State Review Board
The earlier stages of the registration process developed a technically complete and professionally sufficient nomination. This draft nomination is now ready to present to the New Jersey State Review Board for Historic Sites, a.k.a. the “State Review Board” (SRB).
What is the State Review Board?
The New Jersey State Review Board for Historic Sites is appointed by New Jersey’s Commissioner of Environmental Protection and made up of professionals in the fields of
- Architecture
- History
- Architectural history
- Archaeology
- Landscape architecture
Manual for State Historic Preservation Review Boards (NPS; HPO copy)
Read NPS’s full manual for more details on how State Review Boards operate.
State of New Jersey Review Board for Historic Sites By-Laws
Read the by-laws for New Jersey’s State Review Board, approved November 12, 2015.
Attending a meeting
Location
Department of Environmental Protection Building
First Floor Public Hearing Room, 401 E. State Street, Trenton NJ 08625
Date/Time
Three meetings annually, on Thursdays
10:00 a.m.
State Review Board Members
Chair (since 2017)
Kate N. Ogden
Art Historian
Associate Professor of Art History at Richard Stockton University. Ogden teaches American art, modern art, and the history of photography. Her website Art & Architecture of New Jersey, currently offline for repairs, contains a growing wealth of publicly accessible information about resources in the Garden State.
Vice-Chair
Gregory Lattanzi
Archeologist/Historic and pre-historic
State Archaeologist in the Bureau of Archaeology and Ethnology at the New Jersey State Museum. He holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from Temple University. He has written scholarly articles on a variety of topics related to Native American archaeology, and has extensive experience as a principal investigator on archaeological projects in the middle-Atlantic states.
Additional Members
David Abramson
Architectural Historian/Architect
The longest-serving member in the Board’s history, having first joined the Board in 1976. He has been a historic preservation architect in practice in New Jersey since 1980 and possesses extensive experience in the restoration and rehabilitation of historic buildings. He holds a M.S. degree in Historic Preservation from Columbia University.
Michael Chiarappa
Architectural Historian/Historian
An associate professor of history at Quinnipiac University. His areas of specialization have included the folklife of southern New Jersey. He has been a historian of fishing, among other subjects, and is in progress on a book about oystering in the Delaware Bay. He is a historian of vernacular architecture and a co-editor of the journal Buildings and Landscapes, published by the Vernacular Architecture Forum.
Janet Foster
Architectural Historian
A long-time preservation consultant in New Jersey. She was Assistant Director of the Historic Preservation program at the Columbia University Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation from 2002 to 2012, where she also served as an adjunct instructor. Her most recent book is The Queen Anne House: America’s Victorian Vernacular (2006). She also co-authored Building by the Book: Pattern Book Architecture in New Jersey (1992).
John Gomez
Architectural Historian/Historian
Resides in Jersey City, where he was the founder of the Jersey City Landmarks Conservancy, which he led for several years. He holds an M.S. degree in Historic Preservation from Columbia University and he currently serves on the Jersey City Historic Preservation Commission.
Kathleen John-Alder
Landscape Architect
An associate professor in the Rutgers University Department of Landscape Architecture. She is both a landscape architect and a historian of landscape design. John-Alder holds degrees in both environmental design and botany. She has undertaken numerous New Jersey-related projects and studies.
Michael J. Mills
Architect/Planner
A registered architect and licensed professional planner, and one of New Jersey’s most accomplished historic preservation architects. His long career has featured many New Jersey projects. He holds a B.A. degree in Architecture from Princeton University, a M.S. degree in Historic Preservation from Columbia University, and he studied at the International Center for the Preservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM) in Rome. He is a fellow of the American Institute of Architects.
Anthony Puniello
Archeologist/Historic and pre-historic
Worked for DEP for over 30 years, where he developed and managed a cultural resource team that reviews projects funded under the federal Clean Water Act and Safe Drinking Water Act for their potential to affect historic properties, including archaeological sites, buildings, and landscapes. He holds a Ph.D. in Anthropology from New York University.
Michael A. Siegel
Cartographer/Historic Geographer
The Staff Cartographer for the Rutgers University Department of Geography since 1987. He has been the Cartographic Editor for the Journal of Maps since 2007. From 2004 to 2009 he was the cartographer for the Rutgers University Press atlas, Mapping New Jersey. He holds a Master’s degree in Library Science from Rutgers.
Hettie V. Williams
Historian
An assistant professor of History in the Monmouth University History Department. She holds a Ph.D. from Drew University and has taught various subjects. She specializes, however, in 20th-century American and African American history. Among her current projects is an article about Sarah Spencer Washington, who founded the Apex Beauty Products Company in Atlantic City and became an important figure in the civil rights movement.
Interested in becoming a member?
Check DEP’s Boards, Councils & Commissions page for vacancies and submit an application.