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HomeMy WebLinkAbout10/7/2019 Item 3, Cooper Wilbanks, Megan From:Allan Cooper <saveourdowntownslo@gmail.com> Sent:Sunday, October To:Advisory Bodies; Burde, Richard Subject:Public Hearing Item #3: 747 Monterey: Conceptual review of the “Mission Plaza Restroom and Café” Attachments:010_06_19...lettertoarc.pdf Dear Richard - Would you kindly forward the letter attached below to the ARC before their Monday, October 7, 2019 meeting? This letter pertains to Public Hearing Item #3. Thanks! - Allan Allan Cooper, Secretary - Save Our Downtown, San Luis Obispo, CA Website: www.SaveOurDowntownSLO.com 1 Save Our Downtown ______________________________________________________________________________ Seeking to protect and promote the historical character, design, livability and economic success of downtown San Luis Obispo. To: San Luis Obispo Architectural Review Commission & Richard Burde, Engineer III Re: Public Hearing Item #3 - 747 Monterey - Conceptual review of the “Mission Plaza Restroom and Café”
 From: Allan Cooper, Secretary Save Our Downtown Date: October 6, 2019 Honorable Chair and Commissioners - We are urging you to dispense with the thematic use of dark gray and black on these buildings - buildings located in direct proximity to the Old Mission. Permit us to share with you five reasons for avoiding these colors. 1)From a functional point of view, dark buildings increase security concerns and discourage the use of these spaces, particularly at night, because they do little to reflect light. 2)From a psychological point of view the color black negatively connotes death and mourning while darker colors and dimly lit spaces contribute to psychological depression. 3)This color palette is inconsistent with the SLO Community Design Guidelines. These Guidelines state the following: “Colors should be compatible with the existing colors of the surrounding area…Consider the quality of natural and reflected light in public spaces within and around the project site and choose materials and colors to enhance lighting effects…” 4)From an historical point of view, black, a color which brings to mind charred wood, tar or hewn lava, has little to do with the history of the Mission Era . 1 5)Dark pigmentation overall creates heat islands making our streets unpleasantly hot in the summer months. Climate-scientists tell us that should we turn enough of the world's black urban landscape white, this would reflect enough sunlight to keep global warming at bay. This would grant us some precious breathing space in our global struggle to control carbon emissions. To conclude, this faddish fixation on black and dark gray increases security concerns, is inconsistent with our Design Guidelines and is ahistorical. Finally, it clearly sends mixed signals regarding our efforts to counter global warming. Thank you! The Mission Era was dominated by the use of whitewashed adobe or stucco, a vernacular building 1 technique imported by the Spanish missionaries from southern Europe and North Africa. We would do well to familiarize ourselves with an indigenous technology that was primarily a passive response to climate. For thousands of years, buildings were traditionally whitewashed in the spring, as the rainy season subsided. This bright white coating protected the interior from summer heat. With the arrival of Spring and Winter, the rains would wash off the white lime to reveal the darker substrate colors of adobe or stucco. These darker colors absorbed heat during the cold winter months.