If a religious property’s significance is associated with significant forms or architecture or artistry, they may be eligible for listing in the National Register. Without this stipulation, religious properties will not be deemed eligible to be included. If a building has been removed from its original context, it will not be eligible unless it has significant architectural value or is associated with an important person or event. The birthplaces and graves of important individuals are also excluded from the National Register, unless there is no other appropriate buildings left that are significantly associated with the individual’s productive life. Funerary structures and graves also require special circumstances to be included in the National Register. Exceptions can be made for these if their age, design features or their association with events is significant. Reconstructed buildings are another example of a property that would not be eligible under normal circumstances. Exceptions can be made if the building is an accurate representation of a specific type of building or structure that has no remaining examples. Commemorative properties can also be included in the National Register if they are associated with design, tradition, art or symbolic value that has given it historic significance. The final exception that may
If a religious property’s significance is associated with significant forms or architecture or artistry, they may be eligible for listing in the National Register. Without this stipulation, religious properties will not be deemed eligible to be included. If a building has been removed from its original context, it will not be eligible unless it has significant architectural value or is associated with an important person or event. The birthplaces and graves of important individuals are also excluded from the National Register, unless there is no other appropriate buildings left that are significantly associated with the individual’s productive life. Funerary structures and graves also require special circumstances to be included in the National Register. Exceptions can be made for these if their age, design features or their association with events is significant. Reconstructed buildings are another example of a property that would not be eligible under normal circumstances. Exceptions can be made if the building is an accurate representation of a specific type of building or structure that has no remaining examples. Commemorative properties can also be included in the National Register if they are associated with design, tradition, art or symbolic value that has given it historic significance. The final exception that may