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Wikipedia

Historic preservation

Historic preservation (US), built heritage preservation or built heritage conservation (UK) is an endeavor that seeks to preserve, conserve and protect buildings, objects, landscapes or other artifacts of historical significance. It is a philosophical concept that became popular in the twentieth century, which maintains that cities as products of centuries' development should be obligated to protect their patrimonial legacy.[1] The term refers specifically to the preservation of the built environment, and not to preservation of, for example, primeval forests or wilderness.[2]

Today, historic preservation often concerns itself with everyday, vernacular landscapes associated with marginalized communities, such as Barry Farm in Washington, DC (pictured here), as much as it does monumental properties.

Areas of professional, paid practice edit

Paid work, performed by trained professionals, in historic preservation can be divided into the practice areas of regulatory compliance, architecture and construction, historic sites/museums, advocacy, and downtown revitalization/rejuvenation; each of these areas has a different set of expected skills, knowledge, and abilities.[3]

United States edit

In the United States, about 70% of professional, paid practice in historic preservation is in the area of regulatory compliance, which is driven by laws, regulations, and guidelines promulgated at the federal, state, and local levels.[3] At the federal level, these include the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and associated regulations, such as Section 106 (54 USC 306108, formerly known as 36 CFR 800), National Register of Historic Places (54 USC 302101–302108), and the Secretary of the Interior's Standards (36 CFR 67); many states have laws that reference these federal regulations or create parallel regulations, using federal regulatory language. At the local level, preservation laws and regulations are known as "preservation ordinances" and define the need for private property owners to seek a "certificate of appropriateness" when making modifications to existing buildings that are listed in a local historical register.[4] Refer to the table, below, for the full breakdown of various practice areas in the United States.

Areas of professional, paid practice in historic preservation in the United States[3]
Area of practice ! Percent (out of 100%)
Regulatory compliance (federal, state, and local) 69.7%
Architecture and construction 11.2%
Historic sites/museums 8.9%
Preservation advocacy 5.7%
Downtown revitalization 4.5%

United Kingdom edit

According to a 2008 survey conducted by the National Heritage Training Group, the size of the built heritage conservation sector, and how its various specializations break down, is not known.[5]

History edit

England edit

In England, antiquarian interests were a familiar gentleman's pursuit since the mid 17th century, developing in tandem with the rise in scientific curiosity. Fellows of the Royal Society were often also Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries[citation needed].

 
The ruins of Berkhamsted castle (viewed from its Norman motte) and Berkhamsted Common were the location of two successful early preservation events in the nineteenth century. (Enlarged: A train passes Berkhamsted castle, on an embankment that was once part of the castle's outer defences.)

Many historic sites were damaged as the railways began to spread across the UK, these sites included Trinity Hospital and its church in Edinburgh, Furness Abbey, Berwick and Northampton Castle, as well as the ancient walls of York, Chester and Newcastle. In 1833 Berkhamsted Castle became the first historic site in England to be officially protected by statute, under the London and Birmingham Railway Acts of 1833–1837, though the new railway line in 1834 did demolish the castle's gatehouse and outer earthworks to the south.[6]

In 1847 the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust was formed by a private Act of Parliament to prevent the Stratford property's sale to American showman P. T. Barnum.[7]

Another early preservation event also occurred at Berkhamsted. In 1866, Lord Brownlow who lived at Ashridge House, tried to enclose the adjoining Berkhamsted Common with 5-foot (2 m) steel fences in an attempt to claim it as part of his estate. In England from early Anglo-Saxon times, Common land was an area of land which the local community could use as a resource. Across England between 1660 and 1845, 7 million acres of Common land had been enclosed by private land owners by application to parliament. On the night of 6 March 1866, Augustus Smith MP led gangs of local folk and hired men from London's East End in direct action to break the enclosure fences and protect Berkhamsted Common for the people of Berkhamsted in what became known nationally as the Battle of Berkhamsted Common.[8][9][10] In 1870, Sir Robert Hunter (later co-founder of the National Trust in 1895) and the Commons Preservation Society succeed in legal action that ensured protection of Berkhamsted Common and other open spaces threatened with enclosure. In 1926 the common was acquired by the National Trust.[11][12][13]

 
John Lubbock, MP was a moving force behind the implementation of the Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882.

By the mid 19th century, much of Britain's unprotected cultural heritage was being slowly destroyed. Even well-meaning archaeologists like William Greenwell excavated sites with virtually no attempt at their preservation, Stonehenge came under increasing threat by the 1870s. Tourists were chipping off parts of the stones or carving their initials into the rock. The private owners of the monument decided to sell the land to the London and South-Western Railway who stated that the monument was "not the slightest use to anyone now".[14] John Lubbock, an MP and botanist emerged as the champion of the country's national heritage. In 1872 he personally bought private land that housed ancient monuments in Avebury, Silbury Hill and elsewhere, from the owners who were threatening to have them cleared away to make room for housing. Soon, he began campaigning in Parliament for legislation to protect monuments from destruction. This finally led to the legislative milestone under the Liberal government of William Gladstone of the Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882. The first government appointed inspector for this job was the archaeologist Augustus Pitt-Rivers. This legislation was regarded by conservative political elements as a grave assault on the individual rights of property of the owner, and consequently, the inspector only had the power to identify endangered landmarks and offer to purchase them from the owner with his consent. The Act only covered ancient monuments and explicitly did not cover historic buildings or structures. In 1877 the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings was founded by the Arts and Crafts designer William Morris to prevent the destruction of historic buildings, followed by the National Trust in 1895 that bought estates from their owners for preservation.[15]

The Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882 had only given legal protection to prehistoric sites, such as ancient tumuli. The Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1900 took this further by empowering the government's Commissioners of Work and local County Councils to protect a wider range of properties. Further updates were made in 1910.

 
Tattershall Castle, preserved at personal expense by Lord Curzon and a catalyst for broader heritage protection laws

Tattershall Castle, Lincolnshire, a medieval manor house had been put up for sale in 1910 with its greatest treasures, the huge medieval fireplaces, still intact. However, when an American bought the house they were ripped out and packaged up for shipping. The former viceroy of India, George Curzon, 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston, was outraged at this cultural destruction and stepped in to buy back the castle and reinstall the fireplaces. After a nationwide hunt for them they were finally found in London and returned.[16] He restored the castle[17] and left it to the National Trust on his death in 1925. His experience at Tattershall influenced Lord Curzon to push for tougher heritage protection laws in Britain, which saw passage as the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913.

The new structure involved the creation of the Ancient Monuments Board to oversee the protection of such monuments. Powers were given for the board, with Parliamentary approval, to issue preservation orders to protect monuments, and extended the public right of access to these. The term "monument" was extended to include the lands around it, allowing the protection of the wider landscape.[18]

The National Trust edit

The National Trust was founded in 1894 by Octavia Hill, Sir Robert Hunter, and Hardwicke Canon Rawnsley as the first organisation of its type in the world. Its formal purpose is:

The preservation for the benefit of the Nation of lands and tenements (including buildings) of beauty or historic interest and, as regards lands, for the preservation of their natural aspect, features and animal and plant life. Also the preservation of furniture, pictures and chattels of any description having national and historic or artistic interest.[19]

In the early days, the Trust was concerned primarily with protecting open spaces and a variety of threatened buildings. Its first acquisition was Dinas Oleu, a piece of land on the clifftop above Barmouth in Wales, donated in 1895. Two other sites acquired by the Trust in its early years later became nature reserves: Wicken Fen in Cambridgeshire and Blakeney Point in Norfolk.[20]: 36–37  White Barrow on Salisbury Plain was the Trust's first archaeological monument.White Barrow on Salisbury Plain was the Trust's first archaeological monument, purchased in 1909 for £60.[21] The focus on country houses and gardens, which now comprise the majority of its most visited properties, came about in the mid 20th century, when it was realised that the private owners of many of these properties were no longer able to afford to maintain them.[20]: 84-103 

English Heritage edit

English Heritage formed in 1983, is a registered charity that looks after the National Heritage Collection in England.[22] This comprises over 400 of England's historic buildings, monuments and sites spanning more than 5,000 years of history. Within its portfolio are Stonehenge, Dover Castle, Tintagel Castle and the best preserved parts of Hadrian's Wall.

Originally English Heritage was the operating name of an executive non-departmental public body of the British Government, officially titled the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England, that ran the national system of heritage protection and managed a range of historic properties.[23] It was created to combine the roles of existing bodies that had emerged from a long period of state involvement in heritage protection. In 1999 the organisation merged with the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England and the National Monuments Record (England), bringing together resources for the identification and survey of England's historic environment. On 1 April 2015, English Heritage was divided into two parts: Historic England, which inherited the statutory and protection functions of the old organisation, and the new English Heritage Trust, a charity that would operate the historic properties, and which took on the English Heritage operating name and logo.[22][23][24] The British government gave the new charity an £80 million grant to help establish it as an independent trust, although the historic properties remained in the ownership of the state.

The Town and Country Planning Acts of 1944 and 1947 established the listing of buildings of special architectural or historic interest; by 2017 there were 377,700 listed buildings on the National Heritage List for England, which is maintained by Historic England.[25]

National Parks edit

France edit

In 1790, Aubin-Louis Millin submitted a report to the Constituent Assembly regarding the demolition of the Bastille, using the term "monument historique" (transl. historic monument). The idea of preserving sites linked to the Ancien Régime and earlier circulated as a result, and under impetus of Talleyrand, the Assembly, on the 13th of October, created the commission des monuments (transl. Commission of Monuments) whose function was to "study the fate of monuments, arts, and sciences." The following year, Alexandre Lenoir was appointed to create the Musée des Monuments français (transl. Museum of French Monuments), which opened in 1795 and exhibited fragments of architecture Lenoir had saved and salvaged from destruction over the previous years. The museum was ultimately closed during the Restoration by Louis XVIII, and its collection was returned to the original owners and their families.[26]

The vandalism and widespread destruction which accompanied the French Revolution had inspired several such responses, and the first known register of such buildings was an inventory of the castles begun by Louis XVI by the conseil des bâtiments civils (transl. Council of Civil Buildings), which was completed in 1795. Between 1804 and 1834, several archaeological societies were formed, notably the Société des antiquaires de France in 1804 (originally the Académie celtique), the Société française d'archéologie in 1834, and the Comité des travaux historiques et scientifiques also in 1834.[27]

In 1819, the Ministry of the Interior provided an allowance for monuments historiques for the first time,[28] and, on 21 October 1830, François Guizot (then Minister of the Interior) proposed the creation of a post, the Inspector General of Historic Monuments, to classify buildings and distribute funds for their preservation. This post was first assigned to Ludovic Vitet on 25 November 1830, and later to Prosper Mérimée on 27 May 1834.[29][30][31] In 1837, Bachasson, in his capacity of Minister of the Interior, officially established the Commission des monuments historiques (transl. Commission for Historic Monuments) to carry out the work of classification and producing an inventory, as well as distributing funding and training architects for restoration work (Eugène Viollet-le-Duc among them).[32] The Commission published its first inventory in 1840,[33] and subsequently continued its inventory work, as well as create visual records for any future restoration. To this end, it created the Mission Héliographique to photograph monuments in 1851. During this period, the combination of reluctance to understand the government's prerogatives and the fact that the classification of privet property required the owners' consent resulted in the gradual decrease in the number of registered monuments.[27]

On 2 May 1887, a law was passed establishing procedures for the classification of historic monuments as well as establish provisions for a body of Architecte en chef des monuments historiques for their upkeep. In 1906, French law laid down principles of classification of natural sites. Under the 1905 Law of Separation of Church and State, local communities and the government were entrusted with the care and upkeep of religious buildings, however, this led to refusal to care for buildings not of "national interest" by some and the auctioning off of heritage by others. Per consequence, on 13 December 1913, a law was passed which widened the field of protection for classified monuments, including changing "national interest" to "public interest" and allowing the classification of private property without the consent of the owner.[34][35] During the 1920s and 1930s, classification further opened up to private property; additionally, monuments post-dating the Ancien Régime began to be classified. In 1925, a second order of classification was introduced: inscription à l'inventaire supplémentaire des monuments historiques (transl. inscription in the supplementary inventory of historical monuments).

In 1930, the classifications were renamed "classé" and "inscrit" (transl. "classified" and "registered") and classification was allowed to include the land immediately surrounding a classified building. During the Nazi Occupation, numerous classifications were made both in order to prevent destruction of monuments and to provide some protection from compulsory labour.[36]

United States edit

 

In the United States one of the first historic preservation efforts was the Washington's Headquarters State Historic Site, in Newburgh, New York. This property has the distinction of being the first-ever property designated and operated as a historic site by a U.S. state, having been so since 1850.

Another early historic preservation undertaking was that of George Washington's Mount Vernon in 1858.[37] Founded in 1889, the Richmond, Virginia-based Preservation Virginia (formerly known as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities) was the United States' first statewide historic preservation group.[38][39] The American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society was formed in 1895 as the first American organization of its kind in the United States that did not limit its activities to a single historic place or object. The Society operated as a national organization to: protect the natural scenery and the preservation of historic landmarks; to preserve landmarks and records of the past or present; to erect memorials and promote appreciation of the scenic beauty of America.[40]

Charles E. Peterson was an influential figure in the mid-20th century establishing the Historic American Buildings Survey (HABS), advising on the establishment of Independence National Historical Park, helping with the first graduate degree program in historic preservation in the United States at Columbia University, and author.

The architectural firm of Simons & Lapham (Albert Simons and Samuel Lapham) was an influential supporter of the nation's first historic preservation ordinance in Charleston, South Carolina in 1930, affording that city a regulatory means by which to prevent the destruction of its historic building stock. In 1925, efforts to preserve the historic buildings of the French Quarter in New Orleans led to the creation of the Vieux Carré Commission and later, to the adoption of a historic preservation ordinance.[41][42]

 
The preservation of this historic building in Washington, D.C., resulted in an award for Excellence in Historic Preservation by the local government.[43]

The US National Trust for Historic Preservation, another privately funded non-profit organization, began in 1949 with a handful of structures and has developed goals that provide "leadership, education, advocacy, and resources to save America's diverse historic places and revitalize our communities" according to the Trust's mission statement. In 1951 the Trust assumed responsibility for its first museum property, Woodlawn Plantation in northern Virginia. Twenty-eight sites in all have subsequently become part of the National Trust, representing the cultural diversity of American history. In New York City, the destruction of Pennsylvania Station in 1964 shocked many nationwide into supporting preservation. The 1960s proved advantageous with new laws and international agreements extending preservation "from ancient monuments to whole districts and buildings a few decades old."[44] On an international level, the New York-based World Monuments Fund was founded in 1965 to preserve historic sites all over the world.

Under the direction of James Marston Fitch, the first advanced-degree historic preservation program began at Columbia University in 1964.[45] It became the model on which most other graduate historic preservation programs were created.[46] Many other programs were to follow before 1980: M.A. in Preservation Planning from Cornell (1975); M.S. in Historic Preservation from the University of Vermont (1975); M.S. in Historic Preservation Studies from Boston University (1976); M.S. in Historic Preservation from Eastern Michigan University (1979) and M.F.A. in Historic Preservation was one of the original programs at Savannah College of Art & Design. James Marston Fitch also offered guidance and support towards the founding of the Master of Preservation Studies Degree within the Tulane School of Architecture[47] in 1996.[48] The M.Sc. in Building Conservation degree program is offered by the School of Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy, New York. In 2005, Clemson University and the College of Charleston created an M.S. degree program based in Charleston, SC. The first undergraduate programs (B.A.) appeared in 1977 from Goucher College and Roger Williams University (then called Roger Williams College), followed by Mary Washington College in 1979.[49] As of 2013 there were more than fifty historic preservation programs offering certificates, associate, bachelor's, and master's degrees in the United States.[50] Under the direction of Jorge Otero-Pailos, the first PhD in Historic Preservation in the United States was founded at Columbia Graduate School of Architecture, Planning and Preservation in 2018.[51]

National Register of Historic Places edit

 
National Register of Historic Places plaque

National Historic Landmark edit

Historic districts edit

A historic district in the United States is a group of buildings, properties, or sites that have been designated by one of several entities on different levels as historically or architecturally significant. Buildings, structures, objects and sites within a historic district are normally divided into two categories, contributing and non-contributing. Districts greatly vary in size, some having hundreds of structures while others have just a few.

The U.S. federal government designates historic districts through the U.S. Department of Interior, under the auspices of the National Park Service. Federally designated historic districts are listed on the National Register of Historic Places.[52] Historic districts allows rural areas to preserve their characters through historic preservation programs. These include "Main Street" programs that can be used to redevelop rural downtowns. Using historic preservation programs as an economic development tool for local governments in rural areas has enabled some of those areas to take advantage of their history and develop a tourism market that in turn provides funds for maintaining an economic stability that these areas would not have seen otherwise.[53][54]

A similar concept exists in the United Kingdom: a Conservation area is designated in accordance with the Planning (Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas) Act 1990 in order to protect a zone in which there are buildings of architectural or cultural heritage interest.

National Parks edit

The Department of the Interior designated several areas of Morristown, New Jersey as the first historic park in the United States national park system. It became designated as the Morristown National Historical Park.[55] The community had permanent settlements that date to 1715, is termed the military capital of the American Revolution, and contains many designations of sites and locations. The park includes three major sites in Morristown.

In the United Kingdom, James Bryce the ambassador to the US praised the system of National Parks and campaigned to have them introduced in Great Britain. Little came of it until mounting public pressure during the early 20th century from the Ramblers' Association and other groups led to the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949.[citation needed]

Australia edit

 
Melbourne's APA Building was constructed in Queen Anne style in 1889 and demolished in 1981.

All of Australia's major cities have had historic or heritage preservation establishments and legislation in place since the mid to late 1970s, though destruction or outright demolition of historic buildings continues in most Australian cities to this day, subject to council or planning approval, particularly outside of the city centres in historic neighbourhoods.[56][57] Melbourne was founded in 1835 and grew enormously in wealth and prosperity following the 1850s gold rush, which resulted in a construction boom: large edifices were erected to serve as public buildings such as libraries, court houses, schools, churches, and offices. This led to a period where Melbourne became known as "Marvellous Melbourne", boasting the largest collection of Victorian architecture outside of England. However, in the years that followed, and as the thousands of Australian soldiers arrived back from the battlefields following the end of World War I there emerged a sense of renewed pride and a willingness to forget the dark days of war and distance Australian from its Victorian origins, considered "unfashionable" or "outdated" by some. The Council of the City of Melbourne was no doubt buoyed by this new nationalistic pride and put in place schemes to modernize the city which included increasing the building height limit and removing some of the Victorian era cast ironwork. In the years leading up to World War II the Whelan the Wrecker firm had already pulled down thousands of structures in both the city and surrounding suburbs, as Melbourne became particularly conscious of International Modernism. James Paul Whelan's obituary of 1938 suggests that his company had the task of demolishing up to 98% of buildings marked for removal in the city alone.[58] The rise of this International Modernism saw a new approach that valued replacing older, elaborate inefficient buildings with new ones. An early example of this was a City of Melbourne by-law in 1954 that mandated the demolition of all posted cast-iron verandas,[59] thought to be dangerous as well as old fashioned, in order to 'clean up' the city before the 1956 Summer Olympics.

Sydney (Australia's oldest city) was also affected by the International Modernism period and also suffered an extensive loss of its Victorian architecture, something that subsisted well into the 1980s. From the 1950s onwards, many of Sydney's handsome sandstone and masonry buildings were wiped away by architects and developers who built "brown concrete monstrosities" in their place. The 1980s saw "uncomfortable pastiches of facades with no coherence and little artistic merit".[60] Green bans in Australian cities such as Sydney and Melbourne came into effect in the 1970s and the Australian Heritage Commission (AHS), was established by the Federal Government in 1975 by the Australian Heritage Commission Act 1975 as the first body to manage natural and cultural heritage in Australia until its demise in 2004.[61] It was responsible for the Register of the National Estate. The Australian National Heritage List was established in 2003. Controversy arose in 2016 in Melbourne after the historic Corkman Irish Pub was illegally demolished overnight, resulting in the State Planning Minister pursuing an order (via the Victorian Administrative Appeals Tribunal) for the two-story pub to be rebuilt.[62] The site owners were fined AUD$1.325 million after pleading guilty to the process.

In the city of Adelaide, large public protests erupted in the 1980s regarding the 1983 campaign to save the Aurora Hotel in Hindmarsh Square, which had been recommended for listing on the city heritage register but refused because the site was to be redeveloped.[63] The protest led to the emergence of Aurora Heritage Action, Inc. (AHA), which became the most vocal heritage lobby group in Adelaide during the decade, often working in cooperation with residents' associations and later the National Trust. While governments were urged to protect the traditional character of Adelaide, capital became more widely available for development. The large increase in property development from 1987 increased opposition to further demolition of Adelaide's historic buildings. Local councils and lobbyists alike aimed to expand the horizon of heritage to protect historic precincts across the city, even if buildings within those precincts did not warrant heritage listing. The Bannon government slowly responded to public demand and introduced historic (conservation) zones through a revision to the Planning Act (1982) in 1989. Not regulated by the Planning Act, the City of Adelaide endeavoured to create on a similar scheme, which became known as the townscape initiative, facilitating one of the most destructive political debates in the council's history.

Canada edit

In Canada, the phrase "heritage preservation" is sometimes seen as a specific approach to the treatment of historic places and sites, rather than a general concept of conservation. "Conservation" is taken as the more general term, referring to all actions or processes that are aimed at safeguarding the character-defining elements of a cultural resource so as to retain its heritage value and extend its physical life.

Historic objects in Canada may be granted special designation by any of the three levels of government: the federal government, the provincial government, or a municipal government. The Heritage Canada Foundation acts as Canada's lead advocacy organization for heritage buildings and landscapes.

The Netherlands edit

Victor de Stuers is widely considered the man who started historic preservation in the Netherlands. In 1875 the first national department for conservation was established[64] and de Stuers was appointed as the first legal secretary at the Ministry of Home Affairs as chief of the brand new Department of Arts and Sciences. He was the driving force behind Monumentenzorg (Foundation for Historic Preservation), helped found the Rijksmuseum (National Museum) and the Rijksarchief (National Archives).[65][66]

However, it was not until the 20th century that there was national legislation on historic preservation. In 1961 the Monumentenwet ("Monuments Act") was passed. It defined that any physical building or space that was at least fifty years old and "which are of general interest because of their beauty, their meaning to science or their social value" and must thus be preserved.[67][68] In 1988 this Act was replaced by the Monumentenwet 1988 ("Monuments Act 1988")[69] and in 2015 by the Erfgoedwet ("Heritage Law").[70]

In 1973, the NGO Monumentenwacht ("Monument Watch") was founded with the purpose of providing preventative measures of maintenance for historic buildings. As the majority of the historic preservation programs in the Netherlands, this program is decentralized, managed on the provincial level.[71] Owners of heritage buildings can subscribe to the services of Monumentenwacht and receive regular visits for inspection. The costs are covered through a combination of national and provincial subsidies.[72]

A special kind of preservation that takes place in the Netherlands is the preservation of maritime heritage. Maritime trade was the Dutch specialty which shaped much of their culture and as a country that is 50% under sea level the Dutch history is closely intertwined with water.[73] There are maritime museums in both Amsterdam and Rotterdam that tell the story of the Dutch maritime heritage, but there is not much legal documentation on how to preserve it. For example, according to Sarah Dromgoole,[74] shipwrecks from The Dutch East India Company are found all around the world, which are still property of the Netherlands, but the Dutch government rarely takes responsibility for this property that is found outside of their territory.[75]

North Macedonia edit

In North Macedonia, historic preservation falls under the overarching category of cultural heritage preservation according to the Law on Protection of Cultural Heritage (Закон за заштита на културното наследство). According to this law, which the Macedonian Parliament approved in March 2004, there are three types of cultural heritage: immovable, movable, and intangible. Historical preservation is represented by the protection of monuments and monumental entireties under immovable cultural heritage, and historical items under movable cultural heritage.[76]

Although this law was the first nationwide establishment of regulations for historic preservation since North Macedonia gained independence from Yugoslavia on September 8, 1991, several organizations throughout the 20th century have encompassed efforts of historic preservation.

The "Central office for protection of cultural monuments and natural rarities of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia" has existed since 1949. In 1960, the Central Office was renamed to "National office for protection of cultural monuments", and granted the status of an independent cultural institution, with authority to execute activities of historic preservation. After the establishment of the Law on Protection of Cultural Heritage in 2004, the Ministry of Culture once again renamed the office to "National center for conservation" and narrowed down its responsibilities to dealing solely with preservation of immovable cultural heritage.[77]

Other organizations which have contributed to the efforts of historic preservation are the Macedonian National Committee of ICOMOS and the NI Institute for Protection of Monuments of Culture and Museum-Ohrid.

The International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) established their branch in North Macedonia in 1995 through the initiative of 43 conservationists from Macedonia. The guiding principles of the Macedonian National Committee of ICOMOS are raising the national consciousness about the importance of historic and cultural heritage, decentralization of the discourse about heritage, and effective monitoring of the status of cultural and historic heritage in the country.[78]

The NI Institute for Protection of Monuments of Culture and Museum – Ohrid is the second oldest institutions for historical preservation established in 1952. In 1956 the institute was granted authority to protect movable and immovable cultural and historic heritage in the Ohrid region. The institute has since executed numerous efforts for historic preservation, most notably aiding the recognition of the city of Ohrid as a UNESCO site of cultural heritage in 1979.[79]

Today, the main authority for historic preservation is the Cultural Heritage Protection Office (Управа за заштита на културно наследство). The Office is an independent governmental organization under the Ministry of Culture, divided into three departments:

  1. Identification, Protection and Use of Cultural Heritage
  2. Prevention and Supervision
  3. Documentation, International Cooperation and Administrative Affairs[80]

Israel edit

In Israel, there are currently two laws concerning historic preservation, Antiquities Law of the State of Israel (1978)[81] and Planning and Building Law (1965).[82] Both laws were adapted from the British law that was implemented during the British Mandate of Palestine.

However, these laws are not comprehensive and limited in scope: the Antiquities Law only applies itself to buildings or artifacts dated before 1700 BC. So while efforts discovering and protecting anything older than 1700 BC are well protected, anything from later historical periods is not under the protection of this law. The Planning and Building Law discusses the overall management and regulation of land use in Israel. It has been through several changes and amendments specifically regarding preservation,[83] but over the years it hasn't been enforced and many historical sites were destroyed, as the state was prioritizing developmental and economic interests.

During the 1960s, the issue of preservation was gaining public awareness, and as a response to the destruction of Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium (one of the first educational institutions in Israel) in 1959, a wave of shock and anger led to extensive public debate.[84]

In 1984, The Council for Conservation of Heritage Sites in Israel was established, at the recommendation of the Knesset and the Committee of Education. Its aims include locating remains of historic settlements, protect and conserve them as well as developing conservation principles that are specific to Israel's historic situations and are aligned with international standards.[85] The council used to operate under the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel but in 2008 registers as an independent non-profit. Today, it is the organization responsible for the most historical preservation endeavors as well as efforts to add amendments to existing laws to provide a comprehensive and effective framework for preservation in Israel.[86]

A different, separate effort in preservation comes from the Israeli Defense Force (IDF). The IDF surveyed 94 military bases and found that about 80 of them include sites worth preserving, and for each of these bases there is a preservation plan.[87] The IDF is working towards maintaining these building as well as communicating their value to the soldiers in these bases. Buildings include Knights Templar sites, old military bases used by the British or German or buildings from the Ottoman period.

Policy-making institutions edit

UNESCO (international) edit

 
The Fortress of Suomenlinna from 18th century in Helsinki, Finland, is one of the most significant UNESCO's World Heritage sites since 1991.[88]

According to UNESCO's 1972 World Heritage Convention, landscapes and sites of outstanding universal value can be designated as World Heritage Sites. The World Heritage Convention encompasses historic preservation under the category of "cultural heritage". According to Article 1 of the convention, monuments, groups of buildings, and sites "which are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science" are to be designated cultural heritage.

A requirement of such designation is that the designating nation has appropriate legal, scientific, technical, administrative and financial measures in place to identify, protect, conserve, present, and rehabilitate world heritage sites. However, according to Article 6 of the convention, while sovereignty of the State where the site is located is not to be compromised, the State acknowledges that protection of heritage sites is a duty of the entire international community.[89]

The World Heritage convention's counterpart, The World Heritage Committee,[90] is the body responsible for the practical implementation of the convention as well as managing and deciding how to use the World Heritage Fund. The committee also gets to have the final say when determining whether a property will be included in the World Heritage List.

The Committee meets once a year and includes representatives from 21 states that are part of the States Parties. Yearly reports are available to the public on the World Heritage website and include outlines of decisions made, outcomes, working documents and various reports.[91]

International partner of UNESCO is Blue Shield International. From a national and international perspective, there are many cooperations with Blue Shield organizations and with United Nations peacekeeping to ensure the sustainable existence of cultural assets.[92][93][94][95]

Unique to the United States is the requirement in federal law, stipulated in the amended National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, that all owners of property that would be designated as World Heritage must provide consent to this treatment. Functionally, this is the reason why, out of all signatories to the World Heritage Convention, the US has no urban World Heritage Sites because it is impossible to gain 100% owner consent for sites with multiple, privately owned properties. The majority of World Heritage sites in the US is owned by the federal government.

International Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) (international) edit

The International Council on Monuments and Sites, through the creation of international preservation/conservation doctrine, promulgates international guidelines for the treatment of historic buildings and places.

National Park Service (US) edit

Under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (and, as amended), the United States Secretary of the Interior is required to create and maintain a National Register of Historic Places; support, through grants and training, state historic preservation offices; facilitate the implementation of the federal historic rehabilitation tax credit; implement the World Heritage Convention; and provide training and education in historic preservation. The Secretary of the Interior delegated all of these responsibilities to the National Park Service. The National Park Service is responsible for creating and implementing most of federal preservation policy in the US, including the National Register, Secretary of the Interior's Standards, and training qualifications for professionals.

Advisory Council on Historic Preservation (ACHP) (US) edit

The National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 (NHPA) also created a new federal agency, the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation, which consists of a chair and members of the public appointed by the US president. Other members of the ACHP are statutorily appointed. The ACHP's mission, per the NHPA is to "promote the preservation, enhancement, and sustainable use of our nation's diverse historic resources, and advise the President and the Congress on national historic preservation policy." The ACHP is also responsible for implementing the regulations for Section 106 review (i.e., "environmental review") under the NHPA.

Historic England (UK) edit

Historic England is an executive non-departmental public body of the British Government sponsored by the Department for Digital, Culture, Media and Sport. It is tasked with protecting the historic environment of England by preserving and listing historic buildings, scheduling ancient monuments, registering historic Parks and Gardens and by advising central and local government.

Parks Canada (Canada) edit

Parks Canada, which is part of the Government of Canada, manages the country's 48 National Parks, three National Marine Conservation Areas, 172 National Historic Sites, one National Urban Park, and one National Landmark. Parks Canada is mandated to "protect and present nationally significant examples of Canada's natural and cultural heritage, and foster public understanding, appreciation, and enjoyment in ways that ensure their ecological and commemorative integrity for present and future generations".

Challenges edit

Natural conditions and aging edit

As a preserved site ages, various natural processes and risks will have their impact on its structures. Many of those have been addressed through history in the traditional construction and preservation methods. Nevertheless, weathering and wearing and other processes can threaten the building over time and should therefore be addressed through monitoring, preventive action and, when necessary, repairs.[96]

Such processes and risks include those stemming from natural conditions (e.g. humidity changes, extreme temperatures, high winds, soil characteristics and ground water), decay of materials (e.g. vegetation and insects, erosion, weathering, structural settling) and natural hazards (e.g. ground movements, landslides, earthquakes and subsidence, flooding, fires and storms). Countermeasures include applying early warning and monitoring technologies and methods, using traditional and modern preventive solutions on site, adequate maintenance with proper skills and disaster preparedness and mitigation measures.[96] Some practical examples include monitoring the building with fire alarm and suppression systems,[97] applying lightning protection systems, following weather reports and preparing for extreme weather conditions, regular inspections and maintenance of building structures, humidity and temperature control with appropriate HVAC systems,[98] and monitoring ground movements, underground humidity and the condition of foundations with ground penetrating radar or electrical resistivity tomography.[99]

Demographics of paid professionals, volunteers, and students in the field edit

The historic preservation field is one of the least diverse, in terms of race and ethnicity, of any of the built environment professions. 99% of preservation practitioners are white; 85% of students in higher education historic preservation programs identify as white/Non-Hispanic, 1.0% identify as American Indian, 2.3% identify as Asian, 2.8% identify as African American, and 6.4% identify as Hispanic or Latino; there are no African American people, indigenous people, and essentially no people of color, who are tenured or tenure track faculty with at least a 50% teaching appointment in historic preservation degree programs (as of 2018); and most people who volunteer in preservation commissions are white.[100]

Racial, ethnic, and gender bias in paid historic preservation practice edit

Many historic preservation and cultural resource management scholars, such as Erica Avrami,[101] Sara Bronin,[102] Gail Dubrow,[103] Jamesha Gibson,[104] Ned Kaufman,[105] Thomas King,[106] Michelle Magalong,[107] Kenyatta McLean,[108] Sharon Milholland,[109] Andrea Roberts,[110] and Jeremy Wells,[100] have presented evidence that a significant part of historic preservation practice remains biased toward people who identify as white, male, non-Latino, and who have wealth. This bias is also ingrained in the doctrine, laws, regulations, and guidelines that drive about three-quarters of the paid practice in the field.[100]

Lack of research that addresses the practice of historic preservation edit

In the United States, unlike other built environment disciplines (i.e., architecture, planning, interior design, landscape architecture), there is no tradition of intra-disciplinary research in the field that specifically addresses the practice of historic preservation, especially in relation to policy, which is its largest driver of work. Most research by preservation scholars addresses architectural history, but fails to address preservation policy, generally, including diversity, inclusion, equity, and social justice as well as topics related to community engagement and planning.[111] Noted historic preservation scholar and exception to this rule, Ned Kaufman, refers to this phenomenon as preservation's "resistance to research" in relation to the field's inability to reflect on itself in terms of failures and successes:

I should clarify what I mean by research. I do not mean investigations into architectural or landscape history, or into the chemistry of adhesives or the statics of structures. These studies concern the things on which preservation works, but they do not (except in matters of detail) determine what preservation seeks to do or how. They have little bearing on whether or not we should have a National Register of Historic Places, or tax credits, or programs to address climate change, or on whether local landmark regulations are on the whole too strict or not strict enough, or whether testimony from the public that "We have always lived in this place and like it as it is" should or should not be considered relevant. They tell us little about how well existing policies accomplish their objectives, what unintended impacts they might have, or what options might be preferable. By research, I mean the kinds of investigations that do help answer these and similar questions: research that bears on the policies beneath the preservation enterprise, the assumptions that drive them, the forces that shape them, their impact on the world. Whenever I refer to Resistance to Research, I shall mean specifically this kind of research.[112]

As of 2022, in the US, there has never been a research center, research funding (government, foundation, or otherwise), or program, of any kind, that specifically attempts to provide answers as to the effectiveness of existing preservation policies, unintended impacts of preservation policies, and possible policy alternatives. Some scholars believe that the lack of intra-disciplinary historic preservation research is due to an anti-intellectual bias in the field that privileges exigency and physical interventions over scholarly reflection.[113][114][115][116]

Climate change edit

Historic preservation assumes that it is possible to control the physical reality of a building or place through continual interventions in order to sustain the material, form, and meaning associated with such places. Climate change, especially in relation to sea level rise and associated weather events (e.g., hurricanes) threatens many historic buildings and places. In many cases, buildings cannot be saved in place due to these issues; preservation doctrine and, in some cases, regulations, prevents moving buildings to higher ground without an associated loss of historical integrity (or historical authenticity), which present an irreconcilable conundrum that the field has yet to resolve.[117]

People-centered preservation edit

In the early 2000s, a series of publications on "values-centered" preservation by the Getty Conservation Institute helped to catalyze a scholarly debate on the underlying values that drive the historic preservation enterprise, especially in relation to the public and policy (e.g., laws, regulations, guidelines).[118][119] Values-centered preservation was, in turn, preceded by earlier discussions in archaeology, in the 1990s, on the need to move from processual archaeology to postprocessual archaeology.[120] What both of these movements advocate is a move from positivism and scientism in the practice of identifying, interpreting, and preserving/conserving movable and immovable heritage toward more emancipatory ontological orientations centered in the social sciences. People-centered preservation embraces the idea that the values and meanings held by the public for their own heritage, as a form of local knowledge, has as much significance as the values and meanings held by conventionally trained experts, such as architectural historians and archaeologists.[121][122] People-centered preservation embraces the concept of the "Authorized Heritage Discourse" (AHD), established by Laurajane Smith in her book, Uses of Heritage. The AHD describes a system of communication used in built heritage practice and policy in which "the proper care of heritage, and its associated values, lies with the experts, as it is only they who have the abilities, knowledge and understanding to identify the innate value and knowledge contained at and within historically important sites and places."[123] The AHD forms the core of preservation policy created and sustained by local, state, and federal government.[124]

Many of the concepts inherent in people-centered preservation align with the need to address deficits in diversity, inclusion, equity, and justice in policy and practice.[8]

While the US National Trust for Historic Preservation has publicly embraced people-centered preservation,[9] in the United States, no local, state, or federal agency has issued any publications, guidance, or recommendations related to people-centered preservation and there have been no policy changes. In the UK, however, in 2000, the Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport and the Secretary of State for the Environment, Transport and the Regions published The Power of Place, which began to open policy discussions around values-based preservation and the introduction of social science concepts in built heritage conservation practice.[125] This was followed by Heritage Protection for the 21st Century, published by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, which continued to refine policy reform arguments in the treatment of the historic environment in the UK.[126] These publications, and the resulting public debate, did result in some policy changes that the UK government made to move practice related to the conservation of the historic environment toward a people-centered orientation.[127]

Other challenges edit

Although preservation efforts can have benefits for the owners of historical buildings, such as tax cuts and subsidies, there are also drawbacks.

One such drawback is that after a neighborhood has been designated to be historically preserved, there is less construction. On the long term this can affect the value of property and investment in housing, both in the neighborhood itself and the neighborhoods directly surrounding it.[128]

A second concern that has been raised is that buildings that need to be historically preserved are sometimes still inhabited. In some cases their inability to make changes to the building can lead to dangerous or unhealthy situations for residents.[129]

It is not true that nothing could be changed or renovated, but the owner of the building would need to ask permission at the appropriate preservation society, slowing the process down severely. The exact policies are country dependent.[130] Local historical and political realities need to be considered to preserve heritage.[131]

Historic objects in galleries, museums and archives face the challenge from fine particulates representing an aesthetic issue and an agent of chemical degradation.[132]

Influential, historical people edit

  • Eugène Viollet-le-Duc (1814–1879): French architect who restored Gothic buildings and believed that restoration could improve on the past.
  • Ann Pamela Cunningham (1816–1875): influential in saving Mount Vernon (plantation) from demolition and founding the Mount Vernon Ladies' Association, one of the first preservation organizations in the United States (est. 1854).[133]
  • John Ruskin (1819–1900): English art critic who established the basic theory of preservation (retention of status quo); was a staunch supporter of chattel slavery.[134]
  • Augustus Pitt Rivers (1827–1900): Britain's first Inspector of Ancient Monuments.
  • John Lubbock (1834–1913): campaigned for legal protection for ancient monuments and saved Avebury from destruction at the hand of its private owners.
  • William Morris (1834–1896): English designer and writer who founded the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings.
  • Camillo Boito (1836–1914): Italian architect who tried to reconcile the conflicting views of Viollet-le-Duc and Ruskin, inspiring modern legislation on restoration in several countries
  • Victor de Stuers (1843–1916): Dutch art historian, lawyer, civil servant and politician. First legal secretary at the Ministry of Home Affairs as chief of the brand new Department of Arts and Sciences.
  • George Curzon (1859–1925): British Viceroy of India who preserved Tattershall Castle, Lincolnshire and was an influential sponsor of the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913.
  • William Sumner Appleton (1874–1947): Founder of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities (now Historic New England) in 1910, and widely considered as the U.S.'s first professional preservationist. Was a eugenicist that promoted historic preservation as a way of showing that northern European-derived culture was superior to the culture of other racial and ethnic groups.[135]
  • Charles E. Peterson (1906–2004): considered to be the "founding father" of historic preservation in the United States.
  • James Marston Fitch (1909–2000): educator, author, critic and design practitioner made a major contribution to the philosophical basis of the modern preservation movement and trained and inspired generations of preservationists.
  • William J. Murtagh: first Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places in the United States and significant contributor to the literature of the discipline.[136]
  • Lee H. Nelson: worked for Charles E. Peterson at the National Park Service's Historic American Buildings Survey and helped to formulate national policies on historic preservation.
  • Walter Muir Whitehill: Chairman of the Whitehill Report in the late 1960s, which established the first guidelines for higher education historic preservation programs.
  • Richard Nickel: American preservationist who saved architectural elements from Louis Sullivan buildings.
  • Harriet Tubman (1822–1913): purchased 25 acres to erect a Home for the elderly, this site would eventually serve as a memorial to her legacy.[137]
  • Mary McLeod Bethune (1875-1955): involved in many efforts to preserve Afro-American historic sites, established an archive on Afro-American women's history, and provided funds to key organizations with similar goals.[137]
  • Madam C.J. Walker (1867–1919): gave the single largest contribution for the preservation of the Frederick Douglas Home.[137]
  • Maggie Lena Walker (1864–1934)

Professional organisations edit

See also edit

References edit

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  116. ^ R. Russell. "First Pete and Then Repeat? Fundamental Difffferences in Intention between Undergraduate and Graduate Preservation Programs in the United States." In Preservation Education: Sharing Best Practices and Finding Common Ground, edited by B. L. Stiefel and J. C. Wells, pp. 42–56, University Press of New England. (2014)
  117. ^ Hassan & Xie (2020). Climate Change and Conservation of Coastal Built Heritage. Springer.
  118. ^ Erica Avrami; Randall Mason; Marta de la Torre (2000). Values and Heritage Conservation. Getty Conservation Institute.
  119. ^ Torre, M. (2002). Assessing the Values of Heritage Conservation. Getty Conservation Institute.
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  121. ^ Madgin & Lesh (2021). People-Centred Methodologies for Heritage Conservation. Taylor & Francis.
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Bibliography edit

  • Avrami, Erica (2020). Preservation and Social Inclusion. New York: Columbia University Press.[11]
  • Avrami, E., Leo, C.-N., & Sanchez, A. S. (2018). "Confronting Exclusion; Redefining the Intended Outcomes of Historic Preservation." Change Over Time, Vol. 8, No. 1.: 102–120.
  • Birtchnell, Percy (1988). Short History of Berkhamsted. Berkhamsted: Book Stack. ISBN 978-187137200-7.
  • Bruce, Catherine Fleming. (2019). The Sustainers: Being, Building, and Doing Good through Activism in the Sacred Spaces of Civil Rights, Human Rights and Social Movements (2nd ed.). TNOVSA/Quality Books. ISBN 978-0996219068.
  • Carughi, Ugo, and Visone, Massimo. Time Frames: Conservation Policies for Twentieth-Century Architectural Heritage. New York-London: Routledge, 2017, ISBN 9781472489296.
  • Cobb, John Wolstenholme (1883). Two Lectures on the History and Antiquities of Berkhamsted. London: Nichols & Sons.
  • Fitch, James Marston (1990). Historic Preservation: Curatorial Management of the Built World. University Press of Virginia.
  • Kaufman, Ned (2009). Place, Race, and Story; Essays on the Past and Future of Historic Preservation. Routledge.
  • King, Thomas (2009). Our Unprotected Heritage: Whitewashing the Destruction of Our Cultural and Natural Resources. Left Coast Press.
  • McLean, Kenyatta. (2020). Reclaiming Time and Space: Bringing Historical Preservation into the Future. Master's thesis, MIT.[12]
  • Muñoz Viñas, Salvador (2005). Contemporary Theory of Conservation. Amsterdam: Elsevier/Butterworth Heinemann.
  • Page, Max & Randall Mason (eds.). Giving Preservation a History. New York: Routledge, 2004.
  • Price, Nicholas Stanley et al. (eds.). Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage. Los Angeles: The Getty Conservation Institute, 1996.
  • Roberts, A. R. (2020). "The End of Bootstraps and Good Masters: Fostering Social Inclusion by Creating Counternarratives." In E. Avrami (Ed.), Preservation and Social Inclusion (pp. 109–122). Columbia University Press.[13]
  • Ruskin, John. The Seven Lamps of Architecture. New York: Dover Publications, 1989. Originally published, 1880. Important for preservation theory introduced in the section, "The Lamp of Memory."
  • Sherwood, Jennifer (2008). "Influences on the Growth of Medieval and Early Modern Berkhamsted". In Wheeler, Michael (ed.). A County of Small Towns: the Development of Hertfordshire's Urban Landscape to 1800. Hatfield, UK: Hertfordshire.
  • Stipe, Robert E. (ed.). A Richer Heritage: Historic Preservation in the Twenty-First Century. Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 2003.
  • Tyler, Norman, Ted J. Ligibel, and Ilene R. Tyler. [14]Historic Preservation: An Introduction to its History, Principles, and Practice. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, 2018.
  • Viollet-le-Duc, Eugène Emmanuel. The Foundations of Architecture; Selections from the Dictionnaire Raisonné. New York: George Braziller, 1990. Originally published, 1854. Important for its introduction of restoration theory.
  • Wells, Jeremy. (2021). "10 Ways Historic Preservation Policy Supports White Supremacy and 10 Ideas to End It." University of Maryland faculty papers.[15]

External links edit

  • An Overview of Preservation in the United States (US/ICOMOS)
  • Archeology Laws: A Guide for Professionals (National Park Service)
  • Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada
  • Standards and Guidelines for Preservation in the United States

historic, preservation, this, article, about, preservation, cultural, heritage, cultural, heritage, concept, cultural, heritage, vocation, practice, managing, cultural, heritage, cultural, heritage, management, built, heritage, preservation, built, heritage, c. This article is about the preservation of cultural heritage For cultural heritage as a concept see Cultural heritage For vocation and practice of managing cultural heritage see Cultural heritage management Historic preservation US built heritage preservation or built heritage conservation UK is an endeavor that seeks to preserve conserve and protect buildings objects landscapes or other artifacts of historical significance It is a philosophical concept that became popular in the twentieth century which maintains that cities as products of centuries development should be obligated to protect their patrimonial legacy 1 The term refers specifically to the preservation of the built environment and not to preservation of for example primeval forests or wilderness 2 Today historic preservation often concerns itself with everyday vernacular landscapes associated with marginalized communities such as Barry Farm in Washington DC pictured here as much as it does monumental properties Contents 1 Areas of professional paid practice 1 1 United States 1 2 United Kingdom 2 History 2 1 England 2 1 1 The National Trust 2 1 2 English Heritage 2 1 3 National Parks 2 2 France 2 3 United States 2 3 1 National Register of Historic Places 2 3 2 National Historic Landmark 2 3 3 Historic districts 2 3 4 National Parks 2 4 Australia 2 5 Canada 2 6 The Netherlands 2 7 North Macedonia 2 8 Israel 3 Policy making institutions 3 1 UNESCO international 3 2 International Council on Monuments and Sites ICOMOS international 3 3 National Park Service US 3 4 Advisory Council on Historic Preservation ACHP US 3 5 Historic England UK 3 6 Parks Canada Canada 4 Challenges 4 1 Natural conditions and aging 4 2 Demographics of paid professionals volunteers and students in the field 4 3 Racial ethnic and gender bias in paid historic preservation practice 4 4 Lack of research that addresses the practice of historic preservation 4 5 Climate change 4 6 People centered preservation 4 7 Other challenges 5 Influential historical people 6 Professional organisations 7 See also 8 References 9 Bibliography 10 External linksAreas of professional paid practice editPaid work performed by trained professionals in historic preservation can be divided into the practice areas of regulatory compliance architecture and construction historic sites museums advocacy and downtown revitalization rejuvenation each of these areas has a different set of expected skills knowledge and abilities 3 United States edit In the United States about 70 of professional paid practice in historic preservation is in the area of regulatory compliance which is driven by laws regulations and guidelines promulgated at the federal state and local levels 3 At the federal level these include the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and associated regulations such as Section 106 54 USC 306108 formerly known as 36 CFR 800 National Register of Historic Places 54 USC 302101 302108 and the Secretary of the Interior s Standards 36 CFR 67 many states have laws that reference these federal regulations or create parallel regulations using federal regulatory language At the local level preservation laws and regulations are known as preservation ordinances and define the need for private property owners to seek a certificate of appropriateness when making modifications to existing buildings that are listed in a local historical register 4 Refer to the table below for the full breakdown of various practice areas in the United States Areas of professional paid practice in historic preservation in the United States 3 Area of practice Percent out of 100 Regulatory compliance federal state and local 69 7 Architecture and construction 11 2 Historic sites museums 8 9 Preservation advocacy 5 7 Downtown revitalization 4 5 United Kingdom edit According to a 2008 survey conducted by the National Heritage Training Group the size of the built heritage conservation sector and how its various specializations break down is not known 5 History editEngland edit In England antiquarian interests were a familiar gentleman s pursuit since the mid 17th century developing in tandem with the rise in scientific curiosity Fellows of the Royal Society were often also Fellows of the Society of Antiquaries citation needed nbsp The ruins of Berkhamsted castle viewed from its Norman motte and Berkhamsted Common were the location of two successful early preservation events in the nineteenth century Enlarged A train passes Berkhamsted castle on an embankment that was once part of the castle s outer defences Many historic sites were damaged as the railways began to spread across the UK these sites included Trinity Hospital and its church in Edinburgh Furness Abbey Berwick and Northampton Castle as well as the ancient walls of York Chester and Newcastle In 1833 Berkhamsted Castle became the first historic site in England to be officially protected by statute under the London and Birmingham Railway Acts of 1833 1837 though the new railway line in 1834 did demolish the castle s gatehouse and outer earthworks to the south 6 In 1847 the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust was formed by a private Act of Parliament to prevent the Stratford property s sale to American showman P T Barnum 7 Another early preservation event also occurred at Berkhamsted In 1866 Lord Brownlow who lived at Ashridge House tried to enclose the adjoining Berkhamsted Common with 5 foot 2 m steel fences in an attempt to claim it as part of his estate In England from early Anglo Saxon times Common land was an area of land which the local community could use as a resource Across England between 1660 and 1845 7 million acres of Common land had been enclosed by private land owners by application to parliament On the night of 6 March 1866 Augustus Smith MP led gangs of local folk and hired men from London s East End in direct action to break the enclosure fences and protect Berkhamsted Common for the people of Berkhamsted in what became known nationally as the Battle of Berkhamsted Common 8 9 10 In 1870 Sir Robert Hunter later co founder of the National Trust in 1895 and the Commons Preservation Society succeed in legal action that ensured protection of Berkhamsted Common and other open spaces threatened with enclosure In 1926 the common was acquired by the National Trust 11 12 13 nbsp John Lubbock MP was a moving force behind the implementation of the Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882 By the mid 19th century much of Britain s unprotected cultural heritage was being slowly destroyed Even well meaning archaeologists like William Greenwell excavated sites with virtually no attempt at their preservation Stonehenge came under increasing threat by the 1870s Tourists were chipping off parts of the stones or carving their initials into the rock The private owners of the monument decided to sell the land to the London and South Western Railway who stated that the monument was not the slightest use to anyone now 14 John Lubbock an MP and botanist emerged as the champion of the country s national heritage In 1872 he personally bought private land that housed ancient monuments in Avebury Silbury Hill and elsewhere from the owners who were threatening to have them cleared away to make room for housing Soon he began campaigning in Parliament for legislation to protect monuments from destruction This finally led to the legislative milestone under the Liberal government of William Gladstone of the Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882 The first government appointed inspector for this job was the archaeologist Augustus Pitt Rivers This legislation was regarded by conservative political elements as a grave assault on the individual rights of property of the owner and consequently the inspector only had the power to identify endangered landmarks and offer to purchase them from the owner with his consent The Act only covered ancient monuments and explicitly did not cover historic buildings or structures In 1877 the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings was founded by the Arts and Crafts designer William Morris to prevent the destruction of historic buildings followed by the National Trust in 1895 that bought estates from their owners for preservation 15 The Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882 had only given legal protection to prehistoric sites such as ancient tumuli The Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1900 took this further by empowering the government s Commissioners of Work and local County Councils to protect a wider range of properties Further updates were made in 1910 nbsp Tattershall Castle preserved at personal expense by Lord Curzon and a catalyst for broader heritage protection lawsTattershall Castle Lincolnshire a medieval manor house had been put up for sale in 1910 with its greatest treasures the huge medieval fireplaces still intact However when an American bought the house they were ripped out and packaged up for shipping The former viceroy of India George Curzon 1st Marquess Curzon of Kedleston was outraged at this cultural destruction and stepped in to buy back the castle and reinstall the fireplaces After a nationwide hunt for them they were finally found in London and returned 16 He restored the castle 17 and left it to the National Trust on his death in 1925 His experience at Tattershall influenced Lord Curzon to push for tougher heritage protection laws in Britain which saw passage as the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913 The new structure involved the creation of the Ancient Monuments Board to oversee the protection of such monuments Powers were given for the board with Parliamentary approval to issue preservation orders to protect monuments and extended the public right of access to these The term monument was extended to include the lands around it allowing the protection of the wider landscape 18 The National Trust edit Main article National TrustThe National Trust was founded in 1894 by Octavia Hill Sir Robert Hunter and Hardwicke Canon Rawnsley as the first organisation of its type in the world Its formal purpose is The preservation for the benefit of the Nation of lands and tenements including buildings of beauty or historic interest and as regards lands for the preservation of their natural aspect features and animal and plant life Also the preservation of furniture pictures and chattels of any description having national and historic or artistic interest 19 In the early days the Trust was concerned primarily with protecting open spaces and a variety of threatened buildings Its first acquisition was Dinas Oleu a piece of land on the clifftop above Barmouth in Wales donated in 1895 Two other sites acquired by the Trust in its early years later became nature reserves Wicken Fen in Cambridgeshire and Blakeney Point in Norfolk 20 36 37 White Barrow on Salisbury Plain was the Trust s first archaeological monument White Barrow on Salisbury Plain was the Trust s first archaeological monument purchased in 1909 for 60 21 The focus on country houses and gardens which now comprise the majority of its most visited properties came about in the mid 20th century when it was realised that the private owners of many of these properties were no longer able to afford to maintain them 20 84 103 English Heritage edit English Heritage formed in 1983 is a registered charity that looks after the National Heritage Collection in England 22 This comprises over 400 of England s historic buildings monuments and sites spanning more than 5 000 years of history Within its portfolio are Stonehenge Dover Castle Tintagel Castle and the best preserved parts of Hadrian s Wall Originally English Heritage was the operating name of an executive non departmental public body of the British Government officially titled the Historic Buildings and Monuments Commission for England that ran the national system of heritage protection and managed a range of historic properties 23 It was created to combine the roles of existing bodies that had emerged from a long period of state involvement in heritage protection In 1999 the organisation merged with the Royal Commission on the Historical Monuments of England and the National Monuments Record England bringing together resources for the identification and survey of England s historic environment On 1 April 2015 English Heritage was divided into two parts Historic England which inherited the statutory and protection functions of the old organisation and the new English Heritage Trust a charity that would operate the historic properties and which took on the English Heritage operating name and logo 22 23 24 The British government gave the new charity an 80 million grant to help establish it as an independent trust although the historic properties remained in the ownership of the state The Town and Country Planning Acts of 1944 and 1947 established the listing of buildings of special architectural or historic interest by 2017 there were 377 700 listed buildings on the National Heritage List for England which is maintained by Historic England 25 National Parks edit Main article National parks of the United Kingdom France edit Main article Monument historique History In 1790 Aubin Louis Millin submitted a report to the Constituent Assembly regarding the demolition of the Bastille using the term monument historique transl historic monument The idea of preserving sites linked to the Ancien Regime and earlier circulated as a result and under impetus of Talleyrand the Assembly on the 13th of October created the commission des monuments transl Commission of Monuments whose function was to study the fate of monuments arts and sciences The following year Alexandre Lenoir was appointed to create the Musee des Monuments francais transl Museum of French Monuments which opened in 1795 and exhibited fragments of architecture Lenoir had saved and salvaged from destruction over the previous years The museum was ultimately closed during the Restoration by Louis XVIII and its collection was returned to the original owners and their families 26 The vandalism and widespread destruction which accompanied the French Revolution had inspired several such responses and the first known register of such buildings was an inventory of the castles begun by Louis XVI by the conseil des batiments civils transl Council of Civil Buildings which was completed in 1795 Between 1804 and 1834 several archaeological societies were formed notably the Societe des antiquaires de France in 1804 originally the Academie celtique the Societe francaise d archeologie in 1834 and the Comite des travaux historiques et scientifiques also in 1834 27 In 1819 the Ministry of the Interior provided an allowance for monuments historiques for the first time 28 and on 21 October 1830 Francois Guizot then Minister of the Interior proposed the creation of a post the Inspector General of Historic Monuments to classify buildings and distribute funds for their preservation This post was first assigned to Ludovic Vitet on 25 November 1830 and later to Prosper Merimee on 27 May 1834 29 30 31 In 1837 Bachasson in his capacity of Minister of the Interior officially established the Commission des monuments historiques transl Commission for Historic Monuments to carry out the work of classification and producing an inventory as well as distributing funding and training architects for restoration work Eugene Viollet le Duc among them 32 The Commission published its first inventory in 1840 33 and subsequently continued its inventory work as well as create visual records for any future restoration To this end it created the Mission Heliographique to photograph monuments in 1851 During this period the combination of reluctance to understand the government s prerogatives and the fact that the classification of privet property required the owners consent resulted in the gradual decrease in the number of registered monuments 27 On 2 May 1887 a law was passed establishing procedures for the classification of historic monuments as well as establish provisions for a body of Architecte en chef des monuments historiques for their upkeep In 1906 French law laid down principles of classification of natural sites Under the 1905 Law of Separation of Church and State local communities and the government were entrusted with the care and upkeep of religious buildings however this led to refusal to care for buildings not of national interest by some and the auctioning off of heritage by others Per consequence on 13 December 1913 a law was passed which widened the field of protection for classified monuments including changing national interest to public interest and allowing the classification of private property without the consent of the owner 34 35 During the 1920s and 1930s classification further opened up to private property additionally monuments post dating the Ancien Regime began to be classified In 1925 a second order of classification was introduced inscription a l inventaire supplementaire des monuments historiques transl inscription in the supplementary inventory of historical monuments In 1930 the classifications were renamed classe and inscrit transl classified and registered and classification was allowed to include the land immediately surrounding a classified building During the Nazi Occupation numerous classifications were made both in order to prevent destruction of monuments and to provide some protection from compulsory labour 36 United States edit See also National Park Service and Antiquities Act nbsp Mount Vernon plantation near Alexandria VirginiaIn the United States one of the first historic preservation efforts was the Washington s Headquarters State Historic Site in Newburgh New York This property has the distinction of being the first ever property designated and operated as a historic site by a U S state having been so since 1850 Another early historic preservation undertaking was that of George Washington s Mount Vernon in 1858 37 Founded in 1889 the Richmond Virginia based Preservation Virginia formerly known as the Association for the Preservation of Virginia Antiquities was the United States first statewide historic preservation group 38 39 The American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society was formed in 1895 as the first American organization of its kind in the United States that did not limit its activities to a single historic place or object The Society operated as a national organization to protect the natural scenery and the preservation of historic landmarks to preserve landmarks and records of the past or present to erect memorials and promote appreciation of the scenic beauty of America 40 Charles E Peterson was an influential figure in the mid 20th century establishing the Historic American Buildings Survey HABS advising on the establishment of Independence National Historical Park helping with the first graduate degree program in historic preservation in the United States at Columbia University and author The architectural firm of Simons amp Lapham Albert Simons and Samuel Lapham was an influential supporter of the nation s first historic preservation ordinance in Charleston South Carolina in 1930 affording that city a regulatory means by which to prevent the destruction of its historic building stock In 1925 efforts to preserve the historic buildings of the French Quarter in New Orleans led to the creation of the Vieux Carre Commission and later to the adoption of a historic preservation ordinance 41 42 nbsp The preservation of this historic building in Washington D C resulted in an award for Excellence in Historic Preservation by the local government 43 The US National Trust for Historic Preservation another privately funded non profit organization began in 1949 with a handful of structures and has developed goals that provide leadership education advocacy and resources to save America s diverse historic places and revitalize our communities according to the Trust s mission statement In 1951 the Trust assumed responsibility for its first museum property Woodlawn Plantation in northern Virginia Twenty eight sites in all have subsequently become part of the National Trust representing the cultural diversity of American history In New York City the destruction of Pennsylvania Station in 1964 shocked many nationwide into supporting preservation The 1960s proved advantageous with new laws and international agreements extending preservation from ancient monuments to whole districts and buildings a few decades old 44 On an international level the New York based World Monuments Fund was founded in 1965 to preserve historic sites all over the world Under the direction of James Marston Fitch the first advanced degree historic preservation program began at Columbia University in 1964 45 It became the model on which most other graduate historic preservation programs were created 46 Many other programs were to follow before 1980 M A in Preservation Planning from Cornell 1975 M S in Historic Preservation from the University of Vermont 1975 M S in Historic Preservation Studies from Boston University 1976 M S in Historic Preservation from Eastern Michigan University 1979 and M F A in Historic Preservation was one of the original programs at Savannah College of Art amp Design James Marston Fitch also offered guidance and support towards the founding of the Master of Preservation Studies Degree within the Tulane School of Architecture 47 in 1996 48 The M Sc in Building Conservation degree program is offered by the School of Architecture at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute in Troy New York In 2005 Clemson University and the College of Charleston created an M S degree program based in Charleston SC The first undergraduate programs B A appeared in 1977 from Goucher College and Roger Williams University then called Roger Williams College followed by Mary Washington College in 1979 49 As of 2013 update there were more than fifty historic preservation programs offering certificates associate bachelor s and master s degrees in the United States 50 Under the direction of Jorge Otero Pailos the first PhD in Historic Preservation in the United States was founded at Columbia Graduate School of Architecture Planning and Preservation in 2018 51 National Register of Historic Places edit Main article National Register of Historic Places nbsp National Register of Historic Places plaqueNational Historic Landmark edit Main article National Historic Landmark Historic districts edit Main article Historic district United States A historic district in the United States is a group of buildings properties or sites that have been designated by one of several entities on different levels as historically or architecturally significant Buildings structures objects and sites within a historic district are normally divided into two categories contributing and non contributing Districts greatly vary in size some having hundreds of structures while others have just a few The U S federal government designates historic districts through the U S Department of Interior under the auspices of the National Park Service Federally designated historic districts are listed on the National Register of Historic Places 52 Historic districts allows rural areas to preserve their characters through historic preservation programs These include Main Street programs that can be used to redevelop rural downtowns Using historic preservation programs as an economic development tool for local governments in rural areas has enabled some of those areas to take advantage of their history and develop a tourism market that in turn provides funds for maintaining an economic stability that these areas would not have seen otherwise 53 54 A similar concept exists in the United Kingdom a Conservation area is designated in accordance with the Planning Listed Buildings and Conservation Areas Act 1990 in order to protect a zone in which there are buildings of architectural or cultural heritage interest National Parks edit Main article National Park The Department of the Interior designated several areas of Morristown New Jersey as the first historic park in the United States national park system It became designated as the Morristown National Historical Park 55 The community had permanent settlements that date to 1715 is termed the military capital of the American Revolution and contains many designations of sites and locations The park includes three major sites in Morristown In the United Kingdom James Bryce the ambassador to the US praised the system of National Parks and campaigned to have them introduced in Great Britain Little came of it until mounting public pressure during the early 20th century from the Ramblers Association and other groups led to the National Parks and Access to the Countryside Act 1949 citation needed Australia edit Further information Australian Heritage Council nbsp Melbourne s APA Building was constructed in Queen Anne style in 1889 and demolished in 1981 All of Australia s major cities have had historic or heritage preservation establishments and legislation in place since the mid to late 1970s though destruction or outright demolition of historic buildings continues in most Australian cities to this day subject to council or planning approval particularly outside of the city centres in historic neighbourhoods 56 57 Melbourne was founded in 1835 and grew enormously in wealth and prosperity following the 1850s gold rush which resulted in a construction boom large edifices were erected to serve as public buildings such as libraries court houses schools churches and offices This led to a period where Melbourne became known as Marvellous Melbourne boasting the largest collection of Victorian architecture outside of England However in the years that followed and as the thousands of Australian soldiers arrived back from the battlefields following the end of World War I there emerged a sense of renewed pride and a willingness to forget the dark days of war and distance Australian from its Victorian origins considered unfashionable or outdated by some The Council of the City of Melbourne was no doubt buoyed by this new nationalistic pride and put in place schemes to modernize the city which included increasing the building height limit and removing some of the Victorian era cast ironwork In the years leading up to World War II the Whelan the Wrecker firm had already pulled down thousands of structures in both the city and surrounding suburbs as Melbourne became particularly conscious of International Modernism James Paul Whelan s obituary of 1938 suggests that his company had the task of demolishing up to 98 of buildings marked for removal in the city alone 58 The rise of this International Modernism saw a new approach that valued replacing older elaborate inefficient buildings with new ones An early example of this was a City of Melbourne by law in 1954 that mandated the demolition of all posted cast iron verandas 59 thought to be dangerous as well as old fashioned in order to clean up the city before the 1956 Summer Olympics Sydney Australia s oldest city was also affected by the International Modernism period and also suffered an extensive loss of its Victorian architecture something that subsisted well into the 1980s From the 1950s onwards many of Sydney s handsome sandstone and masonry buildings were wiped away by architects and developers who built brown concrete monstrosities in their place The 1980s saw uncomfortable pastiches of facades with no coherence and little artistic merit 60 Green bans in Australian cities such as Sydney and Melbourne came into effect in the 1970s and the Australian Heritage Commission AHS was established by the Federal Government in 1975 by the Australian Heritage Commission Act 1975 as the first body to manage natural and cultural heritage in Australia until its demise in 2004 61 It was responsible for the Register of the National Estate The Australian National Heritage List was established in 2003 Controversy arose in 2016 in Melbourne after the historic Corkman Irish Pub was illegally demolished overnight resulting in the State Planning Minister pursuing an order via the Victorian Administrative Appeals Tribunal for the two story pub to be rebuilt 62 The site owners were fined AUD 1 325 million after pleading guilty to the process In the city of Adelaide large public protests erupted in the 1980s regarding the 1983 campaign to save the Aurora Hotel in Hindmarsh Square which had been recommended for listing on the city heritage register but refused because the site was to be redeveloped 63 The protest led to the emergence of Aurora Heritage Action Inc AHA which became the most vocal heritage lobby group in Adelaide during the decade often working in cooperation with residents associations and later the National Trust While governments were urged to protect the traditional character of Adelaide capital became more widely available for development The large increase in property development from 1987 increased opposition to further demolition of Adelaide s historic buildings Local councils and lobbyists alike aimed to expand the horizon of heritage to protect historic precincts across the city even if buildings within those precincts did not warrant heritage listing The Bannon government slowly responded to public demand and introduced historic conservation zones through a revision to the Planning Act 1982 in 1989 Not regulated by the Planning Act the City of Adelaide endeavoured to create on a similar scheme which became known as the townscape initiative facilitating one of the most destructive political debates in the council s history Canada edit Main article Heritage conservation in Canada In Canada the phrase heritage preservation is sometimes seen as a specific approach to the treatment of historic places and sites rather than a general concept of conservation Conservation is taken as the more general term referring to all actions or processes that are aimed at safeguarding the character defining elements of a cultural resource so as to retain its heritage value and extend its physical life Historic objects in Canada may be granted special designation by any of the three levels of government the federal government the provincial government or a municipal government The Heritage Canada Foundation acts as Canada s lead advocacy organization for heritage buildings and landscapes The Netherlands edit Victor de Stuers is widely considered the man who started historic preservation in the Netherlands In 1875 the first national department for conservation was established 64 and de Stuers was appointed as the first legal secretary at the Ministry of Home Affairs as chief of the brand new Department of Arts and Sciences He was the driving force behind Monumentenzorg Foundation for Historic Preservation helped found the Rijksmuseum National Museum and the Rijksarchief National Archives 65 66 However it was not until the 20th century that there was national legislation on historic preservation In 1961 the Monumentenwet Monuments Act was passed It defined that any physical building or space that was at least fifty years old and which are of general interest because of their beauty their meaning to science or their social value and must thus be preserved 67 68 In 1988 this Act was replaced by the Monumentenwet 1988 Monuments Act 1988 69 and in 2015 by the Erfgoedwet Heritage Law 70 In 1973 the NGO Monumentenwacht Monument Watch was founded with the purpose of providing preventative measures of maintenance for historic buildings As the majority of the historic preservation programs in the Netherlands this program is decentralized managed on the provincial level 71 Owners of heritage buildings can subscribe to the services of Monumentenwacht and receive regular visits for inspection The costs are covered through a combination of national and provincial subsidies 72 A special kind of preservation that takes place in the Netherlands is the preservation of maritime heritage Maritime trade was the Dutch specialty which shaped much of their culture and as a country that is 50 under sea level the Dutch history is closely intertwined with water 73 There are maritime museums in both Amsterdam and Rotterdam that tell the story of the Dutch maritime heritage but there is not much legal documentation on how to preserve it For example according to Sarah Dromgoole 74 shipwrecks from The Dutch East India Company are found all around the world which are still property of the Netherlands but the Dutch government rarely takes responsibility for this property that is found outside of their territory 75 North Macedonia edit In North Macedonia historic preservation falls under the overarching category of cultural heritage preservation according to the Law on Protection of Cultural Heritage Zakon za zashtita na kulturnoto nasledstvo According to this law which the Macedonian Parliament approved in March 2004 there are three types of cultural heritage immovable movable and intangible Historical preservation is represented by the protection of monuments and monumental entireties under immovable cultural heritage and historical items under movable cultural heritage 76 Although this law was the first nationwide establishment of regulations for historic preservation since North Macedonia gained independence from Yugoslavia on September 8 1991 several organizations throughout the 20th century have encompassed efforts of historic preservation The Central office for protection of cultural monuments and natural rarities of the Socialist Republic of Macedonia has existed since 1949 In 1960 the Central Office was renamed to National office for protection of cultural monuments and granted the status of an independent cultural institution with authority to execute activities of historic preservation After the establishment of the Law on Protection of Cultural Heritage in 2004 the Ministry of Culture once again renamed the office to National center for conservation and narrowed down its responsibilities to dealing solely with preservation of immovable cultural heritage 77 Other organizations which have contributed to the efforts of historic preservation are the Macedonian National Committee of ICOMOS and the NI Institute for Protection of Monuments of Culture and Museum Ohrid The International Council on Monuments and Sites ICOMOS established their branch in North Macedonia in 1995 through the initiative of 43 conservationists from Macedonia The guiding principles of the Macedonian National Committee of ICOMOS are raising the national consciousness about the importance of historic and cultural heritage decentralization of the discourse about heritage and effective monitoring of the status of cultural and historic heritage in the country 78 The NI Institute for Protection of Monuments of Culture and Museum Ohrid is the second oldest institutions for historical preservation established in 1952 In 1956 the institute was granted authority to protect movable and immovable cultural and historic heritage in the Ohrid region The institute has since executed numerous efforts for historic preservation most notably aiding the recognition of the city of Ohrid as a UNESCO site of cultural heritage in 1979 79 Today the main authority for historic preservation is the Cultural Heritage Protection Office Uprava za zashtita na kulturno nasledstvo The Office is an independent governmental organization under the Ministry of Culture divided into three departments Identification Protection and Use of Cultural Heritage Prevention and Supervision Documentation International Cooperation and Administrative Affairs 80 Israel edit In Israel there are currently two laws concerning historic preservation Antiquities Law of the State of Israel 1978 81 and Planning and Building Law 1965 82 Both laws were adapted from the British law that was implemented during the British Mandate of Palestine However these laws are not comprehensive and limited in scope the Antiquities Law only applies itself to buildings or artifacts dated before 1700 BC So while efforts discovering and protecting anything older than 1700 BC are well protected anything from later historical periods is not under the protection of this law The Planning and Building Law discusses the overall management and regulation of land use in Israel It has been through several changes and amendments specifically regarding preservation 83 but over the years it hasn t been enforced and many historical sites were destroyed as the state was prioritizing developmental and economic interests During the 1960s the issue of preservation was gaining public awareness and as a response to the destruction of Herzliya Hebrew Gymnasium one of the first educational institutions in Israel in 1959 a wave of shock and anger led to extensive public debate 84 In 1984 The Council for Conservation of Heritage Sites in Israel was established at the recommendation of the Knesset and the Committee of Education Its aims include locating remains of historic settlements protect and conserve them as well as developing conservation principles that are specific to Israel s historic situations and are aligned with international standards 85 The council used to operate under the Society for the Protection of Nature in Israel but in 2008 registers as an independent non profit Today it is the organization responsible for the most historical preservation endeavors as well as efforts to add amendments to existing laws to provide a comprehensive and effective framework for preservation in Israel 86 A different separate effort in preservation comes from the Israeli Defense Force IDF The IDF surveyed 94 military bases and found that about 80 of them include sites worth preserving and for each of these bases there is a preservation plan 87 The IDF is working towards maintaining these building as well as communicating their value to the soldiers in these bases Buildings include Knights Templar sites old military bases used by the British or German or buildings from the Ottoman period Policy making institutions editUNESCO international edit nbsp The Fortress of Suomenlinna from 18th century in Helsinki Finland is one of the most significant UNESCO s World Heritage sites since 1991 88 According to UNESCO s 1972 World Heritage Convention landscapes and sites of outstanding universal value can be designated as World Heritage Sites The World Heritage Convention encompasses historic preservation under the category of cultural heritage According to Article 1 of the convention monuments groups of buildings and sites which are of outstanding universal value from the point of view of history art or science are to be designated cultural heritage A requirement of such designation is that the designating nation has appropriate legal scientific technical administrative and financial measures in place to identify protect conserve present and rehabilitate world heritage sites However according to Article 6 of the convention while sovereignty of the State where the site is located is not to be compromised the State acknowledges that protection of heritage sites is a duty of the entire international community 89 The World Heritage convention s counterpart The World Heritage Committee 90 is the body responsible for the practical implementation of the convention as well as managing and deciding how to use the World Heritage Fund The committee also gets to have the final say when determining whether a property will be included in the World Heritage List The Committee meets once a year and includes representatives from 21 states that are part of the States Parties Yearly reports are available to the public on the World Heritage website and include outlines of decisions made outcomes working documents and various reports 91 International partner of UNESCO is Blue Shield International From a national and international perspective there are many cooperations with Blue Shield organizations and with United Nations peacekeeping to ensure the sustainable existence of cultural assets 92 93 94 95 Unique to the United States is the requirement in federal law stipulated in the amended National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 that all owners of property that would be designated as World Heritage must provide consent to this treatment Functionally this is the reason why out of all signatories to the World Heritage Convention the US has no urban World Heritage Sites because it is impossible to gain 100 owner consent for sites with multiple privately owned properties The majority of World Heritage sites in the US is owned by the federal government International Council on Monuments and Sites ICOMOS international edit The International Council on Monuments and Sites through the creation of international preservation conservation doctrine promulgates international guidelines for the treatment of historic buildings and places National Park Service US edit Under the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 and as amended the United States Secretary of the Interior is required to create and maintain a National Register of Historic Places support through grants and training state historic preservation offices facilitate the implementation of the federal historic rehabilitation tax credit implement the World Heritage Convention and provide training and education in historic preservation The Secretary of the Interior delegated all of these responsibilities to the National Park Service The National Park Service is responsible for creating and implementing most of federal preservation policy in the US including the National Register Secretary of the Interior s Standards and training qualifications for professionals Advisory Council on Historic Preservation ACHP US edit The National Historic Preservation Act of 1966 NHPA also created a new federal agency the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation which consists of a chair and members of the public appointed by the US president Other members of the ACHP are statutorily appointed The ACHP s mission per the NHPA is to promote the preservation enhancement and sustainable use of our nation s diverse historic resources and advise the President and the Congress on national historic preservation policy The ACHP is also responsible for implementing the regulations for Section 106 review i e environmental review under the NHPA Historic England UK edit Historic England is an executive non departmental public body of the British Government sponsored by the Department for Digital Culture Media and Sport It is tasked with protecting the historic environment of England by preserving and listing historic buildings scheduling ancient monuments registering historic Parks and Gardens and by advising central and local government Parks Canada Canada edit Parks Canada which is part of the Government of Canada manages the country s 48 National Parks three National Marine Conservation Areas 172 National Historic Sites one National Urban Park and one National Landmark Parks Canada is mandated to protect and present nationally significant examples of Canada s natural and cultural heritage and foster public understanding appreciation and enjoyment in ways that ensure their ecological and commemorative integrity for present and future generations Challenges editNatural conditions and aging edit As a preserved site ages various natural processes and risks will have their impact on its structures Many of those have been addressed through history in the traditional construction and preservation methods Nevertheless weathering and wearing and other processes can threaten the building over time and should therefore be addressed through monitoring preventive action and when necessary repairs 96 Such processes and risks include those stemming from natural conditions e g humidity changes extreme temperatures high winds soil characteristics and ground water decay of materials e g vegetation and insects erosion weathering structural settling and natural hazards e g ground movements landslides earthquakes and subsidence flooding fires and storms Countermeasures include applying early warning and monitoring technologies and methods using traditional and modern preventive solutions on site adequate maintenance with proper skills and disaster preparedness and mitigation measures 96 Some practical examples include monitoring the building with fire alarm and suppression systems 97 applying lightning protection systems following weather reports and preparing for extreme weather conditions regular inspections and maintenance of building structures humidity and temperature control with appropriate HVAC systems 98 and monitoring ground movements underground humidity and the condition of foundations with ground penetrating radar or electrical resistivity tomography 99 Demographics of paid professionals volunteers and students in the field edit The historic preservation field is one of the least diverse in terms of race and ethnicity of any of the built environment professions 99 of preservation practitioners are white 85 of students in higher education historic preservation programs identify as white Non Hispanic 1 0 identify as American Indian 2 3 identify as Asian 2 8 identify as African American and 6 4 identify as Hispanic or Latino there are no African American people indigenous people and essentially no people of color who are tenured or tenure track faculty with at least a 50 teaching appointment in historic preservation degree programs as of 2018 and most people who volunteer in preservation commissions are white 100 Racial ethnic and gender bias in paid historic preservation practice edit Many historic preservation and cultural resource management scholars such as Erica Avrami 101 Sara Bronin 102 Gail Dubrow 103 Jamesha Gibson 104 Ned Kaufman 105 Thomas King 106 Michelle Magalong 107 Kenyatta McLean 108 Sharon Milholland 109 Andrea Roberts 110 and Jeremy Wells 100 have presented evidence that a significant part of historic preservation practice remains biased toward people who identify as white male non Latino and who have wealth This bias is also ingrained in the doctrine laws regulations and guidelines that drive about three quarters of the paid practice in the field 100 Lack of research that addresses the practice of historic preservation edit In the United States unlike other built environment disciplines i e architecture planning interior design landscape architecture there is no tradition of intra disciplinary research in the field that specifically addresses the practice of historic preservation especially in relation to policy which is its largest driver of work Most research by preservation scholars addresses architectural history but fails to address preservation policy generally including diversity inclusion equity and social justice as well as topics related to community engagement and planning 111 Noted historic preservation scholar and exception to this rule Ned Kaufman refers to this phenomenon as preservation s resistance to research in relation to the field s inability to reflect on itself in terms of failures and successes I should clarify what I mean by research I do not mean investigations into architectural or landscape history or into the chemistry of adhesives or the statics of structures These studies concern the things on which preservation works but they do not except in matters of detail determine what preservation seeks to do or how They have little bearing on whether or not we should have a National Register of Historic Places or tax credits or programs to address climate change or on whether local landmark regulations are on the whole too strict or not strict enough or whether testimony from the public that We have always lived in this place and like it as it is should or should not be considered relevant They tell us little about how well existing policies accomplish their objectives what unintended impacts they might have or what options might be preferable By research I mean the kinds of investigations that do help answer these and similar questions research that bears on the policies beneath the preservation enterprise the assumptions that drive them the forces that shape them their impact on the world Whenever I refer to Resistance to Research I shall mean specifically this kind of research 112 As of 2022 in the US there has never been a research center research funding government foundation or otherwise or program of any kind that specifically attempts to provide answers as to the effectiveness of existing preservation policies unintended impacts of preservation policies and possible policy alternatives Some scholars believe that the lack of intra disciplinary historic preservation research is due to an anti intellectual bias in the field that privileges exigency and physical interventions over scholarly reflection 113 114 115 116 Climate change edit Historic preservation assumes that it is possible to control the physical reality of a building or place through continual interventions in order to sustain the material form and meaning associated with such places Climate change especially in relation to sea level rise and associated weather events e g hurricanes threatens many historic buildings and places In many cases buildings cannot be saved in place due to these issues preservation doctrine and in some cases regulations prevents moving buildings to higher ground without an associated loss of historical integrity or historical authenticity which present an irreconcilable conundrum that the field has yet to resolve 117 People centered preservation edit In the early 2000s a series of publications on values centered preservation by the Getty Conservation Institute helped to catalyze a scholarly debate on the underlying values that drive the historic preservation enterprise especially in relation to the public and policy e g laws regulations guidelines 118 119 Values centered preservation was in turn preceded by earlier discussions in archaeology in the 1990s on the need to move from processual archaeology to postprocessual archaeology 120 What both of these movements advocate is a move from positivism and scientism in the practice of identifying interpreting and preserving conserving movable and immovable heritage toward more emancipatory ontological orientations centered in the social sciences People centered preservation embraces the idea that the values and meanings held by the public for their own heritage as a form of local knowledge has as much significance as the values and meanings held by conventionally trained experts such as architectural historians and archaeologists 121 122 People centered preservation embraces the concept of the Authorized Heritage Discourse AHD established by Laurajane Smith in her book Uses of Heritage The AHD describes a system of communication used in built heritage practice and policy in which the proper care of heritage and its associated values lies with the experts as it is only they who have the abilities knowledge and understanding to identify the innate value and knowledge contained at and within historically important sites and places 123 The AHD forms the core of preservation policy created and sustained by local state and federal government 124 Many of the concepts inherent in people centered preservation align with the need to address deficits in diversity inclusion equity and justice in policy and practice 8 While the US National Trust for Historic Preservation has publicly embraced people centered preservation 9 in the United States no local state or federal agency has issued any publications guidance or recommendations related to people centered preservation and there have been no policy changes In the UK however in 2000 the Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport and the Secretary of State for the Environment Transport and the Regions published The Power of Place which began to open policy discussions around values based preservation and the introduction of social science concepts in built heritage conservation practice 125 This was followed by Heritage Protection for the 21st Century published by the Department for Culture Media and Sport which continued to refine policy reform arguments in the treatment of the historic environment in the UK 126 These publications and the resulting public debate did result in some policy changes that the UK government made to move practice related to the conservation of the historic environment toward a people centered orientation 127 Other challenges edit Although preservation efforts can have benefits for the owners of historical buildings such as tax cuts and subsidies there are also drawbacks One such drawback is that after a neighborhood has been designated to be historically preserved there is less construction On the long term this can affect the value of property and investment in housing both in the neighborhood itself and the neighborhoods directly surrounding it 128 A second concern that has been raised is that buildings that need to be historically preserved are sometimes still inhabited In some cases their inability to make changes to the building can lead to dangerous or unhealthy situations for residents 129 It is not true that nothing could be changed or renovated but the owner of the building would need to ask permission at the appropriate preservation society slowing the process down severely The exact policies are country dependent 130 Local historical and political realities need to be considered to preserve heritage 131 Historic objects in galleries museums and archives face the challenge from fine particulates representing an aesthetic issue and an agent of chemical degradation 132 Influential historical people editEugene Viollet le Duc 1814 1879 French architect who restored Gothic buildings and believed that restoration could improve on the past Ann Pamela Cunningham 1816 1875 influential in saving Mount Vernon plantation from demolition and founding the Mount Vernon Ladies Association one of the first preservation organizations in the United States est 1854 133 John Ruskin 1819 1900 English art critic who established the basic theory of preservation retention of status quo was a staunch supporter of chattel slavery 134 Augustus Pitt Rivers 1827 1900 Britain s first Inspector of Ancient Monuments John Lubbock 1834 1913 campaigned for legal protection for ancient monuments and saved Avebury from destruction at the hand of its private owners William Morris 1834 1896 English designer and writer who founded the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings Camillo Boito 1836 1914 Italian architect who tried to reconcile the conflicting views of Viollet le Duc and Ruskin inspiring modern legislation on restoration in several countries Victor de Stuers 1843 1916 Dutch art historian lawyer civil servant and politician First legal secretary at the Ministry of Home Affairs as chief of the brand new Department of Arts and Sciences George Curzon 1859 1925 British Viceroy of India who preserved Tattershall Castle Lincolnshire and was an influential sponsor of the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913 William Sumner Appleton 1874 1947 Founder of the Society for the Preservation of New England Antiquities now Historic New England in 1910 and widely considered as the U S s first professional preservationist Was a eugenicist that promoted historic preservation as a way of showing that northern European derived culture was superior to the culture of other racial and ethnic groups 135 Charles E Peterson 1906 2004 considered to be the founding father of historic preservation in the United States James Marston Fitch 1909 2000 educator author critic and design practitioner made a major contribution to the philosophical basis of the modern preservation movement and trained and inspired generations of preservationists William J Murtagh first Keeper of the National Register of Historic Places in the United States and significant contributor to the literature of the discipline 136 Lee H Nelson worked for Charles E Peterson at the National Park Service s Historic American Buildings Survey and helped to formulate national policies on historic preservation Walter Muir Whitehill Chairman of the Whitehill Report in the late 1960s which established the first guidelines for higher education historic preservation programs Richard Nickel American preservationist who saved architectural elements from Louis Sullivan buildings Harriet Tubman 1822 1913 purchased 25 acres to erect a Home for the elderly this site would eventually serve as a memorial to her legacy 137 Mary McLeod Bethune 1875 1955 involved in many efforts to preserve Afro American historic sites established an archive on Afro American women s history and provided funds to key organizations with similar goals 137 Madam C J Walker 1867 1919 gave the single largest contribution for the preservation of the Frederick Douglas Home 137 Maggie Lena Walker 1864 1934 Professional organisations editAmerican Institute for Conservation American Institute of Architects American Planning Association International Council on Monuments and Sites Latinos in Heritage Conservation 10 State historic preservation office Society of Architectural Historians National Trust English Heritage Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings Landmark TrustSee also editAdaptive reuse Architectural conservation Athens Charter doctrinal text Barcelona Charter doctrinal text Building restoration Cadw Cultural heritage management Cultural resources management Diversity and inclusion HistoriCorps Historic garden conservation Historic Scotland List of historic houses Principles of Intelligent Urbanism Racial bias Ship of Theseus a philosophical problem regarding identity of preservation and replacement Social justice Space archaeology Sustainable Preservation Venice Charter doctrinal text Category Demolished buildings and structures Category Heritage organizations Category Historic preservation organizationsReferences edit Caves R W 2004 Encyclopedia of the City Routledge p 345 Maryland Association of Historic District Commissions Handbook Archived 2011 07 27 at the Wayback Machine 1997 a b c Jeremy Wells Challenging the Assumption about a Direct Relationship between Historic Preservation and Architecture in the United States Frontiers of Architectural Research Vol 7 No 4 2018 455 464 1 Bronin S 2021 Historic Preservation Law Second Edition Foundation Press p 345 Built Heritage Sector Professionals Current Skills Future Training National Heritage Training Group 2008 2 Michael Wheeler 1 January 1995 Ruskin and Environment The Storm cloud of the Nineteenth Century Manchester University Press pp 125 ISBN 978 0 7190 4377 2 Supporting the Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Shakespeare Birthplace Trust Retrieved 29 October 2012 Cobb 1883 p 26 Sherwood 2008 p 245 Birtchnell 1988 Mr Shaw Lefevre on the Preservation of Commons The Times 11 December 1886 p 10 Ashbrook Kate Modern commons a protected open space PDF Retrieved 24 October 2014 Exhibition and commemorative walk marks anniversary of battle to save Berkhamsted Common Hemel Gazette Johnston Publishing Ltd 12 October 2015 Archived from the original on 13 March 2016 Retrieved 14 October 2015 Bill Bryson 1 November 2013 At Home A Short History of Private Life Doubleday pp 524 ISBN 978 0 85752 138 5 Bryson Bill At Home A Short History of Private Life Transworld Publishers 2010 Denise Winterman 7 March 2013 The man who demolished Shakespeare s house BBC News Adrian Pettifer 2002 English Castles A Guide by Counties Boydell amp Brewer pp 145 7 Mynors p 9 The National Trust Acts 1907 1971 as varied by a Parliamentary Scheme implemented by The Charities National Trust Order 2005 PDF National Trust p 4 Retrieved 10 November 2017 a b Jenkins Jennifer James Patrick 1994 From acorn to oak tree the growth of the National Trust 1895 1994 London Macmillan David Morgan Evans Peter Salway David Thackray 1996 The Remains of Distant Times Archaeology and the National Trust Boydell amp Brewer p 23 ISBN 978 0 85115 671 2 a b New Era for English Heritage English Heritage English Heritage Trust Retrieved 6 April 2015 a b Our History English Heritage English Heritage Trust Retrieved 6 April 2015 Lean Geoffrey 28 February 2015 Does our history have a future in the hands of the English Heritage Trust The Telegraph Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Retrieved 6 April 2015 The Mother of All Planning Acts Historic England 1 September 2017 Choay Francoise 1992 L allegorie du patrimoine in French Paris Editions du Seuil p 218 ISBN 9782020300230 a b Yon Jean Claude 2010 Histoire culturelle de la France au XIXe siecle in French 1st ed Paris Armand Colin pp 57 163 ISBN 9782200256104 Mallion Jean 1962 Victor Hugo et l art architectural Universite de Grenoble Publications de Faculte des lettres et sciences humaines in French Paris Presses Universitaires de France 28 420 ISSN 0533 2729 via Google Books Oulebsir Nabila 2004 Les usages du patrimoine monuments musees et politique coloniale en Algerie 1830 1930 in French Paris Les Editions de la MSH p 98 ISBN 9782735110063 Barnett Graham Keith 1987 Histoire des Bibliotheques Publiques en France de la Revolution a 1939 in French Paris Cercle de la Librairie p 92 Dupont Sommer Andre 1970 Prosper Merimee et l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres Paris Institut de France 114 4 627 via Persee Leon Paul 1951 La Vie des monuments francais destruction restauration in French Paris A et J Picard Nogent le Rotrou impr of Daupeley Gouverneur p 126 Ferat Francoise 30 June 2010 Au service d une politique nationale du patrimoine le role incontournable du Centre des monuments nationaux Rapport d information 599 Leniaud Jean Michel 2002 Les archipels du passe Le patrimoine et son histoire in French Fayard p 142 ISBN 9782213656908 Bady Jean Pierre Cornu Marie Fromageau Jerome Leniaud Jean Michel and Negri Vincent 2013 1913 Genese d une loi sur les monuments historiques Comite d histoire du ministere de la culture Travaux et documents Paris Documentation francaise 34 602 ISBN 9782110093158 La protection des ensembles historiques en France de la Charte de Venise a la Charte de Washington ICOMOS in French Archived from the original on 17 November 2021 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link Lea Diane America s Preservation Ethos A Tribute to Enduring Ideals A Richer Heritage Historic Preservation in the Twenty First Century ed Robert Stipe Chapel Hill University of North Carolina Press 2003 p 2 Helium Studio Preservation Virginia Apva org Archived from the original on 2012 10 08 Retrieved 2012 10 29 Lindgren James Michael Preserving the Old Dominion historic preservation and Virginia traditionalism Charlottesville University Press of Virginia 1993 3 Print Scenic and Historic America Bulletin of the American Scenic and Historic Preservation Society ASHPS 2 1 March 1930 3 Blevins Documentation of the Architecture of the Architecture of Samuel Lapham and the Firm of Simons amp Lapham Masters of Fine Arts in Historic Preservation Thesis Savannah College of Art amp Design 2001 Ellis Scott S 2010 Madame Vieux Carre the French Quarter in the Twentieth Century University of Mississippi p 43 Mayor Gray Announces Winners of Historic Preservation Awards Government of the District of Columbia Retrieved October 22 2014 Abramson Daniel 2012 From Obsolescence to Sustainability Back Again and Beyond Design and Culture 4 3 279 298 doi 10 2752 175470812X13361292229078 S2CID 143319829 Murtagh William J Keeping Time The History and Theory of Preservation in America New York Sterling Publishing Co 1997 Michael Tomlan Historic Preservation Education Alongside Architecture in Academia Journal of Architectural Education Vol 47 No 4 1994 187 196 Tulane School of Architecture architecture tulane edu Master of Preservation Studies Tulane School of Architecture Preservation News Oct 1 1979 Home Page 13 September 2015 Archived from the original on 15 August 2013 Retrieved 13 December 2013 Columbia GSAPP launches country s first PhD program in historic preservation Architect s Newspaper 17 January 2018 Federal State and Local Historic Districts Archived 2006 10 15 at the Wayback Machine TOOLBOX FAQ National Park Service Retrieved 19 February 2007 Stenberg Peter L October 1995 Historic Preservation as Part of Downtown Redevelopment Rural Development Perspectives Vol 11 no 1 Washington DC Economic Research Service pp 16 21 John Patricia LaCaille July 2008 Historic Preservation Resources Archived 2008 05 11 at the Wayback Machine Rural Information Center Publication Series no 62 National Agricultural Library Rural Information Center Retrieved December 30 2008 Morristown National Historical Park Morristown National Historical Park Nps gov 2012 10 12 Retrieved 2012 10 29 Conservation of Australia s heritage historic places PDF Australian Government April 6 2006 Retrieved April 30 2020 Hughes Duncan May 5 2016 A record 800 historic houses being demolished every week in Australia Australian Financial Review Retrieved April 20 2020 Obituary WHELAN THE WRECKER 1938 March 3 The Argus Melbourne p 3 Retrieved February 22 2014 Doyle Helen 2011 Thematic History A history of the City of Melbourne s urban environment Context Brunswick Butler Katelin Bruhn Cameron 2017 The Apartment House Thames amp Hudson p 100 ISBN 978 0 500 50104 7 Background notes Australian Heritage Commission Canberra The Commission 1983 ISSN 0812 2563 Once a building is destroyed can the loss of a place like the Corkman be undone The Conversation March 19 2019 Retrieved April 30 2020 Mosler Sharon Ann 2006 Heritage politics in Adelaide during the Bannon government PDF University of Adelaide Dictionary of Art Historians arthistorians info Retrieved 2017 11 08 Victor de Stuers vader van Monumentenzorg en Rijksmuseum Kerk in Den Haag www kerkindenhaag nl in Dutch Retrieved 2017 11 08 Lunsingh Scheurleer Th H 12 November 2013 Stuers jhr Victor Eugene Louis de 1843 1916 DBNL J A C Tillema Schetsen uit de geschiedenis van de monumentenzorg in Nederland dbnl DBNL in Dutch Retrieved 2017 11 08 Howard Peter Ashworth Gregory John 1999 European Heritage Planning and Management Intellect Books ISBN 9781841500058 wetten nl Regeling Monumentenwet 1988 BWBR0004471 wetten overheid nl in Dutch Retrieved 2017 11 08 Erfgoedwet Rijksdienst voor het Cultureel Erfgoed in Dutch 2014 08 25 Retrieved 2017 11 08 Devlin H 2005 European initiatives in preventative maintenance for historic buildings Retrieved from www wcmt org uk PDF Weaver Martin E 1986 Historic Preservation Maintenance in the Netherlands The Monumentenwacht Bulletin of the Association for Preservation Technology 18 3 10 11 doi 10 2307 1494114 JSTOR 1494114 Bouwer L M Vellinga P 20 October 2018 Flood Risk Management in Europe Springer Netherlands pp 469 484 doi 10 1007 978 1 4020 4200 3 24 Sarah Dromgoole The University of Nottingham Archived from the original on 2013 03 01 Dromgoole Sarah 2006 06 30 The Protection of the Underwater Cultural Heritage National Perspectives in Light of the UNESCO Convention 2001 Second Edition BRILL ISBN 9789047410454 Zakon za zashtita na kulturnoto nasledstvo PDF Sl Vesnik na Republika Makedoniјa br 20 04 in Macedonian Retrieved 2017 11 08 Jovcevska Biljana Abstract PDF ftu uklo edu mk in Macedonian Retrieved 2017 11 08 ICOMOS Macedonia About Us icomos org mk in Macedonian Retrieved 2017 11 08 Istoriјa NU Zavod za Zashtita na Spomenicite na Kulturata i Muzeј Ohrid in Macedonian Retrieved 2017 11 08 Cultural Heritage in South East Europe Macedonia Former Yugoslav Republic of PDF Cultural Heritage in South East Europe Series N UNESCO Retrieved 2017 11 08 חוק מדינת ישראל main knesset gov il Summay of the law in English חוק מדינת ישראל main knesset gov il Klein Halevi Yossi 2011 האמרקניזציה של תל אביב From the Council for Conservation of Heritage Sites From the Council for Conservation of Heritage Sites Historical context on the Council s work and outline of future plans Hebrew The Ministry of Defense statement regarding preservation within IDF bases Hebrew Fortress of Suomenlinna UNESCO World Heritage Centre Convention Concerning the Protection of the World Cultural and Natural Heritage UNESCO World Heritage Centre 1972 The World Heritage Committee All available reports of the Committee Roger O Keefe Camille Peron Tofig Musayev Gianluca Ferrari Protection of Cultural Property Military Manual UNESCO 2016 Corine Wegener Marjan Otter Cultural Property at War Protecting Heritage during Armed Conflict in The Getty Conservation Institute Newsletter 23 1 Spring 2008 Irwin Aisling 23 January 2017 A no strike list may shield Yemen s ancient treasures from war New Scientist Action plan to preserve heritage sites during conflict UNITED NATIONS 12 April 2019 a b Icomos 2000 Icomos world report 2000 on monuments and sites in danger International Council on Monuments and Sites World Monuments Fund 2023 Fire Protection for Heritage Places Principles and Resources Traditional building HVAC for Historic Buildings Deep Scan Tech 2023 Deep Scan Tech is unlocking the hidden secrets of Suomenlinna s historic drydock a b c Jeremy Wells 10 Ways Historic Preservation Policy Supports White Supremacy and 10 Ideas to End It University of Maryland faculty research papers 2021 3 Avrami E 2020 Preservation and Social Inclusion Coumbia University Press Sara Bronin Integrity as a Legal Concept Change Over Time Vol 10 No 2 2021 108 121 4 Gail Dubrow Feminist and Multicultural Perspectives on Preservation Planning In L Sandercock Ed Making the Invisible Visible A Multicultural Planning History University of California Press Jamesha Gibson Marccus Hendricks Jeremy Wells From Engagement to Empowerment How Heritage Professionals Can Incorporate Participatory Methods in Disaster Recovery to Better Serve Socially Vulnerable Groups International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 25 No 6 2019 596 610 Kaufman N 2009 Place Race and Story Essays on the Past and Future of Historic Preservation Routledge King T 2009 Our Unprotected Heritage Whitewashing the Destruction of our Cultural and Natural Resources Left Coast Press Michelle Magalong Equity and Social Inclusion from the Ground Up Historic Preservation in Asian American and Pacific Islander communities In E Avrami ed Preservation and Social Inclusion Columbia University Press Kenyatta McLean Reclaiming Time and Space Bringing Historical Preservation into the Future Master s thesis MIT 2021 108 121 5 Sharon Milholland In the Eyes of the Beholder Understanding and Resolving Incompatible Ideologies and Languages in US Environmental and Cultural Laws in Relationship to Navajo Sacred Lands American Indian Culture and Research Journal Vol 34 No 2 2010 103 124 Andrea Roberts Until the Lord Come Get Me Burn It Down or the Next Storm Blow It Away The Aesthetics of Freedom in African American Vernacular Homestead Preservation Journal of the Vernacular Architecture Forum Vol 26 No 2 2019 73 97 Jeremy Wells Does Intra disciplinary Historic Preservation Scholarship Address the Exigent Issues of Practice Exploring the Character and Impact of Preservation Knowledge Production in Relation to Critical Heritage Studies Equity and Social Justice International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 27 No 5 2021 449 469 6 Ned Kaufman Resistance to Research Diagnosis and Treatment of a Disciplinary Ailment In J C Wells amp B L Stiefel Eds Human centered Built Environment Heritage Preservation Theory and Evidence based Practice pp 309 316 Routledge 2019 T King and M Lyenis Preservation A Developing Focus of American Archaeology American Anthropologist Vol 80 No 4 1978 873 893 J Otero Pailos Conservation Cleaning Cleaning Conservation Future Anterior Vol 4 No 1 2007 iii viii L Smith Doing Archaeology Cultural Heritage Management and Its Role in Identifying the Link between Archaeological Practice and Theory International Journal of Heritage Studies Vol 6 No 4 2000 309 316 R Russell First Pete and Then Repeat Fundamental Difffferences in Intention between Undergraduate and Graduate Preservation Programs in the United States In Preservation Education Sharing Best Practices and Finding Common Ground edited by B L Stiefel and J C Wells pp 42 56 University Press of New England 2014 Hassan amp Xie 2020 Climate Change and Conservation of Coastal Built Heritage Springer Erica Avrami Randall Mason Marta de la Torre 2000 Values and Heritage Conservation Getty Conservation Institute Torre M 2002 Assessing the Values of Heritage Conservation Getty Conservation Institute Laurajane Smith Heritage Management as Postprocessual Archaeology Antiquity Vol 68 No 259 1994 Madgin amp Lesh 2021 People Centred Methodologies for Heritage Conservation Taylor amp Francis Jeremy Wells In Stakeholders We Trust Changing the Ontological and Epistemological Orientation of Built Heritage Assessment through Participatory Action Research In B Szmygin Ed How to Assess Built Heritage Assumptions Methodologies Examples of Heritage Assessment Systems pp 215 265 Romualdo Del Bianco Foundatione amp Lublin University of Technology and ICOMOS Committee for Theory and Philosophy of Conservation and Restoration 2015 Smith Laurajane 2006 Uses of Heritage Routledge pp 29 30 Jeremy Wells amp Lucas Lixinski Heritage Values and Legal Rules Identification and Treatment of the Historic Environment via an Adaptive Regulatory Framework Part 1 Journal of Cultural Heritage Management and Sustainable Development Vol 6 No 3 2006 345 364 Secretary of State for Culture Media and Sport amp Secretary of State for the Environment Transport and the Regions 2000 Power of Place the Future of the Historic Environment UK Government Department for Culture Media and Sport 2008 Heritage Protection for the 21st Century UK Government Kate Clark Power of Place Heritage Policy at the Start of the New Millennium The Historic Environment Policy amp Practice Vol 10 No 3 4 2019 255 281 Been Vicki Gould Ellen Ingrid Gedal Michael Glaeser Edward McCabe Brian J Preserving History or Hindering Growth The Heterogeneous Effects of Historic Districts on Local Housing Markets in New York City PDF Li C 2012 The politics and heritage of race and space in San Francisco s Chinatown In D F Ruggles Ed On location pp 37 59 New York NY Springer Barrett J 2016 Getting Away From No Straight Talk to Local Advocates Forum Journal 30 2 46 49 National Trust for Historic Preservation Retrieved November 7 2017 from Project MUSE database Routledge Handbook of Sustainable Heritage p 183 doi 10 4324 9781003038955 17 ISBN 9780367482749 Grau Bove Josep Strlic Matija 2013 04 03 Fine particulate matter in indoor cultural heritage a literature review Heritage Science 1 1 8 doi 10 1186 2050 7445 1 8 ISSN 2050 7445 S2CID 3925699 Biography of Ann Pamela Cunningham Archived 2010 04 10 at the Wayback Machine National Women s History Museum Retrieved 21 April 2010 T Arthur Economics Slavery and Victorian Reformers Economic Affairs Vol 21 No 2 2001 49 52 Lindgren J M 1996 Preserving Historic New England Preservation Progressivism and the Remaking of Memory Oxford University Press 7 Archived August 7 2007 at the Wayback Machine a b c Dubrow Gail Lee Goodman Jennifer B 2003 Restoring women s history through historic preservation Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 7052 6 OCLC 48691358 Bibliography editAvrami Erica 2020 Preservation and Social Inclusion New York Columbia University Press 11 Avrami E Leo C N amp Sanchez A S 2018 Confronting Exclusion Redefining the Intended Outcomes of Historic Preservation Change Over Time Vol 8 No 1 102 120 Birtchnell Percy 1988 Short History of Berkhamsted Berkhamsted Book Stack ISBN 978 187137200 7 Bruce Catherine Fleming 2019 The Sustainers Being Building and Doing Good through Activism in the Sacred Spaces of Civil Rights Human Rights and Social Movements 2nd ed TNOVSA Quality Books ISBN 978 0996219068 Carughi Ugo and Visone Massimo Time Frames Conservation Policies for Twentieth Century Architectural Heritage New York London Routledge 2017 ISBN 9781472489296 Cobb John Wolstenholme 1883 Two Lectures on the History and Antiquities of Berkhamsted London Nichols amp Sons Fitch James Marston 1990 Historic Preservation Curatorial Management of the Built World University Press of Virginia Kaufman Ned 2009 Place Race and Story Essays on the Past and Future of Historic Preservation Routledge King Thomas 2009 Our Unprotected Heritage Whitewashing the Destruction of Our Cultural and Natural Resources Left Coast Press McLean Kenyatta 2020 Reclaiming Time and Space Bringing Historical Preservation into the Future Master s thesis MIT 12 Munoz Vinas Salvador 2005 Contemporary Theory of Conservation Amsterdam Elsevier Butterworth Heinemann Page Max amp Randall Mason eds Giving Preservation a History New York Routledge 2004 Price Nicholas Stanley et al eds Historical and Philosophical Issues in the Conservation of Cultural Heritage Los Angeles The Getty Conservation Institute 1996 Roberts A R 2020 The End of Bootstraps and Good Masters Fostering Social Inclusion by Creating Counternarratives In E Avrami Ed Preservation and Social Inclusion pp 109 122 Columbia University Press 13 Ruskin John The Seven Lamps of Architecture New York Dover Publications 1989 Originally published 1880 Important for preservation theory introduced in the section The Lamp of Memory Sherwood Jennifer 2008 Influences on the Growth of Medieval and Early Modern Berkhamsted In Wheeler Michael ed A County of Small Towns the Development of Hertfordshire s Urban Landscape to 1800 Hatfield UK Hertfordshire Stipe Robert E ed A Richer Heritage Historic Preservation in the Twenty First Century Chapel Hill NC The University of North Carolina Press 2003 Tyler Norman Ted J Ligibel and Ilene R Tyler 14 Historic Preservation An Introduction to its History Principles and Practice New York W W Norton amp Company 2018 Viollet le Duc Eugene Emmanuel The Foundations of Architecture Selections from the Dictionnaire Raisonne New York George Braziller 1990 Originally published 1854 Important for its introduction of restoration theory Wells Jeremy 2021 10 Ways Historic Preservation Policy Supports White Supremacy and 10 Ideas to End It University of Maryland faculty papers 15 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Heritage preservation An Overview of Preservation in the United States US ICOMOS Archeology Laws A Guide for Professionals National Park Service Standards and Guidelines for the Conservation of Historic Places in Canada Standards and Guidelines for Preservation in the United States Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Historic preservation amp oldid 1192662742, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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