Developing cultural heritage in a more sustainable way. New approaches and examples from practice.
‘Open Heritage’ is a response to the urgent need for a more open definition of cultural heritage, of the parties involved in protecting and maintaining it, and of the relevant planning processes in order to ensure the sustainable reuse of cultural heritage in times of climate change, social inequality and social plurality.
This book introduces in a clear and systematic manner the results of the EU-funded Open Heritage project, which examined best practices in different European countries. It focuses on the idea of inclusive heritage management based on community-driven processes.
It is designed to act as a guide for anyone involved in planning, researching, and deciding on the further development and use of cultural heritage.
- Systematic presentation of the results of the EU-funded project Open Heritage
- A collection of different approaches to assessing the social impact of bottom-up cultural heritage reuse projects
- Presentation of numerous methods derived from Open Heritage case studies and other European initiatives
Sobre el autor
Herausgeber:innen
Heike Oevermann, Professorin für Denkmalpflege und Bauen im Bestand an der Technischen Universität Wien
Levente Polyák, Stadtplaner, Forscher
Hanna Szemző, Soziologin
Harald Mieg, Honorarprofessor am Geographischen Institut der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin
Beitragsautor:innen
Sophie Bod, Dominika P. Brodowicz, Giovanni Caudo, Federica Fava, Andrea Giuliano, Lukács Hayes, Martin Hulse, Volodymyr Kulikov, Ashley Mason, Dóra Mérai, Harald A. Mieg, Jorge Mosquera, Heike Oevermann, Giovanni Pagano, Daniela Patti, John Pendlebury, Levente Polyák, Katarzyna Sadowy, Iryna Sklokina, Hanna Szemző, Andrea Tönkő, Hanne van Gils, Loes Veldpaus