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Arkansas Institute for Building Preservation

Arkansas Institute for Building Preservation TradesThe Arkansas Institute for Building Preservation Trades offers an in-depth, hands-on program leading to an one year certificate or a two year Associate of Applied Science degree in Historic Preservation Trades.

The institute, which opened in the fall of 2000, is the result of collaboration between the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program of the Department of Arkansas Heritage and Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas. Due to a shortage of people skilled in preservation trades, the institute was set up to provide a workshop based program where men and women are educated in a range of relevant trades, techniques and methodologies. By coupling theory and practice in a supervised workshop environment, students learn the skills necessary for maintaining, rehabilitating and restoring historic buildings.

The AIBPT Mission

Arkansas Institute for Building & Preservation TradesThe AIBPT provides a workshop-based program and facility where men and women are trained in a range of relevant preservation trades, techniques and methodologies.

The AIBPT offers a course of training through a curriculum that teaches the skills necessary for maintaining, rehabilitating and restoring historic buildings. We believe that a student has a better learning experience when theory and practice are taught together, accomplished by practicing the lessons of the class room in supervised lab work.

What a student can expect to learn:

Class RoomThe essentials of preservation theory and of the principles guiding work performed on historic buildings. An understanding of how buildings are constructed and the history of their technologies. Recognizing a range of historic building conditions, problems and failures. Learn the importance of preventative maintenance, and design a maintenance plan. Basic and advanced practical skills applied to a variety of actual repair and restoration projects. How to organize, estimate and supervise a restoration project.

 

Learning Methodology

Classes are taught using a combination of class and lab experiences. First year classes are typically sequential, following a step-building method that parallels the building process. This approach helps a student to understand one type of work or skill before proceeding to the next level. Second year classes run simultaneously through each semester, and allow extended time for project completion.

Workshops are also offered for specific restoration topics, including window repair and restoration, repointing historic brick, painting building exteriors, and historic building maintenance. These workshops are also brought to communities by appointment with the Institute.

The program is the result of a unique collaboration between the Arkansas Historic Preservation Program of the Department of Arkansas Heritage, and Phillips Community College of the University of Arkansas, at Helena. Another agency of the Department of Arkansas Heritage the Delta Cultural Center, owns the 1859 Moore-Hornor home, which currently provides students in the Institute with a working field lab.

 

Program Outline

Class Description

 

 

Arkansas Institute for Building Preservation

 

Beth Bechdoldt (2002) Tackles Roof Framing

 

 

CONTACT

 

Arkansas Historic Preservation Program
1500 Tower Building,
323 Center Street
Little Rock, Arkansas 72201
Phone: (501) 324-9880
Fax: (501) 324-9184

info@arkansaspreservation.org

 

Arkansas Institute for Building Preservation Trades
415 Ohio Street, Helena, AR 72342 870-338-3276
Jeffrey Goetz, Director -
jgoetz@pccua.edu

 

Website: www.arkansaspreservation.org

 

 

 

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