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SECRETARY OF THE INTERIOR'S <br />STANDARDS FOR REHABILITATION <br />1. A property will be used as it was historically or be given a new use that requires minima! <br />change to its distinctive materials, features, spaces, and spatial relationships. <br />2. The historic character of a property will be retained and preserved, The removal of distinctive <br />materials or alteration of features, spaces, and spatial relationships that characterize a property <br />will be avoided. <br />3. Each property will be recognized as a physical record of its time, place, and use. Changes that <br />create a false sense of historical development, such as adding conjectural features or elements <br />from other historic properties, will not be undertaken. <br />~. Changes to a property that have acquired historic significance in their own right will be <br />retained and preserved. <br />5. Distinctive materials, features, finishes, and construction techniques or examples of <br />craftsmanship that characterize a property will be preserved. <br />6. Deteriorated historic features will be repaired rather than replaced. Where the severity of <br />deterioration requires replacement of a distinctive feature, the new feature will match the old in <br />design, color, texture, and, where possible, materials. Replacement of missing features will be <br />substantiated by documentary and physical evidence. <br />7. Chemical or physical treatments, if appropriate, will be undertaken using the gentlest means <br />possible. Treatments that cause damage to historic materials will not be used. <br />8. Archeological resources will be protected and preserved in place. If such resources must be <br />disturbed, mitigation measures will be undertaken. <br />9. New additions, exterior alterations, or related new construction will not destroy historic <br />materials, features, and spatial relationships that characterize the property. The new work shall <br />be differentiated from the old and will be compatible with the historic materials, features, size, <br />scale and proportion, and massing to protect the integrity of the properly and its environment. <br />10. New additions and adjacent or related new construction will be undertaken in a such a <br />manner that, if removed in the future, the essential form and integrity of the historic property and <br />its environment would be unimpaired. <br />"Period of significance refers to the span of time during which significant events and activities <br />occurred. Events and associations with historic properties are finite; most properties have a clearly <br />definable period of significance." t1.S. Department of the Interior, National Park Service <br />EXHIBIT 4 <br />