Participant Info
- First Name
- Heather
- Last Name
- Veneziano
- Country
- United States
- State
- LA
- hvenezia@tulane.edu
- Affiliation
- Tulane University and Gambrel & Peak--Historic Preservation Consulting
- Website URL
- https://www.gambrelandpeak.com/
- Keywords
- cemeteries, vernacular architecture, Gulf South, historic preservation, craft, New Orleans, brick, material studies, masonry construction, historic trades, graveyards, placemaking
- Availability
- Media Contact
- Additional Contact Information
- PhD
- MA
Personal Info
- Photo
- About Me
Heather Veneziano is based in New Orleans where she works as a preservationist, conservator, historian, and independent researcher focused on vernacular architecture, deathscapes, ritual, craft, and architectural/landscape preservation. She established the preservation consulting firm of Gambrel & Peak in order to work directly with clients, to help guide them through the process of understanding the nuances of their property and making it as sustainable as possible.
Prior to establishing Gambrel & Peak, she held a variety of positions in related craft-based fields. From working as an assistant professor of Fibers & Material Studies, to apprenticing as a cypress casket maker with Benedictine monks, to gaining hands-on experience as a masonry conservator with a focus on cemetery architecture, she continues to expand upon her knowledge in the field of craft studies.
She holds a Master of Preservation Studies from Tulane University, a Master of Fine Art from the University of Edinburgh, and a Bachelor of Fine Art in Craft and Material Studies from the University of the Arts. Through her educational and professional experience she possesses hands-on knowledge of traditional building techniques and materials, and is therefore able to confidently act as a liaison between property owners and contractors. She has lectured nationally as well as internationally on her work and is currently the co-chair of the Louisiana Chapter of the Association for Gravestone Studies, vice chair of the Vieux Carré Commission, and serves on the Executive Council of the Louisiana Historical Society. Ms. Veneziano is also a Professor of Practice and Interim Associate Director of the Historic Preservation Program of Tulane School of Architecture at Tulane University.
Her Master’s Thesis, “Politics, Poverty, and Preservation: A Case Study of the Preservation of Hart Island,” was awarded the Distinguished Thesis Award in 2015 by Tulane School of Architecture. In 2019, her role as a digital archivist and architectural historian was recognized within a joint Special Award for Excellence in Historic Preservation granted to the Vieux Carré Virtual Library project by the Louisiana Landmarks Society and in 2022 she was awarded the 2022 Preservation Award by the Louisiana Colonials, an award that celebrates ongoing preservation work within the State of Louisiana and a commitment to scholarship in the field of Louisiana history.
Over the years she has contributed a number of articles to Preservation in Print, a magazine published by the Preservation Resource Center of New Orleans and the Louisiana State Historic Preservation Office. In addition, she is the co-author, co-editor, and designer of Gateway to New Orleans: Bayou St. John, 1708-2018, published by the University of Louisiana at Lafayette Press for the Louisiana Landmarks Society. She also acted as a Cultural Heritage Advisor for Sacred Ground: The Cemeteries of New Orleans, published by Princeton Architectural Press in October of 2019.
- Recent Publications
- Media Coverage
- Social Media
- Country Focus
- United States
- Expertise by Geography
- United Kingdom, United States
- Expertise by Chronology
- 18th century, 19th century, Early Modern, Modern, 20th century, 21st century
- Expertise by Topic
- Art & Architectural History, Book History, Colonialism, Economic History, Gender, Libraries & Archives, Local & Regional, Material Culture, Museums, Pedagogy, Politics, Public History, Race, Rebellion & Revolution, Religion, Rural & Agrarian History, Sexuality, Urban History, Women