The Tisbury historic district commission recommended renovation, rather than tearing down the home.
Ray Ewing

MVC Denies Historic Home Demolition on Look Street

The Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard Commission denied a proposed historic home demolition on Thursday evening, resolving to protect a 120-year-old Four Square style building in Vineyard Haven.</p>

The Martha’s Vineyard Commission denied a proposed historic home demolition on Thursday evening, resolving to protect a 120-year-old Four Square style building in Vineyard Haven.

The decision comes as the commission has faced an unprecedented flurry of historic demolition requests in recent years, with two recent denials in Oak Bluffs and West Chop leading to court appeals from applicants.

Located at 43 Look street just east of the William street historic district, the home dates to the turn of the 20th century and was purchased by Brian Purdy in 2021 for $865,000, according to assessor’s records.

The applicant proposed tearing down the 1,920-square-foot home and replacing it with a larger buildng, designed in a different style.

Referred to the commission in April of 2022, the demolition request has since received extensive review from the town’s historic district commission, which recommended that the applicants renovate rather than demolish the property, noting its historic Four Square architecture. In a letter, historic commission chairman Christine Redfield said the building’s style is representative of a transitional period of 1890-1920 buildout in the town.

“Look street is, in its way, as emblematic of the climax-and-twilight era of the village as William street (architecturally very different but similarly coherent) is of the golden years of the 2nd quarter of the 19th century,” she wrote. “43 Look street is one of the few examples left of American Four Square architecture on Martha’s Vineyard.”

A key commission subcommittee voted on Monday to also recommend denying the demolition request to the full commission after significant debate and a tight 3-2 vote.

On Thursday, the commission strongly weighed both recommendations when deliberating on the project.

Commissioner Ben Robinson said that the house’s plainness — it has white siding, a modest front porch and square blueprint — should not be a consideration in determining its historic value.

“History doesn’t need to be made up of just the ornate and the grand,” he said.

Other commissioners felt differently, questioning the historic district commission’s recommendation.

“There’s absolutely nothing historic about this building at all,” said Clarence (Trip) Barnes, 3rd. “It’s just an old house.”

Mr. Barnes also expressed concern that the commission would need to consider a growing number of similar demolitions. Commissioner Peter Wharton agreed with Mr. Barnes’s assesment.

“Oddly enough, in 1900, [Four-square houses] were probably the McMansions of their time,” Mr. Wharton said.

While the builder provided an estimate for renovation at $650,000 to $750,000 that was only slightly less than the cost of the proposed new construction, estimated at $734,000 not including the cost of demolition, the commission ultimately felt that the house’s history was best preserved, rather than torn down.

“It may not be beautiful, and none of us may actually like it, but that doesn’t make it not historic,” commission chairman Joan Malkin said.

Other commissioners raised concerns about the environmental impact of the demolition and the incompleteness of the design for proposed replacement.

“I don’t see any compelling reason to accept that loss,” said Michael Kim, the governor’s appointee on the commission.

Commissioners Fred Hancock, Linda Sibley, Christina Brown, Kate Putnam, Jim Vercruysse, Jay Grossman, Joan Malkin, Michael Kim, Jeff Agnoli, Ben Robinson, Kathie Newman and Greg Martino all voted to deny the demolition, while Ernest Thomas, Trip Barnes, and Peter Wharton abbstained from voting.

Comments

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Fri, 11/11/2022 - 13:35

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Nick Dean Oak Bluffs

Exactly why this organization is pointless and continues to contribute to the island's housing crisis. Haven't we had enough?

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sat, 11/12/2022 - 09:28

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Jason OB

Ok. Now that you paid for the house and we told you you cannot do what you want with your property on public land,not private... fix it to code (ie. Handrails!!updating electrical for wired fire, spending essentially what you paid for the property and house) Or we will start fining you by the end of the month!!! Lol

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 11/13/2022 - 09:20

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Bob Edgartown

MVC should be more concerned about what is replacing a building and what it’s going to look like over the old bones of the house which nobody can see. These old buildings should be buried properly just like we all will be at some point. Common sense has left the MVC along time ago and the few that are left seem to be afraid to vote no and instead they abstain. If this owner has the resources they should join the bandwagon and see the MVC in court. No one wants to run to be on the MVC so it makes it hard to get rid of the dinosaurs that keep costing the taxpayer millions every year.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Sun, 11/13/2022 - 22:45

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Amy Edgartown

Grateful that many are standing up to preserve this islands history. The value and presence of these older homes is irreplaceable.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Mon, 11/14/2022 - 18:08

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Rick Vineyard Haven

The only thing historic about the house is that nobody tore it down years ago…another upgrade discouraged. Vineyard Haven is also historically a drive through town, often with a traffic jam, and often flooded…apparently we should keep it that way as a tribute to our traditional ways.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/15/2022 - 05:30

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Rick Westport Point

Happy to see preservation. Once our history is gone, it’s gone forever. Modern construction can never replace our history.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/15/2022 - 06:32

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Oak Bluffs Grandma Oak Bluffs

Unless you want to see the island be almost all new construction, these are the actions you have to take - keep the old house! If you want a new one, go find some land and build. Otherwise, the island will just be one big new housing development unless actions like this one are taken. If people know you can't tear down old houses, they won't buy them unless they plan to live in them. Maybe the old houses won't fetch as much for the sellers if people know they have to keep the house but that's what is best for the island - to be the island!

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/15/2022 - 07:37

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Gayle OB, NJ

I'm happy to see that an old house is going to be saved from the wrecking ball. The quaint character of the Island needs to be preserved.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/15/2022 - 10:20

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Sara Oak Bluffs

Personally, I think this house is beautiful. It would have been interesting to see what the "different style" projected by the owner looks like.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/16/2022 - 08:25

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Sam West Tisbury West Tisbury

Is there really that many like Barnes. I had a builder say to me I’ll make a good decision on how the new house fits in. He did nothing. Keep public oversight. That sense of history makes MV a special different place and why people want to come here. This is another example of the false ideology of
“The Strong Individual (John Wayne idea)”. Let’s not forget we are part of a Community. We have a history “we can see”. Wish I could say this better.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Wed, 11/16/2022 - 10:16

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Ken Edg.

They tore down a house on main street exactly like this one in Edgartown. Our main street is looking like a strip mall. Good job MVC.

Submitted by Anonymous (not verified) on Tue, 11/22/2022 - 09:09

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Kathryn Muir Edgartown

Again, someone comes to the island and wants to change it by destroying another chunk of uniqueness. Edgartown is now full of giant Connecticut homes with pools,empty living space above the 2 car garages and lived in for a few weeks a year or multiple hotels with Palm Springs/ Miami Beach decor that are also empty for half the year.
The current owners should sell the house and build somewhere else.

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