Notice catalographique « A research agenda for heritage planning : perspectives from Europe »
- Titre
- A research agenda for heritage planning : perspectives from Europe
- Auteur ou éditeur
- Stegmeijer, Eva
- Veldpaus, Loes
- Lieu de publication
- Cheltenham, UK
- Maison d'édition
- Edward Elgar Publishing
- Date de publication
- 2021
- Collation
- xxvi, 225 pages : illustrations (colour) ; 24 cm
- Résumé
- "Recent decades have seen a mini revolution in the way we regard the vestiges of our past in the buildings and landscapes around us. In many countries, the preservation, conservation, management and development of the historic environment and of heritage assets have been increasingly integrated with spatial planning, making heritage more explicitly part of a dynamic system of future making. At the same time, heritage management has gradually changed and widened its scope, scale and ambition. Its operational repertoire has been enriched: from the protection of (single) historic monuments and sites, via the spatial development of larger areas and landscapes based on their historical structures, forms and uses, to providing meaning in all kinds of social, economic and spatial processes.
- Rather than just a material asset, heritage is now more commonly seen as a process of mobilizing some pasts for present-day purposes, and thus a future-making exercise (Hart 2011; Meskell 2015). As such, heritage can involve (a selection of) socio-cultural and socio-spatial arrangements – tangible and intangible, movable and immovable, natural and cultural resources – such as products, processes, patterns, perceptions, personal stories and memories, as well as the relations and values they constitute. This also means that conservation, as a process of caring for heritage, is about much more than preserving a small collection of listed buildings. A gradual transformation has taken place from a so-called ‘culture of loss’, in which limiting damage was the primary goal, towards ‘a culture of profit’ that creates designs for the future from a historically informed perspective (Janssen et al. 2017). Economic interests, cultural value and social vitality are now inextricably linked to contemporary notions of heritage planning." -- Excerpt from introduction
- Langue
- English = Anglais
- Sujet
- Historic preservation - Planning
- Historic preservation - Social aspects - Europe
- City planning - Environmental aspects - Europe
- City planning - Social aspects - Europe
- Cultural property - Protection - Planning
- Architecture - Conservation and restoration
- Préservation historique - Planification
- Préservation historique - Aspect social - Europe
- Urbanisme - Aspect social - Europe
- Urbanisme - Aspect de l'environnement - Europe
- Biens culturels - Protection - Planification
- Architecture - Conservation et restauration
- ISBN/ISSN
- 9781788974622
- Lien au document en anglais
- https://doi.org/10.4337/9781788974639
- Pays
- England
- Type de document
- Monograph = Monographie
- Localisation
- NA 9053 C6 S74 2021
- Clé
- 19468
- Collection
- Catalogue