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Harvesting Historical Riches
Boulder Lions Club Fountain
Architects,
historians, and preservationists frequently debate a concept they
call "a sense of place." You'll find lengthy studies on
the subject in the best scholarly journals, monographs, and dissertations.
Professionals ponder the idea in an attempt to distill its components
and formulate a recipe for perfect new and revitalized urban environments
that recall all that we cherish from our childhood neighborhoods,
public places, and marketplaces. Now, to the average Boulderite,
this concept isn't hard to define. Ask her to define "a sense
of place" and she might take you for a stroll along the Pearl
Street Mall. And she might stop to sit down, chat, and look around
on a bench bordering the Lions Club Fountain on a plaza just south
of the county court house. This spot, slightly removed from the
hubbub of shoppers, could well be the Pearl Street Mall's center
of gravity.
The Boulder County Court House's south plaza borders the Pearl Street
Mall midway between 13th and 14th Streets. As the plaza's centerpiece,
the 1935 Lions Club Fountain visually connects two separate but
compatible public realms. On one side is the busy east-west pedestrian
thoroughfare lined with late eighteenth and early nineteenth century
storefronts. On the other sits the stately, almost severe, Art Deco
court house. The fountain bridges these commercial and governmental
spaces visually by mimicking the court house's terraced architectural
style on a smaller, human scale. Placed amid lush gardens, brick-paved
walkways, and irregular lawns, the gleaming white, circular, terra
cotta water fountain affords shoppers, county employees, and court
house visitors a common area for relaxation or people watching.
But this unique public square's success came with a price. Its popularity
and overuse resulted in maintenance problems, vandalism, and safety
troubles. Its terra cotta blocks had lost their finish and exhibited
the effects of sixty-odd winters. Previous repair jobs to the spray
bars altered the original water effects and the interior structure
had deteriorated, causing some of the terra cotta blocks to shift.
By the 1980s, the fountain had stopped functioning and was being
used as a planter.
In 1996 Boulder County applied for a $35,000 State Historical Fund
grant to repair and restore the beloved Boulder landmark. Though
the Fund usually helps to rehabilitate buildings, not fountains
or sculptures, decision makers backed the project due to the fountain's
exceptional historical and architectural significance (the Lions
Club agreed, and pitched in another $1,500). After the original
Victorian-style county court house burned down in 1932, Glen Huntington
designed its replacement in the still-modern Art Deco mode. He designed
the fountain at the same time. The court house is now individually
eligible for listing in the National Register of Historic Places
and the fountain is considered to be a contributing element to the
site. The entire Downtown Boulder Pedestrian Mall Historic District
is also listed in the Register.
The Boulder County Architects Division began the project by disassembling
the fountain's terra cotta blocks. They meticulously numbered, measured,
and drew each piece so that they could reassemble the structure
after preservation work had been completed. Most of the original
blocks were either retained or repaired. Those that could not be
repaired were reproduced in Ohio according to the measurements,
drawings, and historic documentation. Preservationists used old
photographs to restore the spray bars and replicate the original
spray pattern. Architects also designed a high-tech system that
monitors wind speed on the plaza and adjusts water pressure and
spray levels to make sure passers by don't get wet when Boulder's
notorious wind blows.
The Lions Club Fountain preservation project, upon completion in
1998, wrapped up a $400,000 renovation of the entire court house
plaza. Every day, the fountain and the public square draw visitors
from the mall, court house, and surrounding area. Demonstrations
are frequently held there, as are dances, festivals, and craft shows.
The plaza facilitates Boulder's public life. And perhaps that, in
the end, is what defines a sense of place.
BY BEN FOGELBERG, Editor, Colorado History
NOW
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