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・ Werris Creek
・ Werris Creek railway station
・ Werriwa by-election, 1912
・ Werner Zillig
・ Werner Zimmermann
・ Werner Zimmermann, Jr.
・ Werner Zoege von Manteuffel
・ Werner's catfish
・ Werner's toad
・ Werner, California
・ Werner, Margrave of the Nordmark
・ Werner, West Virginia
・ Werner-Boyce Salt Springs State Park
・ Werner-Cravatte Ministry
・ Werner-Flesch Ministry
Werner-Gilchrist House
・ Werner-Jaeger-Halle
・ Werner-Schaus Ministry I
・ Werner-Schaus Ministry II
・ Werner-Seelenbinder-Halle
・ Werner-Thorn Ministry
・ Werner-von-Siemens-Gymnasium
・ Wernerella
・ Werneria
・ Werneria (plant)
・ Werneria bambutensis
・ Werneria graminifolia
・ Werneria iboundji
・ Werneria mertensiana
・ Werneria preussi


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Werner-Gilchrist House : ウィキペディア英語版
Werner-Gilchrist House

The Werner-Gilchrist House was a historic house located in the University Heights neighborhood of Albuquerque, New Mexico. Built in 1908 as one of the earliest structures on the East Mesa, it was considered a pioneering building in Albuquerque's 20th-century suburban growth. It was added to the New Mexico State Register of Cultural Properties〔(【引用サイトリンク】 url=http://www.nmhistoricpreservation.org/documents/PropertiesByCounty.pdf )〕 and the National Register of Historic Places in 1982.〔 After standing empty for decades and reaching an advanced state of disrepair, the house was finally demolished in November 2011.
==History==
The house was built in 1908 by Laura Werner—an employee of real estate developer and future mayor D.K.B. Sellers—and her son-in-law Ralph Gilchrist. Located on a corner lot in Sellers' newly platted University Heights Addition, the house was originally surrounded by empty scrubland with no other buildings nearby except for the University of New Mexico campus to the northwest. Gilchrist and Werner died in 1920 and 1930, respectively, but Gilchrist's widow (and Werner's daughter) Nora Gilchrist continued to live in the house until her own death in 1981.
After remaining vacant for decades, the decrepit house came to the attention of the city in 2005 when its owners applied for a demolition permit. Recognizing the historical importance of the building, the city denied the permit and applied to have the house designated as a protected city landmark. However, the continuing deterioration of the home made it cost-prohibitive to renovate〔 and it remained in limbo until safety concerns brought the issue to a head in 2011. The city ended up issuing a demolition permit, and the house was razed beginning on November 19, 2011. Three UNM architecture graduate students, Bron Heintz, Hilary Noll and Bailey Porter, intervened in the conventional demo-to-landfill process of building demolition by carefully disassembling and salvaging as much of the building as possible, and diverted over half of the materials from the waste stream for reuse.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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