A National Register historic district provides protections only against federal undertakings--urban renewal, a freeway, etc.--so it provides little in the way of substantive protection against incursions, demolition, inappropriate rebuilds, etc.
And those are the problems faced by Yalecrest and other neighborhoods of historically eligible building stock in Salt Lake City.
K.E.E.P Yalecrest--Keep Educating and Encouraging the Preservation of Yalecrest--is the organization focused on historic preservation matters in the neighborhood.
I write often about wayfinding and cultural interpretation signage systems. As well as neighborhood/commercial district branding and identity systems ("Basic planning building blocks for urban commercial district revitalization programs that most cities haven't packaged: Part 2 | A neighborhood identity and marketing toolkit (kit of parts)").
And I have written about historic district signage ("Reassessing historic preservation on account of it being National Historic Preservation Month," 2010).
As the Internet--URLs, and QR codes have been widespread, there is no excuse for erecting a sign in 2022 and not having a URL or QR code link, ideally to a website or app with more information about the community, a webpage on the historic district nomination (context statement), link to the sponsoring organization, meeting and events page, etc.
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