Saving the Adam Strain Building

When I heard in 2018 that the Adam Strain Building was slated for likely demolition, I felt anger, impending loss, and a sense of betrayal that a building with so many historical connections dating back at least 200 years could simply be allowed to go out like that. Despite being burned during the Civil War, it survived to become an unofficial symbol of Darien.

I was very aware of its endangered state, from photographs I made as early as 2009, a year after the Georgia Trust for Historic Preservation brought attention to it by naming it a Place in Peril. And Darien friends who reached out over the years were cautiously optimistic, but mostly fearful, for what its future held.

I got an exciting message from one of those friends, Kit Stebbins Sutherland, in 2020. She was still cautiously optimistic, but said that the impossible had happened and the Adam Strain Building was going to be saved. Kit grew up in Darien with a mother who spent years creating an amazing photographic archive of its historic buildings and coastal landmarks, so her interest in her hometown is palpable. I breathed a sigh of relief.

Fast forward to the present and the restoration is in full swing. Milan and Marion Savic of Marietta are the new owners of the Adam Strain Building and the circa 1898 Bank of Darien [pink building to immediate left of Strain Building] and are doing everything right. They’ve emphasized the benefits of keeping everything as original as possible, especially protecting the tabby siding which is one of the distinct aspects of the Strain’s construction. It’s in the good hands of Ethos Preservation, Landmark Preservation, and Lominack Coleman Smith Architects. They’re doing the serious work of putting everything back into place and insuring the building is around for another 200 years. I hope to get more detailed photos in the near future, and will share them here.

West Darien Historic District, National Register of Historic Places

5 thoughts on “Saving the Adam Strain Building

  1. Mandy Bryant

    To Brian Brown,

    I found the answer to the 2 views of the pavilion. I will scan the photos tomorrow. There was extensive construction done. The date on the photos that I found was July 1947 when my grandfather, Leon Lewis and Jehu Fletcher owned and ran Crystal Lake.

    I am not sure of the best way to send them to you? Let me know if you receive this email please.

    Mandy Bryant

    On Wed, Aug 23, 2023, 7:17 PM Vanishing Georgia: Photographs by Brian Brown

    Reply
  2. Amy

    I’ve always been intrigued by this great old building in Darien. So happy to learn this important piece of history is being preserved!

    Reply
  3. vernacularga

    This is fantastic, Brian. This building has an aura typical of many colonial buildings in the Carribbean.

    Reply

Leave a comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.