Service
CULTURAL RESOURCES
Preservation planning, survey, and recordation/mitigation services to ensure compliance with current local, state and federal cultural resource management regulations.
COMPLIANCE EXPERTISE
MSG's cultural resource and historic preservation planning services are largely driven by federal, state and local laws that recognize historic buildings and archaeological sites as historically or culturally significant resources deserving of consideration in the planning process. Development projects are required to consider potential impacts to cultural resources and associated mitigation strategies. MSG’s cultural resource management team works with clients to expertly navigate these complex compliance reviews so that projects can appropriately address historic sites while also being able to fully realize a project’s vision.
PEOPLE. PROCESS. PLACE.
MSG’s federally-certified historians, architectural historians, archaeologists and preservation planners assist both public and private sector clients in complying with their obligations under local, state, and federal historic preservation laws and regulations. We provide technical skill and creative vision in developing and executing projects that thoughtfully address preservation concerns. Historic preservation can also serve as a catalyst for community development, economic reinvestment, place-making, and public education.
- Section 106 Consultation & Compliance
- NEPA Consultation & Compliance
- Section 4(f)/6(f) Consultation & Compliance
- Native American Tribal Consultation
- Cultural Resource Management Agreement Documents
- Historic Property Research
- Historic Context Development
- National Register Nominations
- State/Federal Historic Tax Credits
- State/Federal Grant Application Assistance
- Cultural Resource Desktop Reviews
- Reconnaissance Architectural Surveys
- Intensive Architectural Surveys
- Historic Property Documentation / Case Study Reports
- Archaeological Predictive Modeling
- Ground-Penetrating Radar Services
- Phase I Archaeological Surveys
- Phase II Archaeological Site Evaluations
- Phase III Archaeological Data Recovery
- Archaeological Monitoring
- Unanticipated Archaeological Discoveries Plans