Mrs. Onassis--and she knew this too--she knew that if she, showed up an event, you got the press. You respected it. But, she didn’t always speak. She hardly ever spoke. She spoke a couple of words once, and it’s on film, at the Grand Central rally, but by either putting her name on a poster or letterhead, or on a handout, or maybe putting her name in a press release, you get press. We had 8 am meetings once a week plotting what we were going about the movement to save St. Bart’s. She showed up at every one of those meetings to talk about strategy. It was really impressive and very interesting. Because she was brilliant. She was in publishing then, so she again she knew the power of the press as it were, both from her former life and also she knew who and what she was. We caught some flak about that fight, I think. Just because it was a question of whether or not the church had the right to exploit its air rights to preserve itself
KATIE NOLAN: What would you say that like MAS’ role – the relationship was with the LPC before Grand Central, after Grand Central around this time?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Well I only knew it during and afterward. The commission knew that they needed MAS, and I guess internally was a very tactful and very delicate thing to sort of whisper in the ear of a board member, “We need your help with this.” It’s a brilliant process, it’s a public process. You make it more public. You tap into the membership of the Municipal Art Society. We had little alerts in our newsletters: “Write letters” or “Do what you can” or “Call.” But it was primitive when you look back on it. I would get calls from commission staff members saying, “We really need your help with this.” Or they would say, “We really need you to testify here.” And we did. It was a very, very close relationship. And a very sophisticated one, because they could ask for a specific comments and input from our board members. Jim Polshek was on our board, as were Hugh Hardy, Lew Davis, Charles Platt. So there were a lot of architects who could jump into the fray. Allow me to digress for a moment:
Before we moved to the Urban Center we needed money. It wasn’t going to be cheap to do that, and this was at a time when the whole notion of an MBA was sort of dodgy. No one really wanted to say that art and commerce could cohabitate. We got a grant from New York Telephone Foundation, and they had a business consultant analyze the structure of MAS—its board, its staff, who did what. We actually had somebody sitting in on our meetings, sitting in with Margot Wellington watching what everybody we did. And study it as a business, which was on one level horrifying but by same token it was very important. We then hired a Wharton MBA graduate, Henry Ng, to become our person who would look over our fundraising and help us expand. And it was really essential for us to do that. And so that brought us into the real world in terms of finances. The Landmarks Commission couldn’t raise public money, until they started the Landmarks Foundation, which I guess Adele Chatfield-Taylor started. So they could then bring in money and grants for preservation. I’m sort of scattered in all of this, but I’m just thinking about how we were growing on parallel tracks. And then the Landmarks Commission had a series of very smart public relations people on staff. One young man named Alan Haber, who was really brilliant in coming up with angles for stories about what the Landmarks Commission was doing. We could all work together. MAS had a part-time publicist named Joyce Matz who worked with us, but she’d also worked with Alan. So there was this whole little mafia that we had going on on the staff level. Which was really great. It’s as if you could have everybody on your speed dial – if we had speed dial back then – saying ok what do you need what can we do? And it was good. And we could use our walking tours as another way of brainwashing people to say “oh yeah, there is a hearing tomorrow,” or what have you.
The Landmarks Commission was also at this tiny little building. They moved a lot. So their hearing rooms were cramped and horrible. And it wasn’t really a fun thing to do, but we tried to cram people in there. It was one big happy family, when we all agreed.
KATIE NOLAN: Who would you say were your main opponents?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Hmmmm… Real estate developers at that time, and real estate attorneys who were doing their jobs. Howard Zipser was a very influential real estate attorney at that time. He was hired by the Helmsleys of the world and everybody else. So there were some ugly fights. So certainly it was the developers. Look at the building patterns in New York. There was a time when there was really a lot of building, and then the economy was hurting, so suddenly preservation was easier because nobody had the money to build buildings. The Fisher Brothers Building over on the Racquet Club on 53rd and Park was going up. Again, people started to look at what was left of low-rise midtown Manhattan. It was a landmark or a potential landmark. So while they were all sniffing out air rights, they were getting very sophisticated in their interpretation of what they could and couldn’t do. We had to get more savvy in terms of, “Okay, if you’re going to build over the Racquet Club, what’s it going to look like?” And so a lot of buildings that you see came about through having to play with your enemy. And let’s face it – all these guys know each other. They all belong to the same clubs. It wasn’t like they were from different sides of the tracks. So it was always a gentlemen’s agreement. The ugliest part, and I don’t know if you’ve been studying this, is the whole thing with the theater district. And I don’t know if that’s come up at all. But that was, beyond Grand Central, the saddest and the nastiest battle that took place while I was there in terms of what the Marriott was going to do to the theater district, and what it did do. The fact that we lost three beautiful theaters because of that piece of crap over there. And that’s where John Portman came in and Marriott came in and they said, ”We’re going to put up a building that really belongs in New York CIty, that we’ve built in Atlanta and every anonymous city in the country, and we’re going to do this here.” And how do you convince theater owners, STRUGGLING theater owners, to refuse the money offered by developers?. How do you convince the huge Shubert Organization to preserve their building if people are drooling over their air rights? Remember—this is before the Disneyfication of Times Square. It was still an amalgam of peep shows, porn houses, seedy restaurants, and magnificent theaters. And the battle was horrible. And you’ve seen photos of them tearing down the Helen Hayes Theater and Christopher Reeve and other people getting arrested for protesting as the demolition crews went to work. That was a huge blow to see historic buildings torn down. I was too young to see Penn Station demolished, but those images were sort of similar. It was a very sad time. That’s when everybody had to realize, “Well, what’s going to happen next?” How to get the Shuberts to agree to any kind of preservation if it means that they’re going to claim that we’re killing the Broadway theater, because they can’t operate their theaters, which were old and needed renovations and what have you. I remember when -- you can look up this date--when “Cats” was going to move into the Winter Garden Theater. They had to carve a hole in the ceiling for the big moment when the cat rose to heaven or whatever. And they felt they had to convince us-- I don’t know whether the Winter Garden was a landmark interior at that point--but they had to show us that they could put the hole back in the ceiling after “Cats” closed. And they took a bunch of us up to the roof. I’m afraid of high open spaces. Looking at this hole in the ceiling. Knowing that, ‘Hey we’ll put this back if the show ever closes.” And thinking, okay, well now they’re also talking about how technological changes were going to affect the interiors of these buildings. Here we are saying preserve your interior. Renovate your interior. Modernize your interior. Save your air rights. And don’t tear your buildings down. So look what’s happened. It sort of worked. They are landmarks -- you pay a token price added to your ticket for the preservation fund or whatever that is and that sort of worked out. But there was a lot of animosity between the Jujamcyns, the Schuberts and Nederlanders and all of the preservation organizations but the public was outraged that we lost those theaters. Look at the Marriott. But then it’s interesting to see what happened to Times Square. And the original ideas were kicked around, and then there was no money and everybody went away. But I remember going with Hugh Hardy to the New Amsterdam Theater. They weren’t showing porn that day, they were showing some stupid movie and there were about five people doing god knows what in the theater. And Hugh knew about all these hidden spaces downstairs and beautiful smoking lounges. He spoke so eloquently about the potential for the New Amsterdam Theater. And thinking, “Okay, but how is this going to happen?” I left MAS by that point, I went on to the Bryant Park Restoration Corporation But I remember looking out at Times Square from the top of the Marriott and knowing that it wasn’t going to be any longer.
KATIE NOLAN: Do you think it was not successful, what they did to Times Square?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Well, it’s not Times Square anymore. It’s something else. We lost a lot of buildings. There were a lot of facades that are gone. But again, how do you deal with economics these days? So at least the theaters are beautiful and at least they’re there for the most part. So that was successful. It’s a really good question. I think there are times we have to say change is good. I know that I have became more flexible in what I think is acceptable. I still have this outrage when I see something that’s been defaced and torn down. How do they teach it in school now? What … What’s your perception of preservation in this climate?
KATIE NOLAN: One of the focuses in my program is learning how to work around real estate and development. Umm learning the tools so that you’re not, it’s not just advocacy driven or but you have all these other tools at your disposal to save things.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Uh huh.
KATIE NOLAN: So, but you know it’s different in New York than anywhere else, I guess. Because of the real estate market.
LORNA NOWVÉ: I guess so. It’s interesting how other cities are realizing that they had these great downtowns that can be preserved and turned into “hot spots.” Pittsburgh, and other gritty cities, sidestepped a lot of development and now they can say they’ve got these great old mill buildings that are perfect for adaptive reuse.. And use preservation as an economic engine. So. That was the Theater District. That was not a fun time.
KATIE NOLAN: I did a report on that project, so…
LORNA NOWVÉ: Really. So what’s your perspective of what happened?
KATIE NOLAN: Um, they did save buildings, but exactly, it’s not Times Square anymore. And it’s just like the commercialization of history.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Well put. That’s true. Do you make it a theme park?
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yeah. Yeah.
KATIE NOLAN: But unless you have, I mean buildings can’t stand alone. You have to have money. They have to have some use. Otherwise they’re just getting, you know, be neglected and fall down. So.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Well, they’re not falling down.
KATIE NOLAN: Um, so talking about Grand Central, you kind of, like expressed that you kind of, that you can’t -- you just felt it was such an important event and you were a part of it. Besides Mrs. Onassis, why do you think it was a successful campaign?
LORNA NOWVÉ: It was a very sophisticated campaign, and it worked on different levels. From the grassroots standpoint, it made people aware of Grand Central. Everybody going around it, going through it every day. It was taken it for granted. It wasn’t in great shape. But suddenly they would start to look up and they started to look at the ceiling, the carvings, the light fixtures. Some of which weren’t working but they realized, “We could lose this.” So on that level we made the notion of preservation part of the vernacular. So then you informed people, just randomly, because they were having contact with the building that might not be there, or might be drastically altered. So it was successful in that regard. It was successful because it helped lawyers and administrators and politicians understand what a landmarks law could be. And I think that politicians in other cities were waiting to see what was going to happen, because they didn’t have such instruments in place. And I think perhaps before they were going to write or were going to explore preservation policy locally, they were going to wait to see what was going to happen with this.
In terms of the Municipal Art Society, it was like, “Hey, you know, we can do this.” It was a very empowering thing. It was time to take off our white gloves, roll up our little Brooks Brothers sleeves and get into it. And it was like a runaway train in a very good way. Because people were responding. And there were a lot of events, there were a lot of meetings, there were a lot of fundraisers. Because again it was a very expensive endeavor. And there was one fundraiser, a really hot night one summer. I don’t remember maybe ’76, ’77, at the Oyster Bar with Mrs. Onassis and the rest of the board. You couldn’t even move in that space. And the ice sculptures that they had brought in were melting faster than the ice in people’s drinks. But people were willing to cough up money, and let’s face it, I don’t want to be crude, but it cost money to do that campaign, but it was good to tap into those people’s pockets, because they had money. And you’d also see people who had no money give you a quarter on the street to help with the fight. But was like a people’s campaign. When was the last time you got that in New York City?
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah.
LORNA NOWVÉ: We don’t do that anymore. I mean that wasn’t the only one. But it was breathtaking to see. It was incredible to see just handing out fliers – and nobody wants to pick up fliers in New York City. It’s the last thing you want to do. But say, “Save Grand Central”, people would actually stop and they’d take the flier. They’d come to our little, little nook, which was also a little bookstore. We had traffic down there—it was right by the entrance to the shuttle. And people would come and talk about it. And you’d also connect, because everybody had a sense of history about New York. I wish we had done what you’re doing now back then in terms of getting people on record reminiscing about Grand Central. Everything it meant to them. So it became a very public, emotional thing. And we learned how to fight a fight. Taught the board that it was ok to do it. It brought in some money, which we needed, which we spent. I mean we were fiscally, very, very careful about everything.
There was the tradition of Earth Day, in the early seventies, a movement which I was very much a part of when I was in high school. We realized, “Hey, we can save the planet,” which is weird that thirty years later, we have to revisit it in a very desperate way. But so you had an early green movement in the early seventies. How do you take that energy and turn it into the built environment. instead of the natural environment? And that’s what was happening with Grand Central.
KATIE NOLAN: Were there other groups involved in the Grand Central?
LORNA NOWVÉ: There were. If you look at the amicas brief that was filed, there were a lot of organizations both in New York and nationally who became pro bono advocates for the campaign. I don’t remember if we had corporate sponsors for the campaign. That would be very interesting to see in the archives, whatever the archives look like. That’s a good question. We were the instrument of the Landmarks Commission, because the Landmarks Commission couldn’t really lobby. So you’re asking about the relationship. Well guess what? You know, we were basically helping to do their work for them. We were working for the City of New York.
KATIE NOLAN: Um. What do you -- How do you see this all affecting today, preservation today?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I think some people take it for granted. It just sort of what’s done; it’s part of humannature. I’m not really part of the movement anymore. I don’t really know what it takes any longer to be able to keep it going. You ‘re not aware of what it took to get to where we are and what it took to preserve things. I don’t know what goes on in school. I don’t know if elementary or high school kids are taught about architecture.
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah.
LORNA NOWVÉ: New York City.
KATIE NOLAN: New York City Preservation Movement.
A; Uh, I’m not even aware if there is one? Is there one?
KATIE NOLAN: Yes.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Tell me.
KATIE NOLAN: Well, um, it depends, there are lots of different versions of what’s more important and what’s going on, I would think. There’s a lot of people who really believe that the LPC isn’t doing what they are meant to do, and they’re trying to fix it.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Do you think, how are they slacking off, as it were?
KATIE NOLAN: Um, they’re allowing things that they shouldn’t be allowing, changes made in historic districts or additions to buildings that they wouldn’t have accepted that wouldn’t have accepted before. Besides the fact that they have way more work than they’re capable of doing. Yeah. And are they being proactive enough in going out and looking at new districts and buildings? Or are they just sitting there and people are you know, applying to them, and they’re not getting an answer.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Actually two things come to mind, because if you think about it, every district, every area of New York City is being developed now. Everybody’s moving into areas that were off the map ten years ago. So you’re right. New pressures. How do they keep up with the fact that people are now flocking to Long Island City, Astoria and Bedford Stuyvesant, Harlem, Cobble Hill and beyond. Everybody’s moving in. All of these INREM buildings that were city-owned and just abandoned for twenty years are suddenly choice properties. So how do you respond to that? And everybody’s moving in and you’ve got all these new financial engines and so dormant neighborhoods are being revitalized, which is great. But you’re right. How do you preserve it? It’s like the next wave of development. In the outer boroughs, people may not be as sophisticated about the pressures of development because they’ve long been immune. But you think people moving in now are getting very smart about their neighborhoods. You’re moving into a beautiful brownstone area that’s been neglected and now you want to preserve it. But what if a developer wants to come in and just guts them? So it’s as if you can’t be caught off guard. I drive around a lot around Fieldstone in the Bronx, which may or may not be an historic district now. And I think the Commission was really asleep at the wheel at one point because all these mansions were just torn down. In New York City! It’s such a weird part of the city. And irreparable damage. Just so many of those houses are gone. And I was thinking, “Where’s the Commission in all of this? Are they responding? Just as where is the community? Do they know what to do now?” And are they being heard?
Q Do you think the community had more of a role in the seventies and eighties?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I do. I really do. I think people felt more empowered. Maybe it was just our nature back then. People were used to fighting. You had an earlier generation of the Margot Gayles, the Ruth Wittenbergs, people who were getting up there in age. Margot Gayle saved SoHo. She was the doyenne of cast iron architecture. Ruth Wittenberg helped save Greenwich Village. You had the Ortners who helped preserve Brooklyn Heights. Talk about grassroots, you had people who did it at the very beginning. So they were passing it on. And I think there was a real spirit of activism back then. And I think people are more compliant, they’re more apathetic, they’re more self-involved now. Not that they weren’t then, but it was easier to tap into people’s emotions and get them involved. But also you didn’t have the internet. You couldn’t just create a blog; you couldn’t create a website. You couldn’t tell people to have a voice heard with the click of a button. People had to work harder. And they did. It was really amazing, to be in your early twenties and be a part of it, because you’re the ultimate idealist. At that point, you think you want to save the world and you can save the world. And people responded to that. After I left MAS, I went to Bryant Park. And I don’t know if you want to go into any of that. You know about Bryant Park and the whole fight to save Bryant Park in back of the New York Public Library?
KATIE NOLAN: About how like what you’re talking about with Whyte and how it was like not, people didn’t hang out there. It wasn’t safe. And … Yeah
LORNA NOWVÉ: And people said it couldn’t be done. Looking back on it – it was like “What’s wrong with you people?” People actually told us the park wasn’t worth saving because you had to walk up the steps and it was overrun by drug dealers. And that part of midtown wasn’t yet redeveloped. Home Box Office had just moved in. And they were horrified, “Uh oh! We’ve got all of our people here.” And they gave us a check for a hundred thousand dollars to try to clean up the park. And the library was being renovated. Mrs. Astor was horrified to bring potential donors past the park and have them propositioned by drug dealers! There was the promise of a magnificent park and lots of activity, but there were people on the local community board, including Fred Beckhart, who said “This just can’t be done. Nobody will ever go in that park.” It’s funny—if you see Albert Maysles’ film about Christo’s gates, you can see Fred poo-pooing them when that plan was first presented. And you think, “Are you crazy? Are you going to allow the park to continue to fester?” You’d show them these gorgeous renderings that Laurie Olin and Hugh Hardy had done-- forget about whether or not the restaurant should or shouldn’t have gone up there. But people actually said it couldn’t be done. Members of the community board would say, “Forget it. It’s not worth it. Go away. Go do something else.” And you’d go, “Is it me or is it you?” (haha) And now you look at that park. And you just want to throttle the people who told you, “No, it can’t be done.” That was a funny time
Q; Do you think they didn’t feel that way towards preservation? It can’t be done?
LORNA NOWVÉ: When we were presenting the plans for Bryant Park, some thought that the “bad” social forces going on along 42nd Street were going to preclude any kind of preservation, renovation, anything. And this was the case where if you build it, they will come. It was really, really the case. They did get hysterical about what the restaurant was going to be. That was one of the cases where I was actually advocating development, and something that should have been preserved. It was really good to say, “You know what? It’s okay. Lives will not be lost. Two trees will die.” But what brought you to preservation? Why did you …
KATIE NOLAN: I have a lot of interests. I really like history. I like, I always look at old buildings, and I thought, “Hmm, a career.” Melding interests, yeah.
A : Well it’s interesting you talk about careers, because I started to realize that people who were getting out of Columbia and other programs were going to work in the private sector. They were finding places, developers, consulting groups who needed their skills to do parts of environmental impact statements, for example. Which I thought was so smart and so clever. Because how many jobs were there at MAS, the Conservancy? I mean there were what? Thirty of us altogether? Some people wanted to earn a living (haha). It was very interesting to see how preservationists were getting sophisticated as was the private sector. The sort of ‘work with the enemy’ as it were. But in a very productive way. I thought that was very cool. And very interesting to see how some architectural firms hire preservationists to be on their staff – not just to interpret what they were doing, to help advocate and promote what they were doing in the outside world.
KATIE NOLAN: Were there preservation firms the way that there are today?
A There were a few. I don’t remember who they were.. And they were smart. Rambush did preservation, but they were doing bricks and mortar. Who are the groups now? Who are doing it? Who come to mind?
KATIE NOLAN: Mostly the ones I know are just departments within a larger planning firms, or there seem to be a lot more in California. But. Higgins Quasebarth. I think. Or … Like adaptive reuse. They do a lot of that kind of stuff.
LORNA NOWVÉ: There were some that were doing it.
KATIE NOLAN: Um. Just one going back. So HDC was created by MAS, and then it kind of, it became its own identity. Did, how did the relationship change, or did it change, when they separated?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I wasn’t there then.
KATIE NOLAN: Okay.
LORNA NOWVÉ: I was there when it was still under the aegis of MAS. And Tony and I were talking a lot about breaking it out and creating a separate entity. Those were good talks, because I think we felt that the critical mass existed at that point, to break off and do it. And further empower the districts. And it looks like it worked. If HDC was going to be strong enough, it definitely had to have a life of its own; it was important for it to spin off, for its own identity, to get its own financing, to find a different kind of constituency than perhaps the broader generalist approach than MAS was going to have. So it happened. And Tony is the one to talk to about that. Those were fascinating meetings, just to really talk to people intimately involved with the future and prospects of other parts of the city. And to realize they had been doing it for so long, with virtually no attention being paid to their efforts. There was a woman named Joan Maynard who was part of Weeksville-- an old slave colony that was sort of rediscovered in a part of Brooklyn, and she had done her research. She had found out a lot about it, and she got the community involved. This was their neighborhood; this was their square block. It’s so amazing and so exciting to see that they wanted to preserve their neighborhood, and they did it. And found like-minded spirits in other districts. Some people love walking tours. I’m sure some use them to help scope out real estate in the areas that they may not know otherwise, but there are people who are really curious about what on earth was going on. The Kaplan Foundation would give us money, and we’d organize neighborhood tours. Again, Barry Lewis, who you really should talk to. He used to do a show on Channel 13 with David Hartman where they’d walk through different areas of New York City. We would do these day-long bus and walking tours of the “outer boroughs.” We would spend days driving around different boroughs to plan each trip. But we would have to eat our way through the area, also, because the whole idea was to take people to planned communities like Sunnyside in Queens, and then have a great lunch, and then meet with the community leaders. These tours would leave the Urban Center at nine in the morning and get back at six. And they were packed. With people who grew up there and hadn’t been there for a long time, or people who would say, “Oh, yeah, I heard about Lefferts’s Garden, or something like that, but I’ve never been and I’d been afraid to go there,” or whatever. We’d throw them on a bus, have them discover some great restaurant there. And they’d feel like they had been to Europe for the day, because it was basically taking people on a little journey, and then you’d tell them they were in a historic district. And New Yorkers were much more provincial then—it was hard to get people to leave Manhattan to explore other areas. But now it seems everybody moving to the other boroughs, it’s much broader than that. But, people weren’t that curious or they were lazier or scared, perhaps. And now, do you live in Manhattan?
KATIE NOLAN: No. I live in Brooklyn.
LORNA NOWVÉ: See? Mostly everybody I work with lives in Brooklyn or Queens.
KATIE NOLAN: I still don’t think that people who are from Manhattan rarely go beyond Williamsburg or Brooklyn Heights. Park Slope. You know, that’s about as far as they go.
LORNA NOWVÉ: But the economic forces are such that, how far out do you live?
KATIE NOLAN: In Bay Ridge.
LORNA NOWVÉ: See? And think of how great it is there. Think about the diversity there. So economic forces and curiosity are bringing people out there. So it’s no longer this myopic view. Back then it was. You know, if you ran a preservation battle in Bay Ridge or wherever…
KATIE NOLAN: We do.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Well … and what’s happening?
KATIE NOLAN: Umm … there is an old church that is going to be torn down for a condo, and people don’t want it to be. ‘Cause it’s over a hundred years old and it’s beautiful.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Uh huh. And?
KATIE NOLAN: And people are trying to get involved. It’s not probably going to work. Because it’s falling apart and the zoning allows for very tall buildings. But…
LORNA NOWVÉ: Do you feel like the Landmarks Commission is going to respond to you?
KATIE NOLAN: Um, no, because the building is literally crumbling. The stone, it should not have been used for the outside of the building. And you know, it’s a religious institution, so they, you know, “Oh we’re poor. We need more money to – for our soup kitchen.” They don’t have a soup kitchen, but…
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yeah.
KATIE NOLAN: You know what I mean? So the LPC is not paying attention. The Conservancy can’t help fund it because it’s way too expensive. But people are still trying.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Good.
KATIE NOLAN: And I heard Bay Ridge is the new Park Slope, so maybe if more of these yuppies come and move to my neighborhood, they’ll be more ‘save it’. So if we hold on for a couple more years.
LORNA NOWVÉ: That’s true. But that’s what it takes, and I guess that’s what the Historic Districts Council was all about, in terms of local pride. It sounds so sappy, but that’s true. Because people move to an area for whatever reason, and it’s their home. And it’s all they’ve got in terms of their landscape identity or whatever you want to call it. We tried to respond to that, and it was fun to be a staff member doing that, because it was like answering the help line. Where people would call – I mean you’d get really weird calls some times. But if you didn’t get the call let’s say about that church, how else would you know about it? It’s not like anybody was doing windshield surveys of everything. I remember getting a call one Friday – these things always happen before long weekends. Surprise! But they were sandblasting the subway kiosk at 72nd and Broadway on the weekend, which was a huge no-no. And how do you stop it on a Saturday in the summer? I’d get calls like that. There was, I forget the details of this, but you know the building that I guess Phillip Johnson wound up designing opposite the Met with that faux mansard roof? There was a townhouse there, I believe. I remember getting a call on a Friday afternoon right before Memorial Day weekend or something like that. The building was being threatened. Who do you call? Like what’s 911 for buildings? I called Jim Polshek. And I said, “I got this call and they want to tear down the building over the weekend” and blah blah blah blah. What do you do?” And so you call daddy, basically, and one thing led to another, and they stopped it and got Johnson involved. But literally that would come out of getting a call at of some random hour about a building being threatened. And does that exist now? You know, who do you call?
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah.
LORNA NOWVÉ: So.
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah, I guess Landmarks West! or Greenwich Village Society, or?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Arlene Simons in every area, every zip code. That’s an interesting case study, Landmarks West!
KATIE NOLAN: So why did you, you left preservation, sort of for Bryant Park.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes.
KATIE NOLAN: And did you think that maybe you would come back to it? Or did it, was it like a passion you weren’t, you know, going to pursue professionally? Or…?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I wanted to go from broader scope, like looking at the whole city, to literally caring about a square block of New York City, which was an amazing opportunity. Where I could take all those skills, all that knowledge, all those resources, and literally apply them to a square block in Manhattan. So that was great. But I also wanted to be in the movie business. And I decided that I could use those skills the same way as a film producer. But Bryant Park was fun. Because we knew we were right. It was sort of cut and dry. But it was a long fight, and it changed. But again, we had a lot of money coming in because many companies were starting to move in. The library had to deal with the questions, “What are we going to do with the rest of this park?” Mrs. Astor and others made the right calls. Some people moved into a magnificent building that was turned into a co-op on the south side of 40th Street. There were rats jumping off their scaffolding because the garbage dump for the park was across the street from their house. These people had lovely apartments with an incredible view of the park calling, begging: “Can you help us here?” And then everybody else was starting to sniff out all the real estate around there, because eventually something was going to happen. So we had a lot of money coming in, but how do you finance preservation? Bryant Park has a very innovative lease with the city, which was patterned after a lease that the York Zoological Society has with the city – I think it’s a dollar-a-year lease, and it’s a public/private partnership. That’s how we came up with the Business Improvement District, which has an assessment, a window tax for everybody who faces Bryant Park. Back then it was about three cents a square foot, or something like that. So that the neighborhood actually helps finance the preservation of that park. But also look at all the corporate sponsors. Who would have dreamed of Fashion Week in Bryant Park? It was interesting, it was fun to do. And then after a while, I just couldn’t do it anymore. I just burned out. It wasn’t fun anymore. It was the same personalities. And I knew I did not want to run an organization. And it just wasn’t what I was interested in doing anymore. I really felt I had done it. I could point to a lot of things in New York City and say I had a hand in them. And that’s a really wonderful feeling. And it will always mean a lot to me, and gives me a lot of pride. But after a while, I burned out. And I started to not like some of the people that you had to fight all the time. And I started getting fed up with community boards. It was time for somebody else to come in with a new attitude, a better attitude, perhaps a different perspective. I always had a good attitude. I’m very proud of the fact that I was always often a very good go-between, between forces, which is what I also like doing. Even in Bryant Park, there were people within our team who didn’t really necessarily get along all the time. So I would find I would go office- to-office and sort of smooth things out and make it work. But that was a really interesting team. And it was a real microcosm of everything that’s done in any kind of social activism endeavor I don’t care where it is in the world. If you have something that needs to be saved, you have a mission, you have a plan, you have public input, and you have the choice of losing it forever or not. And in this case, the heart of New York City. It still makes me laugh.
KATIE NOLAN: So is there anything that you think that we haven’t talked about?
LORNA NOWVÉ: I don’t know--it would be up to you in terms of what you, what holes you need filled in.
KATIE NOLAN: Well you’ve covered basically everything I was going to talk to you about, but sometimes stories come to mind when you’re talking. And your like, “Oh, I should mention that?”
LORNA NOWVÉ: Stories, stories I’m sure there are lots of stories. There was always a struggle of how to be sophisticated in our approach, in terms of our press materials, in terms of slogans, in terms of the approach that we were going to do. Because MAS was a class act. You wouldn’t want to cheapen anything. She was joking and it was really sort of cute, but we were talking during the St. Bart’s thing, and thinking about what could we do to raise people’s awareness, and Mrs. Onassis said, “Let’s go around putting bumper stickers on people’s cars at night so they never see us.” People wanted to let their guard down and really see what it was like to fight and to be passionate. It’s okay to be a sophisticated businessman, but there are times when, you you’re a person, and you have to play. I think it’s very interesting to look at the make-up of the board of directors back then. We had Bill Bernbach on our board-- his firm was one of the top ad agencies in the world – Doyle, Dane, Bernbach. They had Coke, they had Volkswagen – all the famous ads from that time. Frank Stanton of CBS was on our board. So if you needed an ad campaign? You’d go to the guys who sold Coca Cola. And they’d help you with an ad campaign. You’d go up to Bill Bernbach’s office, an he’d say, “What do you need?” J. Walter Thompson did all the ad campaigns for free for Grand Central. Another of the biggest ad agencies in the world at that point. “What do you need? You want posters?” You had all these junior ad execs, doing posters for us. That’s sort of amazing. Go in the subway—you’ll see all these great ads that are also done pro bono, and you know that they’ve got great minds doing them for worthy causes.
KATIE NOLAN: Um..
LORNA NOWVÉ: I mean if I think of other stories, not that I’ve suppressed them, but…. I’m just trying to think of other fights. Good and bad. Because those were the big ones. We lost a lot of, a lot of houses of worship. That was the big thing. A lack of resources and diminishing congregations. And I guess that’s when the Landmarks Conservancy started their – was it sacred trust
KATIE NOLAN: The Conservancy?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes.
KATIE NOLAN: Sacred Sites.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes. Because I guess that’s when that was started. Shirley Ferguson was one of the people who started that. It was a very touchy subject. We lost All Angels on the West Side. We lost Mt. Nebo, which was on West 86th Street. We lost so many houses of worship because we couldn’t match the pressing economic forces. I think All Angels’ pulpit is at the Met now, and when I look at it, I say, “ Yes, it’s a beautiful relic, but where’s the rest of the building?” But I know there was never a dull moment. I just remember – we had great parties. I helped organize some of our annual meetings, including one at Radio City Music Hall. And that year we gave one of the awards to the city councilman who created the Pooper Scooper Law, which was when people started to have to clean up after your dogs. And ‘Annie’ was playing on Broadway. And I don’t remember if it was Sarah Jessica Parker or not, but we had the little girl who played Annie at that point bring the dog who played Sandy and she and dog presented the award. Oft’ times it was held at a place that was going to get an award for the efforts to save them, like the Brotherhood Synagogue on Gramercy Park, or Radio City.. And it was always so much fun to come up with not only the recipients, but really clever ways to present the awards.
And then after a while, they started to present the President’s Medal. I think to either a person or a really spectacular preservation effort. And you’ll see them every now and then around New York—they’re large bronze circular plaques. So that was our annual meeting, which was a membership meeting. But it was an interesting mix to go to the annual meetings, because you’d see the members. People you’d recognize from the walking tours. They’d be sitting side by side with heads of all the major corporations in New York who were writing big checks. So those guys were able to see just who the membership was, what the membership was. I think there was something in those events for everybody, and everybody felt that they were a part of MAS. Which I think was very important. So yes, by being part of MAS, you were then a part of the preservation movement, and you were a part of sophisticated urban planning – whatever that was going to be. If you needed to fight a landmarks designation, you’d have to go to the Board of Standards and Appeals, I guess, to get it overruled. It’s probably much more complicated and sophisticated now. But you’d have to, the whole notion of hardship was a big factor in terms of, “Well if you’re going to bestow landmark status on this building, and they can show economic hardship, then I have a valid challenge to that.” And the Landmarks Commission wasn’t the be-all and end-all for that. That came through the City Planning Commission. I guess from what I’ve read it’s very different now.
KATIE NOLAN: I don’t know how the hardship thing works, but I mean the commission, you know, there’s the lengthy review process. But the city councilmen can always say ‘No’, and then it won’t be a landmark. .And the planning commission then has the next thing of they can shrink the boundaries or whatever. So this, it’s a many stage process. You have to get the okay from a lot of different people before it will become a landmark. But sometimes people try to say it’s a hardship when you’re like, but you just bought a five million dollar building. You can fix the cornice. You know? Things like that. So.
LORNA NOWVÉ: And who has the final say then? Which agency?
KATIE NOLAN: Um, well it’s just like any one along the way can basically overturn it. So generally unless the commission knows they’re going to get the support of the local council member, they won’t even bring it up to the hearing. But…
LORNA NOWVÉ: Wow. It seems easier back then. I forgot all about the City Planning Commission, because they would get involved. Especially if they were hardships as it were ….
KATIE NOLAN: But I think also then it was … there were so many buildings that were being nominated, whereas now it’s like twenty-eight you know or more years later where all the obvious buildings have already been designated. So..
LORNA NOWVÉ: That’s interesting, too. And then you had the whole notion of what to do when buildings turn 50, like Lever House and the Huntington Hartford Museum. Are they significant? And we didn’t really have to deal with the notion of preserving modernism back in the 70’s. Things that were fifty years old then – this sounds so weird! – LOOKED old. They were from the twenties! Now you’re dealing with things from the fifties and the sixties that requires a whole other series of definitions of of what’s worth preserving. And I think it’s, this is very, from my perspective, very interesting way to interpret what’s significant or not. Because we don’t have a lot of really interesting fifties buildings left around here.
KATIE NOLAN: Yeah I know.
LORNA NOWVÉ: So you need to have different tools and different perspectives.
KATIE NOLAN: Well, but then you have, I mean preservationists just aren’t to fight for buildings that they think are pretty ugly.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Isn’t that interesting. So what do you do? You’re gritting your teeth, going, “Oh, technically….”
KATIE NOLAN: But we’ve all, I think preservation itself, the movement has also started to focus more on cultural value, and you know public identity and memory and stuff. So even though a building might not be aesthetically pleasing, you know, it’s still like, “This was an important building to all of these people, and it means a lot of them.” So that’s why we have to fight for it.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Which is good, because that goes, as I said, to the sort of emotional landscape, not just the bricks and mortar. I can’t think of anything else.
KATIE NOLAN: Well I can just give you my email address, so if …
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes, do.
KATIE NOLAN: So if you …..
LORNA NOWVÉ: I will.
KATIE NOLAN: Why did you agree to this interview?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Because it still means a lot to me and I am very moved by it all and I still appreciate and am always aware of the environment. And it’s a very, very important part of my life. And I made friends in that movement who are friends to this day. And a lot of them are still working in the trenches, and I always feel like I’m so superficial, I work in Hollywood, I’m so sorry! But when I got the call, I was really touched, because MAS means a lot to me, and every now and then Vanessa Gruen or somebody else from MAS will call me up and ask for a contact or something. And I’m really happy to help. I was there with a group of pretty incredible people, and at a very influential time in this city’s history. And I’m grateful for it. And if I can impart any of that, it means a lot to share that perspective. I hope I’ve gotten that across to you in some way. But we’re sort of witnesses to history, as well as facilitators, in a way. And we were just doing it. I never thought about it. It was just what you did. I just, I often found myself sort of pinching myself. “This is my job? This is what I’m doing? And I’m actually…” It’s great to be able to have results, tangible results. And you’d also have contact with people a lot, and that always meant a lot to me. We were never isolated. We were always part of the community of putting communities together. And that was really good, to feel that we were facilitators. I just loved getting the call and it was really fun to meet you and talk to you about it.
KATIE NOLAN: Well I’m glad that you agreed to do it and like I said I think it will be really important for preservationists later on to be able to you know listen to these and see the documents and get like someone who was really there. You know? The last thing I meant to ask you is if you have any papers? Any correspondence or whatever that they can take a look at.
LORNA NOWVÉ: I started to go through some things, and I’ll find some things. I found this weird letterhead. I have to give you a piece. Because I think I had the last piece of it. There was a committee to save the Tweed Courthouse. And, which obviously they succeeded in doing. It desperately needed a new roof. And the members of the board is like a Who’s Who of preservation history back then. And this predated me. Giorgio Cavaglieri wound up doing the design for the preservation of the Tweed Courthouse, I believe. The sad thing is when we were in 30 Rock, we didn’t have a lot of space, and we had a little closet, which was about ten feet square at the most. It was also our supply closet. But there also really incredible photographs, just priceless photographs of various preservation efforts which I assumed moved to the Urban Center, and then into the Information Exchange. I don’t know what happened to them after that. They were literally next door to the Xerox paper. And those are the MAS archives originally. So there was really no, we had no archivist
KATIE NOLAN: Well that’s how I think it goes now in a lot of places. And it’s like, “Oh, it’s just this stuff.” You know? Just put it there.
LORNA NOWVÉ: It’s not like we weren’t responsive to the historic significance of it, it’s just that we had other things going on. “Well they’re in that box. They’re safe.”
KATIE NOLAN: If you don’t have the space then what are you going to do?
LORNA NOWVÉ: We had no space. We had a great view. But no space.
KATIE NOLAN: Okay, I’m going to turn this off. Is that alright?
LORNA NOWVÉ: Yes, it’s fine.
KATIE NOLAN: All right. So thank you very much.
LORNA NOWVÉ: Thank you. It was good talking with you.
KATIE NOLAN: And again this is Katie Nolan interviewing Lorna Nowvé on October 13th, 2007.
