The Association for Preservation Technology International (APT) provides APT Charleston 2012 registration and housing grants to five preservation professionals who have worked in the industry for three years or fewer and do not have funding support from their firms, or are in transition between jobs and are looking for employment in the field. Grantees will be required to complete a volunteer preservation project in his/her local community. Grants will be awarded by the APT Conferences Committee. Applications are due August 15, 2012. Click here for the guidelines and application. Even if you don’t take advantage of the grants, there is a discount for Emerging Professionals.
Additional Information
You won’t want to miss APT Charleston 2012! This year’s Conference will offer remarkable opportunities to enjoy Charleston’s architectural character and urbane Southern culture while exploring crucial collaborations among preservationists, architects, engineers, and building-trades professionals.
The nation’s first historic district was born in Charleston in 1931, predating the federal government’s by thirty years. Charleston’s impressive list of preservation firsts include using zoning as a preservation tool, publishing an inventory of historic architecture, the Historic Charleston Foundation’s use of revolving funds to focus on the rehabilitation of entire neighborhoods, and establishing the first four-year college devoted to the traditional building trades (the American College of the Building Arts).
With 100 years of experience in developing the tools of practice and civic engagement to sustain urban vitality through preservation, Charleston is a living laboratory and tangible embodiment of this year’s theme, “Cornerstones: Collaborative Approaches to Preservation.”
With APT and the Preservation Trades Network (PTN) coming together this year for parallel conferences, there will be an unprecedented convergence of theory, practice, and interaction with trades practitioners. PTN’s 16th annual International Preservation Trades Workshop (IPTW) will showcase the work of some of the most skilled traditional tradespeople from the U.S. and abroad, in highly interactive hands-on demonstrations. The demonstrations will provide added context and practical applications for the papers delivered in the APT sessions.

