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Informed conservation, significance and conservation plans HSEd Jules Brown North of England Civic Trust.

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Presentation on theme: "Informed conservation, significance and conservation plans HSEd Jules Brown North of England Civic Trust."— Presentation transcript:

1 informed conservation, significance and conservation plans HSEd Jules Brown North of England Civic Trust

2 why do we do conservation?

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4 managing change conservation is about

5 significance degree of change is based on

6 burra charter “Places of cultural significance enrich people’s lives, often providing a deep and inspirational sense of connection to community and landscape, to the past and to lived experiences” “…must be conserved for present and future generations”

7 “a technique for understanding historic buildings and landscapes, and for applying that understanding to conservation and management” the need for a proper understanding of a heritage asset and why it is important before deciding to manage or change it informed conservation

8 4 themes  involvement  understanding  significance  risk, vulnerability  policy  use  monitor and review +  what have we got?  why is it important?  what’s its problem?  what shall we do about it?

9 standards heritage lottery fund conservation management planning  www.hlf.org.uk  how to apply  further resources  conservation managem’t planning

10 standards  dclg / english heritage pps5 practice guide  www.english -heritage.org.uk  professional  advice  gov’t planning policy  pps practice guide

11 standards  english heritage consv. principles  www.english -heritage.org.uk  professional  advice  conservation principles

12 conservation (management) plans

13 conservation plan  a tool to be used  a starting point  comprehensive  strategic  analytical  participatory  synthetic  clarity from complexity “a document which attempts to understand a site, sets out its significance, and explains how that significance will be retained in any future use, repair, alterations, development or management”

14  complex site, management  conflicting significance  lack of understanding  everywhere? where

15 when wwhat do we want?! understanding! wwhen do we want it?! early on, and certainly well before a decision is made, at whatever level, to intervene physically in the heritage asset or in the management regime which controls it, actually.

16 who  usually a team  range of info  range of skills  overall ‘editorial’ lead  independent?  consultation  participation

17 statements  smaller  quicker  outline consv plan  done in house  have been done by some for many years as standard practice  thought process

18 understanding

19 understanding  desk based research  on site research  analyse it  present it “…understanding is the bedrock of conservation; without understanding conservation is blind and meaningless”  elements  history / chronology  designations / policy context  ownership / management  stakeholders  gaps  written descriptions  lists  photographs  diagrams / plans / maps

20 understanding

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31 significance

32 significance  why is it significant?  who is it significant to?  statement of significance  matrices, diagrams “…should influence every decision that is made about its future, from everyday management to planning new projects”  show your working:  evidential  historical  aesthetic  communal  presentation:  archeological  architectural  artistic  historic

33 significance

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35  low, medium, high  none, marginal, some, considerable, exceptional  local, regional, national, international

36 significance

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40 risk

41 risk, vulnerability  what’s going on? why?  long term, critical, independent  conflicts  opportunities “…if you understand how special qualities might be at risk, you are in a better position to manage them and plan for the future”  physical condition  previous alterations  setting  ownership / control  management  use  development  access  policy context  funding  stakeholder expectations  etc...

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44 policy

45 policy  clear set of policies  implementable, adoptable  conservation  management “…help make sure you do a good job and show you’re committed to caring for the heritage asset to the highest possible standards”  principles  routine maintenance  periodic renewal  repair  restoration  alteration  new work  accessibility, sustainability, biodiversity  designation  research  access (physical, intellectual)  decision-making  stakeholders, community  ownership

46 policy

47 use it!

48 gazetteer

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