ACO Public Education and Engagement Award

This award recognizes events, exhibitions, programs, news media, digital platforms, and other projects undertaken by an individual, a group or a non-profit organization that has helped to advance public understanding, engagement with and enjoyment of Ontario’s natural, built and cultural heritage.

Discover the stories behind each of our nominees by clicking on the links on our nominee page.

Congratulations to Your Old Barn Study, this year’s co-recipient.

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Ask a 7-year old to draw an old barn and you’ll get a red building with green gambrel-shaped roof from Old MacDonald’s Farm. Country or city kids, the same result. Yet across the province, barns are disappearing through urbanization, scavenging, neglect, obsolescence and vandalism. No one knows how many still stand and which ones are significant and deserve saving. Old barns are in crisis.  

Founded in 2019, non-profit Ontario Barn Preservation (OBP) is the only provincial organization committed solely to the leadership of saving old barns. One way is preserving them in the virtual world through OBP’s software Your Old Barn Study (YOBS), designed to capture valuable data on construction, significant features and wonderful old barn stories. This might even allow future architects/engineers/historians might recreate virtual barn tours. 

OBP’s innovative idea is to train a small army of owners to document their own barns, using simple educational tools and smartphones/computers to collect and send searchable information to a central database. Partnering with the University of Guelph’s History Department, over two years OBP directors and six U of G experiential course students created YOBS. Barn owners became census takers, answering 50 questions about their barns with explanatory photos and menu choices. OBP believes YOBS may result in one of its most significant methods of saving old barns. Although only dozens have thus far been studied, the ball is rolling.

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Your Old Barn Study, on laptop and smartphone

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Aerial photo of Dalziel barn built ca. 1809, Black Creek Pioneer Village, North York

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3-D schematic of an old swing beam built ca 1825, schematic by John Johnson