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Potential Hotel at the Masonic Center. Rendering provided by Ascendant Holdings.

The developers of a proposed 220-room, 14-story hotel to be built atop the Humphrey Scottish Rite Masonic Center are still working with city officials to secure final approval for their project. The developers are haggling with the citys Historic Preservation Commission and historic preservation staff over the fate of 20 stained-glass windows, none of which are original to the building.

Youre forgiven if youve never noticed the stained glass windows; at least one of the commissioners was in the same boat. Said Commissioner Patti Keating Kahnduring the meeting: when I drive past the building I cannot see stained glass. The building is so dark. Shes right, theyre barely visible because theyre covered by a dark plate glass. Yet, interior photos shown by historic preservation staff member Tim Askin show a number of colorful windows, most notably in a second-floor chapel space.

Ascendant Holdings, led by Eric Nordeen and Matthew Prescott, is looking to remove and relocate the windows as part of their redevelopment of the property at 790 N. Van Buren St.The hotel will be operated byPortland-based boutique operator Provenance Hotels, who has told Ascendant that the windows create an environment that is too dark to be used as food and beverage space or meeting rooms.

Ascendant will need commission approval to remove the windows and display them as art in the hotels interior, as theyve indicated they desire to. Yet the Historic Preservation Commission wouldnt have the authority to compel them to display them once theyve been removed. No one is suggesting Ascendant has any desire to pull a bait-and-switch, but the preservation staff and commission have raised concerns over setting precedent regarding future projects.

Further complicating things, two stained glass experts, including local firm Conrad Schmitt Studios, have examined the windows and, according to Nordeen, deemed them inferior. As Nordeen told the commission both independently concluded [the windows are] locally made, of inferior quality and they dont really have any secondary value. They do have value to the Masons.

Perhaps more germane to the commission than the hard-to-regulate fate of the windows is what Ascendant would replace them with. Matthew Jarosz, who chairs the commission and leads UW-Milwaukee Historic Preservation Institute, held a lengthy back and forth with project architect Ken Gowland about the merits of various window replacement options. The stained glass windows werent builtas entirely new windows, but instead installed inside the existing window frames. The rest of the windows in the building were replaced in 1996 by the masons. Nordeen suggested that replacing the stained glass windows could lead to a building with greater historic integrity.

Ultimately, the commission seemed supportive of finding a solution, but held off on making a decision. The meeting ended with Jarosz telling Nordeen, I think you need to come back and tell us exactly where you want to go with it.

Ascendant and their team, including a partnership of New Jersey-based Kraig Kalashian Architecture & Design and New Orleans-based Metro Studio, must now firm up plans of how they wish to use the windows and what theyll replace them with.

Will the masons find a home for them? Will Ascendant display them within the building, and if so how many? Will they leave any in place? Well know more soon. Should the commission reject Ascendants plans, the developer would retain the right to go to the full Common Council to override the historic commissions decision.

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Masonic Hotel Inches Forward - urbanmilwaukee

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May 11, 2017 at 5:44 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
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