St. Agnes Hospital Mural
Large-scale institutional mural work in Fresno, California, showing the public and healthcare side of the Lanzini archive.
Library of Congress
Archive restoration reference for one of the nation's major public institutions. Add the best supporting photo or clipping when selected.
Forest Lawn Cemetery
Historic restoration reference in a public or institutional setting, useful for monument, sculpture, and stained glass context.
Civic and Institutional Art
Murals, decorative finishes, public-facing artwork, and historic craft applied beyond church interiors.
Questions
Public works restoration FAQs
These answers are written for property owners, agencies, committees, and institutional teams comparing restoration options.
Do you work outside church interiors?
Yes. Lanzini & Sons also has public art and historic restoration experience for civic, institutional, and architectural artwork.
Can you help document damage before a public restoration project?
Yes. Photo documentation and condition notes are useful when committees, agencies, or property owners need to understand scope before approving work.
Can public art restoration be phased?
Often, yes. The right phasing depends on access, safety, weather exposure, material condition, and whether the artwork can remain in place.
What kinds of materials can be involved?
Public and historic restoration may involve paint, plaster, bronze, marble, stone, wood, gilding, decorative finishes, stained glass, mosaics, and architectural artwork.
What should we send first?
Send photos, location, ownership or decision-maker context, known history, visible damage, and any access or safety concerns.
Restore public artwork with care for material, setting, and history
Send photos and a short description of the artwork, monument, mural, or historic surface. Lanzini & Sons can help identify whether the next step is documentation, assessment, stabilization, restoration, or phased planning.
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