Managing built heritage 2e.
Clasificación: | Libro Electrónico |
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Autor principal: | |
Formato: | Electrónico eBook |
Idioma: | Inglés |
Publicado: |
Chichester :
Wiley-Blackwell,
2015.
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Temas: | |
Acceso en línea: | Texto completo |
Tabla de Contenidos:
- Managing Built Heritage; Contents; About the Authors; 1 Introduction; Note; References; 2 Heritage Assets: Their Nature and Management Implications; Introduction; Some introductory thoughts about heritage assets; Heritage assets and their management implications; Buried archaeology; Archaeological sites and monuments; Individual historic structures and buildings; Cultural landscapes; Landed estates; Historic areas and urban landscapes: towns and cities; World Heritage Sites and Cities; Buffer zones and urban settings to major heritage assets; Intangible heritage.
- Owners, managers and management approachesReferences; 3 Heritage Values and Cultural Significance; Benefits of conservation; 1 There are significant benefits to the social, psychological and political well-being of individuals, groups and nations
- or indeed collections of nations; 2 There are significant educational benefits: that we can understand aspects of past societies not only through analysis of the physical remains of the past but also the historic environment is a focus and an opportunity for a less 'expert' engagement with the lives and experiences of previous generations.
- 3 As existing buildings, they are a resource that should be reused for (environmental and financial) sustainability reasons4 The historic environment contributes to a sense of place through its character and its visual aesthetic; 5 Historic buildings and areas attract significant tourist revenue and make significant contributions to local, regional and sometimes national economies and employment; Understanding the cultural significance of a heritage asset; Development in the idea of values; International charters; Value characterisation: typologies; Categories of values; Aesthetic.
- Scenic and panoramicArchitectural/technological; Historical; Associational; Archaeological; Economic; Educational; Recreational; Artistic; Social; Commemorative; Symboliciconic; Spiritual and religious; Inspirational; Ecological; Environmental; Some examples of assets and their values; References; 4 Assessing Significance; Establishing and analysing the origins and development of an asset; Gathering evidence about significance; Research and types of evidence; Documentary evidence; Primary source material; Illustrations, including paintings.
- Registrations of births, baptisms, marriages, deaths and burials/cremationsCorrespondence, reports, minutes of committee meetings, specifications of work, contractors invoices, etc.; Census returns; Trade directories; Maps; Plans; Photographs and postcards; Surveys; Local newspapers and journals; Secondary material; Example: a North of England church; Interpreting the building/physical remains; Establishing and analysing the character, dynamics and setting of the asset; Assessing community values; Analysing significance; Assessing significance: comparisons and relativity; Comparisons.