we'll go to public comment and one speaker card, patrick o'neil. and any other member of the public wish to comment on this project? commissioners, comments? commissioner perlman? >> i always think the word that mr. o'neil used was celebrate and, of course, this is our job, as preservationists is to celebrate the history of our place. i think it's a funny word and thought because we never tell the story of the building, because we don't put a plaque out and so someone walking by, whether it has all three pieces of the history or just two pieces of the history or one will not know the difference. you know the difference because it's your property and that's not what i'm eluding to. what i'm eluding to is so many buildings in the city have been added to badly over time and in this case, the stucco put on in what is clearly a very inferior methodology of installing it over the original material that's still there. you know, there's all these buildings after world war ii where they used plastic crete and did fake stone along the base of the building. a