Architectural heritage is a form of tangible and immovable cultural heritage centered around the documentation and preservation of the built environment of existing and past buildings and structures built for residential, commercial, industrial, defensive, governmental, and spiritual purposes.[1] These buildings and structures can vary widely in size, sophistication, and design based upon the resources and materials available at the time of construction and the cultural understanding of historical precedents and collective memory of architectural styles known to the architects and builders at the time of design and construction.[2]
These historic buildings and archaeological sites can illustrate the spatial arrangements and sociocultural interactions influenced by the built environments of historic times, and can vary in importance based upon the cultural significance or physical rarity of a particular type of architectural structure.[3] Additionally, the historic and prehistoric interactions between humans, the environment, land and sea usage, and interaction with other cultures can play a significant role in the development of stages of civilization and human history, including traditions, ideas, beliefs, and artistic and literary works that can display human creative genius and outstanding universal significance.[4]
Study of architectural heritage sites
editArchitectural heritage can be studied by architects, architectural historians, cultural historians, archaeologists, anthropologists, and a variety of other disciplines through such methods as surveys, delineations, measurements, drawings, and renderings to depict existing structures of historical significance or heritage value, study and conservation of past drawings, blueprints, and renderings of existing and past buildings, and geospatial surveys and scans of historic or archaeological sites, including satellite images, photogrammetry, LIDAR scans, and SONAR renderings of underwater submerged archaeological sites.[5] Surveys, delineations, drawings, and renderings, when properly conserved as part of the documentary heritage of the architectural tradition, can be digitized to help ensure their conservation and communication in the event of the original copy or the extant structure being destroyed.[6]
Geospatial surveys and scans can also help researchers see evidence of historic or prehistoric structures that might not be visible to the naked eye, for example if only foundations of the structures remain underground, if geological shifts or volcanic eruptions have caused the buildings to become buried under sedimentation or ash deposits, if once land based archaeological sites have become buried underwater due to rising sea levels or geological shifts, or in the event the site is simply too inaccessible to be physically accessed by researchers due to excessive vegetation cover or rough and jagged terrain.[7] These delineations, surveys, and scans can help researchers understand the types of buildings and structures historic and prehistoric people built, as well as what they show about how people interacted with each other and their environment.[8]
Human and natural threats to architectural heritage sites
editArchitectural heritage sites can be threatened by a number of human and natural threats, such as armed conflicts, lack of preservation or conservation measures, demolition or excessive modification, exposure to environmental elements, and natural disasters such as hurricanes, typhoons, tornadoes, floods, earthquakes, and excessive winds.[9][10] Additionally, excessive tourism can also pose a threat to the integrity of the historic sites if poorly managed or insufficient preventative conservation measures are in place.[11]
Architectural conservation and historic preservation
editOngoing assessments and monitoring of architectural heritage sites help maintenance and restoration personnel identify architectural elements that are in a stable state of conservation and which elements are in need of treatments and restorations.[12] These ongoing assessments might include wood treatments, historic paint analyses, pest and rodent control, and monitoring of temperature and relative humidity.[13]
Architectural preservation treatments can run from smaller scale restorations to major reconstructions.[14] Smaller scale restorations might include repainting and refinishing surfaces, environmental barriers, water gilding, sandblasting fixtures, and repairing utility connections, such as electrical wires and plumbing pipes.[15] Larger scale restorations and reconstructions might seek to demolish architectural elements or portions of buildings in the interest of restoring the overall structure to an earlier state which better represents a period in history which the architectural significance of the building is better associated with.[16][17]
Similar to any form of tangible cultural property, architects, restorers, historic site and museum professionals always recommend involving a conservator before undertaking any major restoration projects on a site with architectural heritage significance.[18] Additionally, many restoration projects require the involvement of a structural engineer to determine if the proposed modifications and treatments might negatively impact the structural integrity of the building or surrounding elements, or if additional building permits and inspections might be necessary before undertaking the work.[19]
At the international level, the United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization administers the World Heritage Program to identify locations whose architectural or natural heritage, or some combination thereof, have outstanding universal value measured against a set of ten criteria, including representation of masterpieces of human creative genius, exhibiting important interchanges of human values, bearing a unique or at least exceptional testimony to a cultural tradition or civilization which is living or has disappeared, and being an outstanding example of a type of building, architectural, or technical ensemble or landscape which illustrates a significant stage in human history.[20] Locations inscribed on the World Heritage List can be eligible to receive funds from the World Heritage Fund to help protect the architectural heritage sites, which is funded from voluntary and involuntary contributions from the state parties to the World Heritage Convention.[21]
Most nations have a mechanism to identify historic buildings and heritage sites of national or regional significance which should be protected from unauthorized demolition or alteration, such as the United States Department of the Interior's National Register of Historic Places.[22] Additionally, some nations, such as the United Kingdom, further assign historic structures into categories based upon their historical and architectural significance, such as Historic England's grading of listed buildings.[23] These grades and categories can help governments, planning and zoning organizations, grant distributors, historical societies, and property managers obtain the resources necessary to maintain and conserve buildings and structures of outstanding universal value, while allowing for some flexibility for modification and use of sites of lower historical significance.
References
edit- ^ United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (2024). “Global Strategy”. https://whc.unesco.org/en/globalstrategy/
- ^ Borges, R.F. (2001). “Evolution of architectural forms of historic buildings”. Penn State University. https://www.witpress.com/Secure/elibrary/papers/STR01/STR01058FU.pdf
- ^ English Heritage (2024). “Prehistory: Architecture”. https://www.english-heritage.org.uk/learn/story-of-england/prehistory/architecture/
- ^ Wang, Li (2022). “Evaluation of the Practical Effects of Environmental Measures in the Conservation of Architectural Heritage in Yan'an Based on Recurrent Neural Networks”. National Library of Medicine. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9484901/
- ^ Library of Congress Research Guides (2024). “Surveys and Historic Designations”. https://guides.loc.gov/house-history/surveys
- ^ Vermont Secretary of State (2024). “Digitization and Digital Preservation”. Vermont State Archives and Records Administration. https://sos.vermont.gov/vsara/partner/assistance/resource-library/digital/#:~:text=Digitization of historic materials has,are made freely available online.
- ^ Alshawabkeh, Yahya et al. (2006). “Integration of laser scanning and photogrammetry for heritage documentation”. https://www.researchgate.net/publication/228857387_Integration_of_laser_scanning_and_photogrammetry_for_heritage_documentation
- ^ King, Thomas (2011). “A Companion to Cultural Resource Management”. Blackwell Publishing. https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/book/10.1002/9781444396065#page=44
- ^ Blue Shield International (2024). “Threats to Heritage”. https://theblueshield.org/why-we-do-it/threats-to-heritage/
- ^ United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (2024). “List of factors affecting the properties”. https://whc.unesco.org/en/factors
- ^ Adie, Bailey Ashton (2019). “Overtourism as a perceived threat to cultural heritage in Europe”. Solent University. https://pure.solent.ac.uk/ws/files/10939013/overtourism_culturalheritagesites_non_peer_review_CIT_AM.pdf
- ^ Al-Sakiny, Ula Faris et al. (2022). “Treatments of Sustainable Preservation in Heritage Buildings: Reviews the Treatments that can Improve the Preservation of Heritage Buildings”. Iraqi Journal of Architecture and Planning. https://www.iasj.net/iasj/download/77a994bb477fd0a1
- ^ University of Pennsylvania Weitzman School of Design (2024). “Architectural Conservation”. https://www.design.upenn.edu/historic-preservation/architectural-conservation
- ^ Weeks, Kay et al. (1995). “The Secretary of the Interior's Standards for the Treatment of Historic Properties with Guidelines for Preserving, Rehabilitating, Restoring, and Reconstructing Historic Buildings”. https://books.google.com/books hl=en&lr=&id=ThTja_zbt0EC&oi=fnd&pg=PP9&dq=architectural preservation treatments&ots=_IrUNPSilE&sig=euRhifa1QDctOtBPuvqDNivuYAg#v=onepage&q=architectural preservation treatments&f=false
- ^ Alvarez de Buergo Ballester et al. (2002). “Characterizing the construction materials of a historic building and evaluating possible preservation treatments for restoration purposes”. London Geological Society Special Publications. https://www.lyellcollection.org/doi/abs/10.1144/GSL.SP.2002.205.01.18
- ^ Loth, Calder (2014). “Architectural Reconstructions: A Respectable Tradition”. Institute of Classical Architecture and Art. https://www.classicist.org/articles/architectural-reconstructions-a-respectable-tradition/
- ^ Kazman, Rick et al. (2001). “Architecture Reconstruction Guidelines”. Carnegie Mellon Software Engineering Institute. https://insights.sei.cmu.edu/documents/664/2001_005_001_13898.pdf
- ^ Berdecia- Hernandez, Hector (2020). “What is Architectural Conservation?”. American Conservation Experience. https://www.usaconservation.org/blog-post-3-what-is-architectural-conservation/
- ^ The Institution of Structural Engineers (2024). “What is a Structural Engineer?”. https://www.istructe.org/become-a-structural-engineer/what-is-an-engineer/
- ^ United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (2024). “World Heritage”. https://whc.unesco.org/en/about
- ^ United Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (2024). “World Heritage Fund”. https://whc.unesco.org/en/world-heritage-fund/
- ^ National Park Service (2024). “What is the National Register of Historic Places?”. https://www.nps.gov/subjects/nationalregister/what-is-the-national-register.htm
- ^ Historic England (2024). “What are Listed Buildings?”. https://historicengland.org.uk/listing/what-is-designation/listed-buildings/