Living (World) Heritage Cities: Opportunities, challenges, and future perspectives of people-centered approaches in dynamic historic urban landscapes [Paperback]

Maaike De Waal (Editor); Ilaria Rosetti (Editor); Mara De Groot (Editor); Uditha Jinadasa (Editor)

£45.00
OR
ISBN: 9789464261424 | Published by: Sidestone Press | Year of Publication: 2022 | Language: English 250p, H280 x W210 (mm) 84fc / 3bw



Other Formats

Hardback - ISBN: 9789464261431 - £ 120.00



Living (World) Heritage Cities

Details

Cities are in a constant process of change and are the theater of interaction among people and their complex, historically multi-layered, culturally diverse living environment. Therefore, various interests, needs, and values affect these dynamics of interaction and urban change, which bring challenges and opportunities for the development of cities. Particularly, when urban development deals with such complex living environment and the management and conservation of both listed and non-listed heritage – as in the case of World Heritage cities – a variety of public and private, and global and local stakeholders are affected by processes of change.

Inclusive approaches in the negotiation of these changes that involve all these actors is increasingly advocated for a more sustainable urban development. In the past three decades, the emergence of the so-called living heritage approach promotes the empowerment of those communities, groups, and individuals that keep heritage alive in participating in decision-making over the management of urban developments, and heritage management and conservation that affect them. The preservation of their continuous relationship with their heritage is considered key to fostering the mutual benefit of cities, heritage, and society. While research worldwide offers examples of best practices, the implementation of these approaches still faces many barriers and new challenges.

This book aims to explore how (World) Heritage Cities are dealing with the preservation of their living heritage, what is needed for its effective management, what approaches are adopted, and what challenges and opportunities are encountered. Results offer an overview of current practices, which also include some of the first testimonies of their evolution in the time of a global pandemic (COVID-19), that can inform future research and urban strategies.

Table of Contents

LIST OF FIGURES AND TABLES
 
FOREWORD
Francesca Giliberto
 
INTRODUCTION
 
Living (World) Heritage Cities. An introduction
Maaike S. de Waal, Ilaria Rosetti, Uditha Jinadasa, & Mara de Groot
 
SECTION ONE: VALUES AND USES OF URBAN HERITAGE
 
Free space as an antidote to monoculture in heritage cities: An essay on the potential of interstitial wastelands
Karin Stadhouders
 
Priceless but precious: How residents feel attached to a city ruin. The ancient city of Shekhem (Tell Balata, Palestine) as living heritage
Monique H. van den Dries, Krijn Boom, Ihab Daoud, Dergham Fares, Arnout van Rhijn, & Sjoerd van der Linde
 
Public decision-making in living multi-layered cities: Hacı Bayram District of Ankara, Turkey
Özgün Özçakır, Ayşe Güliz Bilgin Altınöz and Anna Mignosa
 
Heritage City: Building the Historic Environment – Values and Uses – Urban Regeneration at King’s Cross Central, London
Caroline Donnellan
 
The Practice of Backgammon in the Parks of Tehran: Characteristics, Challenges, and Motivations in Safeguarding Intangible Heritage
Mona Momeni
 
SECTION TWO: WORLD HERITAGE CHALLENGES
 
Between opportunity and challenge: Mayors’ perspective on participatory heritage practices in World Heritage Cities
Ilaria Rosetti, Ana Pereira Roders, & Marc Jacobs
 
Galle Fort: The Gentrification of South Asia’s World Heritage
Uditha Jinadasa
 
Adaptation of circular models for global heritage cities: regeneration in vicinity to Istanbul World Heritage Site as a case study
Deniz Ikiz Kaya
 
Challenges and successes in a Living World Heritage City. Historic Bridgetown and its Garrison, Barbados
Maaike S. de Waal
 
SECTION THREE: HERITAGE IMPACT ASSESSMENT AND HISTORIC URBAN LANDSCAPE APPROACHES
 
The development of HIA instruments for Indonesian heritage cities
Punto Wijayanto
 
The heritage impact assessment of Valparaíso (Chile) and the challenges of the historic urban landscape approach for its elaboration
Martín Andrade-Pérez & Juan Luis Isaza-Londoño
 
Heritage Impact Assessment method in the protection of cultural heritage; Iranian cases
Hassan Bazazzadeh, Seyedeh sara Hashemi safaei & Asma Mehan
 
Saving an ancient irrigation canal in Lima, Peru: the experience of a citizen’s campaign
Javier Lizarzaburu
 
SECTION FOUR: HERITAGE CITIES IN TIMES OF A GLOBAL PANDEMIC
 
‘I can see through the water’s eyes’. COVID-19 in Heritage Cities: Citizen Participation and Self-Organization for greater Conservation and Sustainability. The case of Venezia Pulita (Clean Venice)
Bruno de Andrade
 
Reimagining the City: Exploring the Implications of COVID-19 for Living (World) Heritage Cities
Eldris Con Aguilar
 
Towards a tourism of proximity: small historical centers as catalysts of new living models
Mariacristina Giambruno, Sonia Pistidda, Benedetta Silva & Francesca Vigotti
 
Urban Heritage as the Anchor for an Uncertain Future? The City of Turku and the COVID-19 crisis
Visa Immonen & Maija Mäki
 
The Restart and Revitalization of Heritage Tourism in the Post-Pandemic Era: A Case Study of Xi’an, China
Zhaoyang Sun & Tao Xue
 
EPILOGUE
 
Epilogue
Maaike S. de Waal, Ilaria Rosetti, & Francesca Giliberto
 
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
 
AUTHOR BIOGRAPHIES

Product Tags

Use spaces to separate tags. Use single quotes (') for phrases.

[profiler]
Memory usage: real: 24903680, emalloc: 24313808
Code ProfilerTimeCntEmallocRealMem