John Stubbs
Director of Preservation Studies, Christovich Senior Professor of Practice - Preservation Studies
Areas of Expertise
Biography
From 1990 until 2011, John H. Stubbs served as Vice President for Field Projects at the World Monuments Fund in New York where he directed scores of the organization’s projects across the world. For the World Monuments Fund, his key field projects included management of the organization’s conservation initiatives at Pompeii, Angkor in Cambodia, the Royal Monastery of Guadalupe in Extremadura Spain, the Tower of Belem in Lisbon, the Liechtenstein Estates of Valtice and Lednice in the Czech Republic, the Temple Synagogue in Krakow, Poland, the Brancusi Endless Column Ensemble in Romania, and St. Ann and the Holy Trinity Church in Brooklyn, NY. He conducted over two dozen international planning symposia and charettes, and was instrumental in the establishment and early management of WMF’s renowned Watch List of endangered sites program.
Beginning in 1989, John Stubbs served for twenty years as an Adjunct Associate Professor of Historic Preservation in Columbia University’s Graduate Program in Architecture, Planning & Preservation. He taught the theory and practice of architectural preservation, and the history, principles and use of classical architecture. He has also taught preservation documentation and design studios at both Columbia and the School of Architecture at Louisiana State University (LSU). He holds a Master of Science in Historic Preservation from Columbia University, a Bachelor of Science in Construction Technology with a minor in Architectural History from LSU, and attained post-graduate training as a UNESCO Fellow at the International Centre for the Conservation and Restoration of Cultural Property (ICCROM) in Rome. In 1978, John Stubbs worked as a Historical Architect for the Technical Preservation Services Division of the U.S. Department of the Interior in Washington, D.C. administering federal tax incentives for rehabilitating historic buildings. He later went on to serve as Assistant Director of Historic Preservation Projects at Beyer Blinder Belle in New York for ten years, and as a Trustee of the Archaeological Institute of America. He is a founding board member of the James Marston Fitch Charitable Foundation for which he was its chairman from 2008 until 2012. He served as a Trustee of the Frank Lloyd Wright Foundation, chairing its Preservation Committee, from 2013-2016.
Education
Columbia University
Louisiana State University
Media Appearances
A New Orleans architect and his love of art and nature: See photos
“The Art of Place: Lee Ledbetter—Architecture and Interiors” is the first book by Lee Ledbetter. Published by Rizzoli New York, was edited by Mayer Rus, with a forward by John Stubbs and principal photography by Pieter Estersohn. It was released in late March...
With noted chef on board, project to turn historic Mandeville building into lakefront restaurant gains traction
Barrett McGuire said John Stubbs, a former preservation professor at Columbia University in New York and later at Tulane University, was consulted on the project. Piazza Architects of Mandeville did the design work...