Investigators
and Investigative Skills
An investigator must have the skill and ability to closely observe and analyze the materials with a broad understanding of historic construction practices and technologies. Photo: Travis C. McDonald, Jr.
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General and Specialized Skills. The essential skill needed
for any level of investigation is the ability to observe closely and to
analyze. These qualities are ideally combined with a hands-on familiarity
of historic buildings-and an open mind! Next, whether acquired in a university
or in a practical setting, an investigator should have a good general knowledge
of history, building design history and, most important, understand both
construction and finish technologies.
But it is not enough to know architectural style and building technology
from a national viewpoint; the investigator needs to understand regional
and local differences as well.
While investigative skills are transferable between regions and chronological
periods, investigators must be familiar with the peculiarities of any given
building type and geographical area.
Investigation frequently identifies urgent needs of stabilization. Supplemental support, such as temporary shoring, may be required to prevent collapse. Photo: Travis C. McDonald, Jr.
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Architectural survey and comparative fieldwork provides a crucial database
for studying regional variations in historic buildings. For example, construction
practices can reflect shared experiences of widely diverse backgrounds
and traditions within a small geographical area. Contemporary construction
practice in an urban area might vary dramatically from that of rural areas
in the same region. Neighbors or builders within the same small geographical
area often practice different techniques of constructing similar types
of structures contemporaneously. Reliable dating clues for a certain brick
bond used in one state might be unreliable for the same period in a different
state. Regional variation holds true for building materials as well as
construction.
Finally, even beyond regional and local variation, an investigator needs
to understand that each building has its own unique history of construction
and change over time. Form, features, materials and detailing often varied
according to the tastes and finances of both builder and supplier; construction
quality and design were also inconsistent, as they are today.
Specialists on a Team. Because architectural investigation
requires a wide range of knowledge and many different skills, various people
are likely to interact on the same project. While homeowners frequently
execute small-scale projects, more complex projects might be directed by
a craftsman, an architect or a conservator. For large-scale projects, a
team approach may need to be adopted, consisting of professionals interacting
with additional consultants. Consulting specialists may include architectural
historians, architectural conservators, craftsmen, historic finish analysts,
historians, archeologists, architects, curators, and many others. The scope
and needs of a specific project dictate the skills of key players.
Architectural investigation often includes the related fields of landscape
and archeological investigation. Landscape survey or analysis by horticulturists
and landscape architects identify pre-existing features or plantings or
those designed as separate or complementary parts of the site. Both above
and below-ground archeology contribute information about missing or altered
buildings, construction techniques, evidence of lifestyle and material
culture, and about the evolution of the historic landscape itself.