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Last year during the APT visit to Cuba, I experienced his passion up close and personal, as he spoke to our group about his mission and his accomplishments. I took a really nice photo of him that seems to capture that spirit. We recognized the limits of what he can do within the constraints of his country, but also admired the highly visible and commendable results.  I have others, but I love Eusebio Leal's dynamic posture in this image matches his delivery. Under the horse, with her hands clasped, is Rosa Lowinger who was translating as fast as he was speaking. Rosa was our APT guide, and an accomplished architectural conservator based in Miami and Los Angeles. The man sitting next to her was our Cuban guide, very good...but I can't remember his name right now. I don't remember the name of the other woman, but the laughing man is John Canning. The rest of our group was seated to the left of the photo. ------------------------------------------- Ilene Tyler FAIA Quinn Evans Architects Ann Arbor MI -------------------------------------------
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------------------------------------------- Original Message: Sent: 05-22-2012 12:15 From: Susan Parrish Subject: Eusebio Leal: The man who would save Old Havana
The year was 1967, in a country not known for rewarding dissent, and Leal, then 25, was relatively new on the job as a city preservationist. He was leading a project to skin the asphalt off a historic street, revealing the original wooden surface, and he had a special load of vintage wood to restore the centuries-old grandeur. But government officials told him the street would have to be paved over immediately so it could be used for an important diplomatic visit.
All these years later, at 69, Leal's mad passion has made him a beloved figure in Cuba and a globally admired hero of the historic preservation movement. With the unlikely title of city historian, he has rescued hundreds of landmark buildings in Old Havana - Habana Vieja - the colonial section of the city founded in 1519. He devised a mechanism to use tourist dollars to fund preservation, making the city more attractive to visitors - thus begetting more tourist dollars and more preservation. Read the full article from The Washington Post. ------------------------------------------- Susan Parrish Manager, Knowledge Communities The American Institute of Architects Washington DC -------------------------------------------
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