By Victoria Cherrie
JOURNAL REPORTER
What should become of the old Forsyth County Courthouse?
About 20 people packed a small meeting room at the Adam's Mark Winston Plaza Hotel last night to debate that question.
Some envision a museum. Others see a community resource center or a beehive of restaurants and shops in the building that needs $500,000 in repairs.
"Finding how and when you are going to achieve that is not an easy task," said Tan Ersoy, the president of Ersoy & Associates, an architecture firm that worked for years to refurbish Reynolds High School.
Ersoy was among several architects, residents and preservationists who said they want the building to be preserved.
"It is too much of a building, it has too much history to be torn down," said Seth Brown, who was Bethania's first mayor after it incorporated in 1995.
The site has had a courthouse since December 1850, when the first building opened there.
A second courthouse opened in January 1897, and the current building was put up in 1926. Additions have been made to the building over the years.
Rence Callahan, a local architect, said that the changing architecture representing each era should be celebrated in whatever is done to the building.
When the present Hall of Justice on North Main Street opened in 1974, the old courthouse building became home to some county offices. With the opening this year of the new county-government complex on Chestnut Street, the last of the offices in the old courthouse have closed.
Forsyth County still owns the building, but agreed in February to allow the Downtown Winston-Salem Partnership, a revitalization group, to evaluate it and make recommendations for its future use.
A committee studying the possibilities invited ideas from the public last night.
The committee plans to study what other cities have done with their courthouses and research ways to help pay for the project. The initial goal was to make a recommendation and give a report to the Forsyth County Board of Commissioners in January.
• Victoria Cherrie can be reached at 727-7283 or at vcherrie@wsjournal.com














