Katherine Longfield

has prepared architectural history documents for structures and sites throughout the United States. Her passion for the west has exposed her to a variety of historical resources located in the intermountain region, though her consulting career began in the hills of the Berkshires on a gilded-age gentlemen’s farm. Katherine received her Master's degree in historic preservation from Columbia University, concentrating on public land history and cultural resource management. Prior to becoming a preservation consultant, she worked for both private and public, as well as local and federal organizations, ranging from the National Park Service in Grand Teton National Park, to a New York City community-based preservation advocacy non-profit, Landmark West, to the Art Commission of the city of New York. Currently, she is based out of Jackson Wyoming serving as an advisor to the Teton County Historic Preservation Board as well as principal of Amenity Preservation, LLC.

 

Kurt Dubbe, AIA

principal at Dubbe-Moulder Architects, has been a leading Historic Preservation Architect in the Rocky Mountain region for the past fifteen years. Kurt actively participates in the historic preservation community in various capacities that includes his role as a member of the Wyoming Review Board for National Register Nominations; his representation as a member of the Board of Advisors for the National Trust for Historic Preservation; and as a member of the National Trust Executive Committee. As a private sector architect, Kurt’s historic preservation experience includes working with the Wyoming State Historic Preservation Office to provide technical preservation expertise to various communities, reviewing Section 106 projects, and assisting on the Federal Historic Preservation Tax Credits for property owners throughout the state of Wyoming.