Michigan Barn Tour. Beauties of Central Michigan.

The wind mills worked overtime as a cold wind whipped over the Michigan landscape as snow flurries fell from clouds. Both reminded everyone on the Michigan Barn Preservation Network annual conference bus tour that it was still winter. While the winter was cold, the mood on the tour was warm and excited to see beautiful barns.

There were nine barns on this all day tour. Every barn has a story.

1. Auto-Owners Insurance Company Barn. This barn was originally built to house dairy cattle and contained one of the early milking parlor systems in Michigan. It is one of the very few Gothic style barns in the greater Mid-Michigan area.

The Clare & Judy Koenigsknecht Barn

2. The Clare and Judy Koenigsknecht Barn. This barn was rescued from burn down. It was Clare’s childhood barn where he did chores and played. When he heard it was threatened, he jumped into action. After overcoming family concerns, it became a family project. In order to save the barn, it had to be moved. The Koenigsknecht did just that.

The Noel and Sandy Stuckman Barn

3. The Noel and Sandy Stuckman Barn. This farm complex was beautifully and painstakingly restored to it it’s former glory as it looked in 1915 when the Boss Family built it. This bank barn is typical of the post and bean construction used on many barns on the region. The addition of a refurbished Aeromotor windmill finished the farm out.

 

 

The Lewis and Georgianna Alspaugh Barn and Carriage House

The Lewis and Georgianna Alspaugh Barn and Carriage House.

4.The Lewis and Georgianna Alspaugh Barn & Carriage House. When the Alspaughs purchased the farmstead, both the gambrel rood barn and traditional style farmhouse were in poor condition. The barn was built in 1901 and had 10 stanchions for milking cows, a granary, and space for hay/straw storage. They lovingly restored the barn and added a carriage house built in the 1980s with a combination of traditional and modern building techniques.

The Chuck and Rosella Lonier Barn.

5. The Chuck and Rosella Lonier Barn. This small bank barn is typical of the barns in this area built between the last 1800s and early 1900s being of post and beam construction. The basement part had room for six to ten cows, two to four horses and one to three pens for holding other livestock. A silo was attached to one end of the barn.

 

The Shady Lodge Farm Barn.

6. The Shady Lodge Farm Barn. Owning a centennial farm, caring about the heritage of a large barn and adapting it to modern agriculture, presented a real challenge to the Lonier Family. They converted the two-story gambrel roof barn into a one-story storage facility with great success.

 

 

The Shady Lodge Farm Barn.

7. The Ron and Jill Albert Barn. Jill Albert is a third generation owner with fond memories of growing up on the farmstead her family moved to 1891. This could be called the “Story Book Farm” with its not-so-bank barn with its gable roof and all the unique little farm buildings. The barn and outbuildings house Jill’s antique business.

 

 

 

 

Peckham Farms Barn.

8. Peckham Farms Barn. The barn has a traditional Michigan barn look with white trimmed cross-buck doors, small pane windows, ship’s prow overhang, and roof cupolas; however, it is a modern build. The barn is part of the Peckham Industries newest venture in providing people with disabilities career training.

 

 

 

 

The Haussman Construction Company Barn & Office (The former Creyts Brothers Farm).

9. The Haussman Construction Company Barn & Office (The former Creyts Brothers Farm). This massive barn was a landmark for those traveling along the road between Detroit and Grand Rapids. Originally there were two barns that sat at right angles to each other and were joined together and a wood silo was added at one end. The barn was one of the few in the area to have carbide lights installed along with running water. Today it is used for storage.

This barn tour highlighted the diversity of barns in one region of Michigan. Thanks to the barn owners who opened their doors to about 100 people!

 

 

 

Barns in a Changing World – Michigan Barn Preservation Network Holds Conference

The Michigan Barn Preservation Network (MBPN), a partner organization with the National Barn Alliance, is holding their 2012 Annual Conference and Meeting on March 9 and 10 at Kellogg Center, Michigan State University (MSU) campus in East Lansing.  The 17th annual conference is themed Barns in a Changing World and is packed with an exhibit/vendor showroom, networking time, informative sessions, statewide Barn of the Year awards and the famous barn tour by bus.  The Conference celebrates Michigan barns, farmsteads and rural communities for everyone with an interest. Michigan and surrounding state attendees are barn and farm owners, admirers, and preservation-minded, business-minded people who love barns and farmsteads.

The two-day conference attracts over 200 people with twelve sessions to choose from all day.  This year, Tim Barnes returns with sessions on exterior barn painting and advertising and we get a virtual tour of the Osceola new Barn Quilt Trail!

Our quarter-scale barn model as part of our Teamwork and Timbers program will be a feature of the exhibit/vendor room, as well as some impressive ‘barn art’ offered for auction.  The room is open to the public for free, bring your family and friends and just walk in.

Friday March 9 is an all-day bus tour with commentary on noteworthy farmsteads northwest of Lansing.  Each year this tour surprises attendees with extraordinary barns you never knew existed and it will happen again! A barn is a barn?  Not after this tour!   The six barns on tour were built from 2010 back to the 1860s, serve as local landmarks and include an antique establishment in Michigan’s picturesque countryside.

March 9 also is the date for the Barn of the Year awards dinner at the Kellogg Center celebrating impressive restoration and reuse barn projects from around our state. Plus an after dinner sneak peek at the exhibit/vendor room too.

Saturday March 10 offers four tracks of three sessions each covering a variety of barn-related topics including restoration projects, hands-on structural repairs for buildings, real estate, tax and legal information and agritourism usage.  And that colorful new barn quilt tour in the Lower Peninsula, central Michigan area!  Meet the experts and learn from award-winning projects.  A live auction and silent auction of barn memorabilia entertain at lunch, and the exhibits and displays round out an eventful day. If you love rural Michigan, be there!

Kellogg Center is the MSU campus conference center noted for quality accommodations, excellent cuisine, easy parking and all the conveniences for conference attendees.

The MBPN Conference is open to members and non-members with registration information on the MBPN website,  www.mibarn.net.

 

Forming the Future of Barns: Winter Meeting

Are you part of a barn preservation organization? And are looking to network and gain knowledge to strengthen your organization? Then…

Join us for our Winter Meeting!!! February 17-19, 2012 • Upper Arlington, OH •  The Amelita Mirolo Barn

As part of the mission of the National Barn Alliance, we are committed providing a platform for barn preservation organizations and owners to connect and share information. On February 18, we invite barn preservation organizations to join us for networking, educational workshops, informative speakers, and socializing.

Joel McCarty, Executive Director of the Timber Frames Guild, will share his organization’s secrets for success as the morning keynote and Alex Greenwood, co-founder The NJ Barn Company and co-author, Barn: The Art of a Working Building, will speak to adaptive reuse for barns in today’s world.

Workshops will cover barn surveying, marketing the organization, and membership development. Breakfast, lunch, and snacks will be served throughout the day.

Previously the winter meeting was limited to Board members as important face time for an organization where the current Board hails from eight states; so usually our “meetings” are necessarily monthly conference calls. This year the NBA is attempting for the first time ever to bring together representatives of all barn preservation organizations.  The goal is to foster improved communication and the interchange of Best Practices.  We need to learn from each other in order to better promote the awareness and preservation of America’s Heritage Barns and Rural Vernacular Architecture.  This is an exciting development for our small niche of preservation.

Please let us know if you plan to attend to info@barnalliance.org.

NBA 2012 Winter Meeting Full Agenda

Imagine a landscape without barns? No? Then join us in saving them!

Yellow Barn

This beautiful barn outside of Erie, CO, is endangered. And due to real estate crash slowing development, has been given a reprieve. For now. In high growth areas near cities and resorts, new development is literally consuming the historic rural landscape.

As age, obsolescence and sprawl take their toll, barns are disappearing from the American landscape at a tremendous rate. There are more than 55 million people and 80 percent of our landscape is rural. It is a diverse landscape including farmsteads and ranches. The National Barn Alliance is working with state, local, and national partners to strengthen efforts to document and preserve these icons of our rural heritage.

Are you passionate about barns as we are at the National Barn Alliance? Yes? Our historic barns need an advocate. And that advocate be you. Join us as member.

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Thanks to barn enthusiast and photographer, Shaun Dalrymple, for sharing his “Yellow Barn” photograph with us.

Need Holiday Gifts for that Barn Lover? New Barn-focused Books

Looking for a gift for your barn lover? There are two new books out and worth taking a look at.

Bygone Treasures and Timeless Beauties: The Barns of Old Milton County by Robert Meyers. This is the first book to document in words and beautiful color photographs the barns and the people who have made their marks on a historically significant region of Georgia. It takes the reader from the oldest barns in the region to some of the magnificent new horse facilities that will become the historic treasures of tomorrow. Charles Leik, president of the National Barn Alliance, gives his recommendation.

Michigan Barns, Et Cetera: Rural Buildings of the Great Lake State,  by Jerry R. Davis, is a skillfully illustrated book that features fifty images (suitable for framing) of barns, covered bridges, churches and other rural buildings throughout Michigan.  Each drawing is enhanced by a short vignette containing interesting facts, figures and anecdotes about the featured structure.  Michigan Barns, Et Cetera is an engaging read for anyone interested in art, architecture and the rural history of Michigan and the American Midwest. Anybody interested in the preservation of old barns and buildings will love this book.     About the Author: Jerry R. Davis is a Michigan native who immigrated to New Mexico about fourteen years ago. He taught junior high school history and geography in Michigan schools for thirty-one years.    He  is a member of SouthWest Writers and the New Mexico Book Co-op.

Both would make nice coffee table books.