Busy As Beavers!

Jascin N. Leonardo Finger • May 05, 2015

East side of building with new lintel on lower level.

Things are speeding along at the MMA Library – soon to be the EcologyLab!


Mason Wayne Morris and his crew (daughter Andrea) are working on replacing the steel lintels over the windows on the main floor and handling the cracking and damage to the southeast corner of the exterior. The carpenter has brought the new wood gutters to the site and applied the first coat of primer. I have ordered mineral paint samples, painted them onto the building, made the color selection, and handed in the Historic District Commission application for a paint color change – though really we are returning the stucco to its original color when it was built in the 1930s. And, the remediation crew is here to get rid of any mildew or any other contaminants in the building. The environmental engineers have made a site visit and completed their recommendations. Next, we will be designing a new HVAC system for the interior – since we will have collections in the building – and once the mason has completed his work, Jim Tyler and his painting crew will paint the stucco and the trim and windows of the Wing. The exterior work is moving along and now the interior is getting under way. We have some preliminary schematics for the interior as well with more to come – and to share – in the next few weeks so stay tuned!

 

JNLF

Mineral paint choices based on original stucco.

The original terracotta tiles and damage that is being repaired.

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By Jascin N. Leonardo Finger 08 Apr, 2024
Vestal Street has seen a bevy of activity of late. In January, we began the renovation of the Maria Mitchell Vestal Street Observatory’s (MMO) Seminar Room addition – as it has been referred to since it was built in 1987. When it was created, the point was for it to serve as meeting, lecture, work space on three floors for the Astronomy Department – in particular the National Science Foundation Research Experiences for Undergraduate (NSF REU) interns we have each summer, visiting astronomers, and the astronomy staff. Believe it or not, it was the first time the Observatory had a bathroom! And, it connected to what we refer to as the Astronomer’s Cottage (ca. 1830 and purchased for the MMA in 1922) so that staff could move between the house and the Observatory without going outside – convenient! With a gift from board member and Mitchell family descendant, Richard Wolfe, we have been able to renovate this space, bringing it up to date and adding HVAC, an accessible bathroom and kitchenette, three office spaces, a seminar/meeting area, and space for intern workspaces. Lighting and interiors are being improved as this is written and we hope to have the space ready by June 1, 2024. A special thank you goes to John Wise, another Board member, who has been working with the MMA to make sure this renovation happens in a short timeframe. The work here dovetails nicely with the conservation of the historic observatory to which the Seminar Room is connected. The historic MMO, built in 1908 with a 1922 addition, has seen exterior conservation work over the last several years with support from the Community Preservation Act and the M. S. Worthington Foundation. This fall, we will move inside with more grant funding which will allow us to conserve the historic interiors and install a proper HVAC system to protect the historic fabric and historic astronomical equipment and papers. We will restore the floor in the Astronomical Study from 1922 – it’s hidden under wall-to-wall carpet and 1950s tile but it’s still there – and allow us to conserved the historic plaster and all of the original varnished woodwork. Stay tuned on this project. JNLF
01 Apr, 2024
“If you don’t look, you don’t see. You have to go and look.” -Edith Andrews
01 Apr, 2024
To me, Nantucket was always tumbledown fences. Covered in lichens, worn with wind and salt spray – grooved even – and a deep grey. Pieces broken, swinging in the wind as this broken one was with the 50mph gusts. Held together by vines – ivy or rambling climber vines, or honeysuckle. You do not see as many nowadays. This one is in town along a lane – possibly older than the house it wraps around as there was once a much older house there in the 1950s/1960s. Taken down to make room for this one – in a not so kosher manner – but that’s a story for another day. The lichens and mosses that grow on them, the vines that cover them, provide food and shade and coverage for a myriad of life – from the tiniest insects to small birds hiding from red-tailed hawks or even people and cats. Architecturally they speak of our past. While this one is very simple and not as old as others, it hearkens to a time in which cars were fewer, the island was quieter, and life was simpler. A fix was one picket not a whole fence. And some of the much. much older fences make me think of Maria Mitchell and her day when there were a lot of fences too – but not to keep people out or to create a “privacy screen.” They were there to keep animals in the yard – and more often to keep wandering animals OUT of the yard. JNLF
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