SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS. The Cultural Heritage Operators' Booklet.
SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS. The Cultural Heritage Operators' Booklet.
SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS. The Cultural Heritage Operators' Booklet.
KNOW-HOW BOOKLET
Contributors
Concept, Research and Data Dorothea Papathanasiou-Zuhrt, Ph.D., Cultural Compilation Heritage Expert of the SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS Lay out concept and Jose-Ramon Esperante, B. Sc., M.Sc., and Danielimplementation Fernando Weiss-Ibanez, B. Sc., M.Sc. Visibility Guidelines Eirini Papadopoulou,B.Sc. ; SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS Communication Manager Prof. Paris Tsartas, Rector, University of the Aegean, Scientic Supervisor of the SEE TCP SAGITTARIUS Advisor in Tourism Economics Prof. Andreas Papatheodorou: Associate Professor in Industrial and Spatial Economics with emphasis on Tourism, University of the Aegean Photodocumentation Kyriaki Glyptou, Ph.D. Student, School of Management Sciences, Department of Business Administration, University of the Aegean Advisor in Tourism Prof. Theodor Stavrinoudis, Assistant Professor Management: Tourism Management, University of the Aegean
THE
BOOKLET FOR
KNOW-HOW
LAUNCHING (G) LOCAL LEVEL HERITAGE ENTREPRENEURSHIP: STRATEGIES AND TOOLS TO UNITE FORCES, SAFEGUARD THE PLACE, MOBILIZE CULTURAL VALUES, DELIVER THE EXPERIENCE
S A G I T TA R I U S i s dedicated to the d ev e l o p m e n t a n d promotion of heritage entrepreneurships in the area of South East Europe. The Transnational Project will be implemented in 36 months and be finalized by February 2014.
This document entails guidelines for the physical object of the SEE TCP Project SAGITTARIUS. It is co nanced by the European Commission. The SEE TCP Project SAGITTARIUS includes partners from 8 countries: Italy, Greece, Hungary, Slovenia, Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia, Moldova funded by the ERDF, and IPA Instruments and the respective national contributions (15% of the Project budget). The overall project budget is 2.489.980,00 (ERDF contribution: 2.012.783,00 ; IPA contribution: 103.700,00 ). SAGITTARIUS is dedicated to the development and promotion of heritage entrepreneurships in the area of South East Europe. The Transnational Project will be implemented in 36 months and be nalized by February 2014. This document does not necessarily reect the opinion of the members of the European Commission and the Team Leader of the SEE TCP . Information on the SEE TCP Project SAGITTARIUS PROJECT and projects can be found at http:// www.southeast-europe.net/en/ projects/approved_projects/?id=136. The web side provides the possibility to download and examine the most recent information produced by nalised and ongoing SEE SAGITTARIUS.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION #
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1. SELECT THE ASSET! (12) 1.1# Natural Heritage Assets## (15) 1.2# Man-Made Heritage Assets: Built Environment and Movable Heritage# 1.3# Spiritual Cultural Heritage# (16) 1.4# Material Cultural Heritage # (17) 1.5# Build and Asset Record## (17)
1.5.1# Industrial Cultural Heritage# 1.5.2# Rural Assets# 1.5.3# Marine and Coastal Assets # 1.5.4# Urban Assets# 1.5.5# Natural Assets # 1.5.6# Scenic Landscape# 1.5.7# Archaeological Assets # 1.5.8# Spiritual Cultural Assets # 1.5.9# Oral History 1.5.10#A Literary and an Arts Place 1.5.11# Traditions and Events
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2. SIGNIFY THE ASSET, EXTRACT AND COMMUNICATE CULTURAL VALUES ! 2.1# How to assess signicance# (27) 2.2# Main Signicance Criteria# (27)
2.2.1# 2.2.2# 2.2.3# 2.2.4# 2.2.5# 2.2.6# 2.2.7# Ecosystem Values Tangible Cultural Heritage Values Scientic Values Social Values Aesthetic Values Historic Values Spiritual and Special Values
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2.3# 2.4#
Secondary Criteria# # # (34) Producing Statements of Signicance# (35) WORKSHEET I: Assessing Signicance (37) WORKSHEET II: Producing the Asset Map (38)
3 TELL THE STORY! (43) 3.1# Create the Emotion# # 3.2# Linking to the bigger picture # 3.3# Critical issues# # #
WORKSHEET III: Writing a Storyline (49) WORKSHEET IV: Developing Interpretive Themes WORKSHEET V: Hidden Meanings (52) 4 SELECT THE AUDIENCE ! (55) 4.1# Dene Audience and Include Stakeholders# 4.2# Approach the Audience with Suitable Media#
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WORKSHEET VI: Working with the Audience (61) 5 ENSURE ACCESSIBILITY! (62) 5.1# Visitor Facilities## # # (64) 5.2# Signage Systems # # # (65) 5.3# Real Time Accessibility# # # (67) 5.4# Cognitive and Emotional Accessibility# (69) 6 DEVELOP THE CULTURAL HERITAGE CONSUMPTION MIX! 7 EVALUATE THE PLAN ! (74)
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CHECKLIST!
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WP0
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 4,000.00 EUR 5,500.00 EUR 1,000.00 EUR
Act. 04
11,000.00 EUR
WP1: Transnational project & Financial Management and Project Monitoring WP LEAD: LP ACTIVITY Act. 1.1 TITLE Transnational Project Administration, Management and Coordination Responsible Partner LP Transnational Project Monitoring Responsible Partner LP Administrative Project Closeout Responsible Partner LP TIME PERIOD 01/03/2011 28/02/2014 01/03/2011 28/02/2014 01/06/2013 28/02/2014
WP1
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 156,300.00 EUR
WP2: TRANSNATIONAL PROJECT COMMUNICATION WP LEAD: LP ACTIVITY TITLE Delivering the Projects Main Public Medium and Permanent Information and Transparency Source Responsible Partner ERDF PP6 Communication with the JTS and Programme Management Structures Responsible Partner LP Communication Plan and Project Branding at global level Responsible Partner LP Internal Communication Strategy Responsible Partner LP External Communication Strategy to disseminate Project results to different target publics Responsible Partner ERDF PP1 TIME PERIOD 01/06/2011 28/02/2014 01/03/2011 28/02/2014 01/03/2011 30/11/2013 01/06/2011 28/02/2014 01/06/2011 28/02/2014
WP2
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 39,300.00 EUR
Act. 2.1
Act. 2.2
4,900.00 EUR
WP3 HERINEXUS: TRANSNATIONAL ALLIANCES TO PROMOTE HERITAGE ENTREPRENEURSHIP WP LEAD ERDF PP3 ACTIVITY TITLE Activation of the Transnational Network Act. 3.1 Responsible Partner LP Developing a vision for key stakeholders and players from the Public, Private and Third Sector Act. 3.2 to embrace and support heritage entrepreneurship at transnational level Responsible Partner LP Establishing a Partnership led Collaborative Act. 3.3 Network to promote Project Scope Responsible Partner ERDF PP4 Transnational Non statutory Co operation Act. 3.4 Agreement with the Public-Private-Third Sector Responsible Partner ERDF PP3 SAGITTARIUS: Foundation of an Open Collaborative Network to guarantee viability of Act. 3.5 Project results Responsible Partner ERDF PP2 TIME PERIOD 01/06/20130/06/2011 01/06/2011 30/11/2011 01/09/2011 31/03/2012 01/09/2011 31/03/2012 01/09/2011 28/02/2014
WP3
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 77,200.00 EUR
17,300.00 EUR
43,900.00 EUR
142,600.00 EUR
27,000.00 EUR
WP4: USING A PARTICIPATORY KNOWLEDGE PLATFORM TO GUIDE HERITAGE ENTREPRENEURS UNLOCK THE VALUES OF HERITAGE RESOURCES WP LEAD LP ACTIVITY TITLE TIME PERIOD 01/06/2012 30/11/2012 01/06/2011 31/05/2012 01/04/2012 30/11/2012 01/03/2012 30/11/2012 01/06/2012 30/11/2012
WP4
Transnational Experience Exchange, Good Act. 4.1 Practice Transfer Responsible Partner ERDF PP2 Development of Professional Skills in Heritage Act. 4.2 Interpretation to unlock cultural values (eCourse) Responsible Partner LP Creation of professionals with increased capacities Act. 4.3 in Heritage Interpretation Responsible Partner LP Transnational Pooling of Expertise. Good Practice Act. 4.4 Database in Heritage Planning and Management Responsible Partner LP Using Natural and Cultural Heritage as a Act. 4.5 Recreational Learning Resource Responsible Partner LP
32,500.00 EUR
13,100.00 EUR
26,000.00 EUR
30,200.00 EUR
WP5 HERIBUILDER: STRATEGIES & TOOLS TO DESIGN HIGH ADDED VALUE CULTURAL PRODUCTS & SERVICES WP LEAD: ERDF PP7 ACTIVITY Act. 5.1 TITLE The Transnational Heritage Register Responsible Partner ERDF PP7 The Transnational Signicance Assessment Tool Responsible Partner ERDF PP7 Typology of Heritage Products and Services to promote value-driven Cultural Consumption Responsible Partner ERDF PP7 The Collaborative Planning Process for Design and Delivery of Place Driven Cultural Products and Services Responsible Partner ERDF PP1 Design and Delivery of a high added value Cultural Heritage Consumption Mix Responsible Partner LP TIME PERIOD 01/12/2011 31/05/2012 01/01/2012 28/02/2014 01/04/2012 30/09/2012
WP5
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 17,000.00 EUR 16,000.00 EUR
Act. 5.2
Act. 5.3
22,500.00 EUR
Act. 5.4
01/10/2012 30/04/2013
52,800.00 EUR
Act. 5.5
01/05/2013 31/08/2013
22,200.00 EUR
WP6 HERICARE: PARTICIPATORY PRACTICES IN THE PLANNING & MANAGEMENT OF HERITAGE WP LEAD: ERDF PP1 ACTIVITY TITLE TIME PERIOD 01/09/2011 31/05/2012 01/09/2012 30/11/2012 01/11/2011 29/02/2012 01/03/2012 31/05/2012 01/01/2012 31/12/2012
WP6
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF) 15,000.00 EUR
Involving and Engaging Communities to unlock Act. 6.1 cultural values and formulate local cultural offers Responsible Partner ERDF PP5 YOUNG ARCHERS: Involving and Engaging Act. 6.2 Young Audiences into the Caring of Heritage Responsible Partner LP Involving and Engaging Entrepreneurs in the Act. 6.3 Heritage Business Responsible Partner ERDF PP8 Putting Theory into Practice: Pilot Project Area Act. 6.4 Selection Responsible Partner ERDF PP8# Monitoring the "Heritage Business" Act. 6.5 Responsible Partner ERDF PP9
30,240.00 EUR
25,880.00 EUR
29,880.00 EUR
30,000.00 EUR
WP7 HERITAINMENT: COMMUNICATE CULTURAL VALUES AND DELIVER THE EXPERIENCE VIA THEMATIC TRAILS AND A ROVING MUSEUM WP LEAD ERDF PP4 ACTIVITY TITLE TIME PERIOD
WP7
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF)
Production of Materials for the Transnational Act. 7.1 Heritage Trail Responsible Partner LP THE GOLDEN ARROW: The Projects Roving Act. 7.2 Museum Responsible Partner ERDF PP4 THE GOLDEN ARROW: Design and Delivery of Act. 7.3 a Polycentric Heritage Trail Responsible Partner ERDF PP4 GOLDEN ARROW: The Project's Interpretive Act. 7.4 Guide Book Responsible Partner IPA PP
WP8 HERISTAR: SAFEGUARDING PRINCIPLES, SETTING STANDARDS, LABELING QUALITY WP LEAD: ERDF PP8 ACTIVITY TITLE TIME PERIOD
WP8
TOTAL BUDGET (ERDF)
Act. 8.4
Act. 8.5
Transnational Quality Management Responsible Partner EDF PP8 Transnational Evaluation of the Pilot Projects Responsible Partner EDF PP8 Transnational Quality Labelling Responsible Partner EDF PP6 Publication and Dissemination of "HERIJOURNEY". A Good Practice Guide in Heritage Interpretation. Experiences in South East Europe Responsible Partner EDF PP5 Project Closeout Responsible Partner LP
01/01/2014 28/02/2014
103,000.00 EUR
INTRODUCTION
Heritage places cannot speak for themselves. Without the ability to access the intangible networks of knowledge and value transmission, cultural users cannot recognise and appreciate heritage items as such. Conservation is meaningless without interpretation is an incomplete task. We need to bridge the gap between monument-meaning and monumentfabric and forge connections with a wide array of different target publics. Cultural consumption, whether in relation to recreation, learning or leisure and tourism is a social phenomenon interacting with supply and demand. Therefore consumption incentives are based on distinctive cultural features of cultural assets and consumer perceptions. T h e C U LT U R A L H E R I TA G E O P E R AT O R S BOOKLET facilitates the process of understanding and unlocking resource inherent values and gives It introduces users to heritage value categories such as the historic, aesthetic, scientic, research or technical, social or spiritual values, guiding how to extract these values and their signicance for different target public and different uses. The Booklet introduces cultural heritage operators to the development of interpretive products and services in a 6+1 step procedure: Select the asset Signify the asset Tell the asset story Select the audience Ensure accessibility Develop the cultural consumption mix Evaluate interpretation
Heritage consumption is a universal right. Access to heritage significance for a broad public as possible should be facilitated by effective interpretation. Interpretive planning shall involve a wide range of associated communities and stakeholder groups. ICOMOS Ename Charter for Heritage Interpretation 2004
The Booklet transfers validated knowledge how to utilize heritage and deliver user friendly, physically, economically and intellectually accessible heritage attractions, which meet audience needs and market requirements, while maintaining their authenticity and integrity. It contains 6+1 WORKSHEETS to guide cultural heritage operators in the public, private and third sector unlock the values of cultural heritage and embed them into everyday practices including the cultural heritage sector, food and beverage, tourism and accommodation, handicrafts, catering and restaurant services, traditional products, the publishing sector, the arts and the creative industries sector.
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01
SELECT THE ASSET
s e t o N
Make a list of signicant tangible heritage assets Include Designated and non-designated assets. Make a summary of the cultural information required to make informed decisions about the management of heritage spaces. Make sure that Information compiled about selected assets will be of interest to residents, schools community groups and cultural consumers.
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Whether you are a wine grower, a Museum curator, a souvenir shop in a touristy place, a restaurant or a bookstore owner, many of your products and services offered are connected to heritage and in many cases to local heritage. They may obtain a higher added value, if they are interpreted for different audiences. Interpretation is one way in which the interest, signicance, value and meanings heritage asset can be communicated to the public and it is the only way to extract the cultural values hidden in the assets: a nice meal will always be a nice meal, however a nice meal cooked with a hundred year old recipe and a view to a thousand year old landscape is denitely more than just a nice meal. It is a life time experience.
local culture that expresses their unity in a place. A strong sense of place can lead to more sensitive stewardship of cultural history and natural environment and advance cultural consumption in everyday life. The Heritage Environment is composed of diverse heritage classes. We may value many other historically signicant features such as farms, industrial sites, natural landscapes and vegetation, apart from temples, castles, world-known sites and collections. Intangible elements of heritage are also diverse, ranging from cultural ancestry to social identity, community relationships and traditions. The golden larnax and the golden crown of Philip II of Macedonia, Vergina Museum, Greece Culture has both material and value dimensions. Its material dimension is expressed in activities, buildings, landscapes, collections and events. Its value dimension comprises relationships, shared memories, identities and experiences. In a (diverse and multi-ethnic) community there is no single set of cultural values which denes us all, and one important challenge for a document such as this is to reect diversity of need, aspiration and experience. Nor is the cultural world static, and the pace of change is being increasingly inuenced by electronic media. For those with the means, electronic media can now deliver a wide range of cultural experiences direct to the home.
Regardless of the nature of the activity and the nature of the organization, a municipal authority, a travel agency, a local store, an app designer involved in culture and tourism directly or indirectly shall answer one question: what is my local heritage and how can I use it to advance cultural consumption by protecting it at the same time.
The unique identity of a place and the feelings associated can be much better acquired through interpretation: cultural consumers develop a "sense of place" through experience and knowledge of a particular area, drinking the local coffee in the local coffee shop, emerge in the local history in the local museum, understand geography and geology of the local are, its ora and fauna, the legends of a place, cultural heritage sites and collections, buying supplies and souvenirs in the local store. A growing sense of the land and its history is being created. Shared physical perceptions and experiences help people from different cultural groups develop a - 14 -
1.1
Natural Heritage Assets It is very important to understand that the variability among living organisms from all sources, terrestrial, marine and other aquatic ecosystems and the ecological complexes of which they from, should be kept and cared for, since they make up the biodiversity of a place, the very reason which makes a place viable for residents.
According to UNESCO natural heritage comprise features consisting of physical, biological, geological and physiographical formations and precisely delineated areas which constitute the habitat of threatened species of animals and plants of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science or conservation; natural sites or precisely delineated natural areas of outstanding universal value from the point of view of science, conservation or natural beauty. The natural range of geological and geomorphological features of a places, assemblages, systems and processes build the geodiversity of a place. Geological and geomorphologic diversity bears evidence of past life, ecosystems and environments in the history of the earth as well as a range of atmospheric, hydrological and biological processes currently acting on rocks, landforms and soils.
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1.2
Tangible cultural heritage comprises the built environment, movable cultural heritage (objects and collections) and the mixed landscapes: the variety of built and manufactured realities from the architectural complex of a living historic centre to the remains of an archaeological site, objects and collection. Tangible heritage assets are considered to be irreplaceable, not only in terms of
economic and social value, but also in their physical dimension, which is dened by clear associations of place (locality) and time (historicity); consequently they are also irreproducible and non-modiable for purposes other than conservation and protection: visible memorable entities such as monuments, buildings, sites and townand landscapes cannot be translocated, transferred or reproduced outside of their actual location without changing their symbolic, aesthetic and economic value. UNESCO denes as cultural heritage monumental works of the man-made environment and the shaped natural environment: architecture, sculpture and painting, elements or structures of an archaeological nature, inscriptions, cave dwellings and combinations of features, with outstanding universal value from the point of view of history, art or science. A list of signicant assets together with information required to achieve management results, classify and signify tangible cultural heritage assets. The list includes man-made objects and collections, private and state, as well as building, sites and attractions within a given locality.
1.3
Intangible heritage is the knowledge depot that permits cultural heritage to live on, giving at the same time birth to new forms of cultural production. Although intangible heritage assets circulate vividly through the ages and among mentalities, expressions like language and traditions are strongly linked with places as manifestation of a communitys use of the cultural assets of the territory. Languages, religions, traditions, events, celebrations affect the cultural identity of the territory where they are organised. Intangible heritage assets are thus immaterial cultural expressions of a place, a territory, a community in past and present. - 16 -
1.4
1.5
The production of culture-based goods such as specialised handicrafts (artistic glass, jewellery, textile production, souvenirs and fashion, artistic decorative items, everyday-use objects etc) and the so-called produits du terroir (food and wine, herbs, thermal treatments, etc.) are traditions inherited from the past. Production, even if it has undergone changes, still requires the distinctive skills and social networks at local level. Material cultural is to be understood as an expression of localised know-how and savoir vivre that contribute to the identity of a certain territory and lifestyle. Communities should consider culture-based goods, distinctive produits du terroir and culinary traditions with physically identiable p r o d u cti o n l o ca ti o n s a s to u ri sm attractors. Production styles and marketing strategies should try to remain symbolically attached to the production location, in order for the attractors to retain their intrinsic power.
The Asset Record helps to creating an attractive cultural heritage consumption mix at local level. An attractive cultural heritage consumption mix at community level requires many synergies to be born. An attractive mix may consist of the most different elements put together ranging from the local coffee shop to local artists to the local museum and traditional events. The more diverse the locally-driven mix is, the better for the variety of the experience. Attractors from the natural and built environment, museums and collections, events and traditional festival, open-air and indoor-activities, cultural industries, the performing arts, traditional sports and medicine etc., they all contribute to the creation of a mixed heritage typology, which should reect the features the spirit of the place, which can be consumed as cultural goods and services. The particular qualities of a landscape are recognised in the fact that many areas of the county have special environmental designations. Local landscape is a key component of the communitys identity. Landscape assets are diverse in age, style and condition but they contribute to a sense of continuing community tradition. A number of key areas shall be intensively surveyed, based on standard heritage evaluation criteria.
Murano Glassmakers
Make a list of signicant produits du terroir signicant artifacts Make a summary of the cultural information required to make informed decisions about the promotion of the items Make sure that Information compiled about selected assets will be of interest to residents, local economic actors and cultural consumers.
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Below is an example of a ctive place called Terrabianca, which is located in Basilicata, Italy, on the top of a hill within a seaside are spreading across its feet
1.5.1Industrial Cultural Heritage The local landscape of Terrabianca has been shaped by the industrial development of the 19th century. The local water laundry, the olive press, the mill, the iron hut and the brick factory are prominent testimonies of an evolving past penetrating the present. 1.5.2.Rural Assets The local landscapes have been affected by the different agricultural systems adopted across the lowland and upland parts of the county. These practices have had a signicant inuence on settlement and eld patterns, as well as reecting the of interpreting the spirit of the place by extracting its cultural values 1.5.4 Urban Assets As Terrabianca was the Capital of the region until the last century it has a strong multicultural character. A number of signicant monuments in excellent condition invite to explore the past and enjoy the present. Piazza di Cavalli, a 17th Century masterpiece with... The Armory Palace, where A series of Historic Buildings in the The New City Hall The historic mansions in the Old City Center The rural farmhouses of the Upper Valley The Old Jewish District and the Synagogue The Turkish Bath The Mosque and the Turkish Library The historic rural sites with the citrus groves The vernacular structures such as the wind mills of the Upper Valley The Garden of Pleasures, created in the 16th century by the noble man Alfonso de Martinenga, who decided to live in Terrabianca after he has inherited there his uncles castle. The Bishops Residence The Fortications of the Inner City The Water Front, with the Calatrava Fountain The Local Paintings Gallery, hosted in the Castello Speranza, which is a typical Pierre-Auguste Renoir: Breton Landscpape Church and Orchard. At: 1st Art-Gallery.com Museum Quality hand made Oil Painting Reproductions 1.5.5 Natural Assets
Pierre-Auguste Renoir: Breton Landscpape Church and Orchard. At: 1st Art-Gallery.com Museum Quality hand made Oil Painting Reproductions
interaction with, and attempts to control, the natural environment. 1.5.3 Marine and Coastal Assets Terrabianca does not only have a rural character, but a substantial historic record as an important commercial and trade center. To document its marine history and the ecosystems values is an integrative part - 18 -
Terrabiancas rich and complex geology and geography has resulted in a wide range of natural environments as the Promavera Gorge and the Lungho River, which have been settled and managed for over 5 centuries now. The areas natural resources encouraged early industrial activity mining, quarrying, and ironworking. These have left a very tangible legacy of buildings and other structures, permanent changes to the natural landscape where hillsides have been quarried away or new articial hills created from waste products, and a complex network of associated road, canal and railway systems. The industrial revolution also had a major impact on the settlement and movement of people into and within the county, new villages growing to house the workforces who drove the industries forward. 1.5.6 Scenic Landscape The scenic landscape of Terrabianca provides a variety of walking and cycling trails within the county. 3 marked walking trails offer signicant outdoor experiences: The Terrapietra Trail. It guides through the 3 outstanding medieval Churches and the Terrabianca Monastery with 5th century frescoes. The Terravino Trail. It opens windows in sophisticated taste. Visitors can visit the wineries of the local producer network The Geoterra Trail for Children. Along the route exist marked phenomena with simple interactive devices, where younger audiences can learn about the hidden secrets of mother nature, experiment with the outdoor devices and train their ve senses. 1.5.7 Archaeological Assets Many aspects of Terriabancas heritage reect the areas borderland nature the need to delineate the territory as well as to develop benecial trading links. Visible
remains include the fortications and transport links to the neighbouring industrial and commercial centres of Northern Italy. The ow of people into and through the area goes back to the earliest times, but is particularly associated with the industrial developments of the 19th century. The earliest people to live here began the long process of deforestation across the upland areas creating the now familiar open moor lands, whilst the lower lying areas still reect the methods of early farming such as the distinctive eld patterns and boundaries of the borderland valley. The mediaeval eld systems which still survive Terrabianca provides many examples of cultivated terraces.. 1.5.8 Spiritual Cultural Assets The cultural interaction between different incoming populations was just one phase in the areas long history of cultural and commercial interaction. It reects the borderland and trading crossroads characteristic of the area that has also accounted for so many of the prominent structures and earthworks through military fortications, to the trading infrastructure of canals and railways. The pressures on the native language, its survival and revival, are also a part of this borderland heritage. Sport is an important aspect of the Terrabianca. The Terrabianca Club, a nationally recognised football team have won the Terravinci One-Day Trophy 8 times in the last decade; The culture of these sports invigorates the economy, unites the community and initiates many social event. The sporting life of the county is richly documented. The Terrabianca Football Museum provides an excellent archive of the Regions Football history, its many characters and signicant achievements. 1.5.9 Oral History
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This distinctiveness in the countys communities is being captured through the recollections and researches of individuals and groups community and oral history projects are helping to keep alive memories of the areas social fabric, the working lives and community activities of local people. This collective knowledge about the past is a vital part of local heritage and enables the dry and inanimate structural remains to be given new meaning and be brought to life for future generations. In Terrabianca exist many variations of myths and stories, deriving from Mediaeval Times, closely connected with the development of the old town and the regions history. Most known are: The Knight and the Sword The Kingdom of the Dragon The Thief who was stolen 1.5.10 A Literary and an Arts Place Similarly to the sports traditions in Terrabiance exists is a large record of the regional history and achievements in literature and the arts, with original testimonies in the Castles Library and all across the local stores in the Old City. Terrabianca is also known as the birthplace of Eugenio Scarlati, the famous writer of All Nights Daylight. In the early 20th centuries prosa and poems were enjoyed by the faithfull clientele in the local coffee shops. Two lms shot in 2005 and 2009 have promoted this ambience, which is today more vivid than ever.
Lord Strathclyde, on his way to the Greek War of Independence fell in love with the scenic beauty along the River Lungho and dedicated one of his masterpieces to Terrabianca. In the early 20th century John Hemingway sailed to the coast of Terrabianca to pay a short visit and stayed enchanted for three years. His dwelling in the Upper Valley was the birth place of Grapes of the White Land a literary masterpiece. 1.5.11 Traditions and Events Since the Middle Ages there is a rich event calendar in Terrabianca. Festivities are of religious origin, but secular as well. These include: The Barbers Wedding. It is about The Dancing Festival. This festival has its roots The Fairy outside the Wall.
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s e t o N
Stolen and saved many times over the centuries. It consists of to parts: the corona graeca (lower parts) and the corona latina (upper part). The greek crown was sent to Hungary by emperor Michael VII Ducas (1071-1078), the upper part was made of the shattered reliquary of St. Stephen. The two parts united in byzantine style. Michael VII depicted in the Crown of Hungary
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ASSET RECORD
Basic Information
Name of Place Other names Land description Location/Address Construction date(s) Designation Original construction year; or if constructed in stages, specify additional relevant year(s). Use National Designation Codes (eg. Individual Bldg, Precinct, Urban Park, Tree etc). Monument, Landscape, Heritage Site, Historic City, Object, Collection, Material Cultural Heritage Item, Festival, Traditional Event Current name Former or other names NUTII and NUTS III
Explanatory Notes
Asset Type Architectural and/or Art Style Use (original/current) Other Listings
Use Ofcial names. State both Original and Current Uses if possible. Show any other listings that apply to the place at the time of the survey or assessment, eg. State Register, Classied .. Provide a brief description of the place, its component elements, and any important features of its context or setting. Provide a brief history of the place relevant to its signicance. Detail the historical evolution of the place, including dates of importance, past and current uses, and associated persons or events. Write down the historic theme Select from standard construction materials Provide a concise and succinct statement of the places signicance State whether the asset is considered of Exceptional, Considerable or Some signicance. State the Management Category associated with the Level of Signicance assigned to the place. List any written records, maps, plans, photographs or other sources used in the assessment of the asset.
Physical description
Historical notes Historic theme Construction materials Statement of signicance Level of Signicance
Management Category
Include one photograph that clearly depicts the place. State whether the asset is in Good, Fair or Poor condition, and if available, a summary of major works required conserving or restoring the asset.
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02
CULTURAL
VALUES
The process of extracting a heritage assets cultural value starts with question, why should it be communicated in the rst place? Assets are communicated for a series of different reasons each time. Usually it makes sense to communicate a heritage asset, as it makes part of the history and identity of the local community, even if it is not a UNESCO enlisted monument, but just an ordinary example of something from the past, but typically represents a place and its spirit, is still a signicant piece of a larger puzzle.
Historic Celebrities!
Many heritage assets focus on people who are perceived to be important, famous or wealthy. Classic examples are the familiar phrases: King George drunk for this golden cup, when celebrating his wedding. Pope Benedict slept in the mansion in his way to Rome. This is the famous dress Marilyn Monroe had on in the movie Men prefer Blond, now being exhibited here. Groups that have often been overlooked in the past, such as women, minorities, working people, servants and slaves might be signicant about your asset, to consider what these groups may have contributed to its signicance. If the heritage asset is a Castle, a farm or factory, people have lived and worked there.
Important Events
What if the local heritage asset is not a UNESCO enlisted monument? An asset may not be directly linked to an event recorded in history books, but its almost certainly been inuenced by an event or trend that played out at the regional or national level.
What impact might that event or trend have had on local people?
What kinds of lives did the children lead in the farm? What were the roles of enslaved people during the sieges?
This kind of information is challenging to uncover, but well worth the effort. - 24 -
Example. The Barbers Shaving Bowl: detecting the Enemy, 1522, June the 13th
Inside the fortied City of Rhodes, Chief Engineer Gabriele Tadino da Martinengo, collects from the barbershops all the shaving bowls. Suspending a small clapper over each one, he places them at the most crucial locations of the wall. The slightest underground vibration causes this homemade bell to ring, meaning the Turks that besiege the City are digging mines.
V.Pavlides, Rhodes 1306-1522 A Story, 2nd Edition Image: Dutch Barber Bowl ca, 1700
r e t n I
n o i t a pret
Start with:
make it be so!
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endangered
elements? Examples of
particular earth
processes at work in soil, water or atmosphere ?
Diversity in
fossils, land systems or geological features, particular phenomena?
2.1
Heritage signicance is based on the natural heritage values which include the importance of ecosystems, biological diversity and geodiversity, and cultural heritage values which include the importance of aesthetic, historic, social, and scientic or other special values that communities recognise.
The signicance assessment process for objects and collections is based on four primary criteria such as the historic, aesthetic, scientic, research or technical as well as social or spiritual values of the assets. The simple step-by-step process below helps arrive at the meaning and value of an object. In summary it involves: analyzing the object understanding its history and context comparison with similar objects assessment against a set of criteria summarizing its values and meaning in a statement of signicance
The process of deciding why a place or an object is of heritage signicance is called heritage assessment, essentially vital to creating attractors at local level.
Assessment testies exactly why places and heritage entities are important, is central to developing conservation and management plans, a local heritage strategy, interpretive products and services; it contributes to the development of educational materials, justies the allocation of resources. If heritage assessment is not undertaken, damage could be irreversible: destruction of evidence of signicance, inappropriate management practices, exceeding Carrying Capacity level of assets, loss of a place altogether. There are four levels of signicance for heritage resources: they can be of local, regional, national and global importance. Involving experts to assess the signicance of assets, or conduct a valid research using local, national and international assessment criteria as well as their appropriateness to become components of the local tourism product. Signicance means the physical natural, historic, aesthetic, scientic and social values that a tangible and intangible resource has for past, present and future generations, in and outside a spatial entity. It is crucial though for a community to assess the signicance of its own resources, in order to create a visible, tangible attractor for locals and visitors.
2.2
2.2.1. Ecosystem Values It is important to dene and assess the grade of importance of the ecosystems values of a natural heritage resource to safeguard it from decay. A series of questions arise such as if an asset is an important example of intact ecological processes at work an asset contributes to important ecological processes occurring between communities and the nonliving environment the bio- and geodiversity, the variety of life forms, the different plants, animals and micro-organisms, the genes they contain, the ecosystems they form can create powerful tourism or other cultural attractors.
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2.2.2. Tangible Cultural Heritage Values It is important to understand the context of a heritage asset. In order for this to happen we should consider its relationship to other assets, items objects, where it was used, the locality and how it relates to the history and geography of the area. Wherever possible, record the asset or collection in its context of use and original location. Analyze and record the fabric of the object: it might be a numismatic or paintings collection, a wall town, an ancient temple, the local community museum.
2.2.3 Scientic Values Scientic values, applying to both natural and man-made cultural resources, are determined by the importance of the data involved, by the grade of rarity, quality or representativeness. Resources may be important for their natural values in showing patterns in natural history or continuing ecological, earth or evolutionary processes, rare or endangered plant or animal species, geological features, a type of construction method or material used, or forms of archaeological evidence. Heritage assets may possess ecosystem and social values or both and a substantial part of them are objects of scientic research. Scientic asset values are determined by the importance of the data involved, on rarity, quality or representative-ness. Scientic values apply to both natural and man-made cultural resources. Heritage assets may be important for their natural values in showing patterns in natural history or continuing ecological, earth or evolutionary processes, rare or endangered plant or animal species, geological features, a type of construction method or material used, or a particular form of archaeological evidence.
Document how an object works, what it is made of, its manufacture, patterns of wear, repairs and adaptations. Record the objects condition and make a judgment assisted by experts, whether the item is common or rare, in good condition or intact and documented judgments by comparison to similar items in other museums.
Good examples of a particular type of place, that undisturbed, intact and complete are good material to create tourism attractors, whereas scientic research can contribute to understanding of its material nature or its nature as a cultural phenomenon.
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1879 K. Benz rst two-stroke petrol engine ran 1883 G. Daimler and W. Maybach patented the rst motor for vehicles 1897 R. Diesel presented his engine This motor by Rudolf Diesel was built in 1897 and is considered to be the rst diesel engine. It had been preceded by two experimental motors in 1982/93 and 1894. However, they did not work satisfactorily. Tests in 1897 conrmed the diesel motors efciency. Fuel consumption per HP/hour amounted to 238 g, i.e. 26.8 % of the heat contained in the fuel was converted into effective power. Soon afterwards the same motor achieved an efciency of 27 %.
Today, the diesel motor is still the most efcient combustion engine.
Info: 1 cylinder, four-stroke, water-cooled Air injection of fuel Output: 14.7 kW (20 HP) Number of revolutions: 172 min-1 Stroke volume: 19.6 l Bore: 250 mm Stroke: 40 mm
Marathon (, Marathn) is a town in Greece, the site of the battle of Marathon in 490 BC, in which the heavily outnumbered Athenian army defeated the Persians. Marathon's name comes from the herb fennel, called marathos in Greek, so Marathon literally means "a place with fennels".
The burial mound for the 192 Athenian dead that was erected near the battleeld remains a feature of the coastal plain.. The burial mound is now marked by a marble memorial stele and surrounded by a small park.
2.2.4. Social Values Social Values are signicant through association with a community or cultural group in the local district for social, cultural, educational or spiritual reasons. Most communities will have a special attachment to particular places. An asset or a place would be considered for inclusion under this criterion if it were one that the community, or a signicant part of the community, has held in high regard for an extended period. Places with social values tend to be public places, or places distinctive in the local landscape, and generally make a positive contribution to the local sense of place and local identity. They may be symbolic or landmark places, and may include places of worship, community halls, schools, cemeteries, public ofces, or privately owned places such as hotels, cinemas, cafes or sporting venues. Places need not be valued by the entire community to be signicant. A signicant group within the community may be dened by ethnic background, religious belief or profession. Social values embrace the qualities for which a place is a focus of spiritual, traditional, economic, political, national or other cultural sentiment to a majority or a minority group. If a place or item is important, as part of community identity, associated with persons, groups and signicant events important in the communitys history, a place or item is valued by a community for religious, spiritual, cultural, educational or social reasons it is very likely to become as cultural heritage attractor given it is properly managed.
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2.2.5 Aesthetic Values Aesthetic values include natural and/or cultural features, which evoke strong feelings and/or special meanings. Aesthetic attractors comprise distinctive features of resources and places, prominent visual landmarks, features that evoke awe from their grandeur of scale, a strong time depth, are symbolic for its aesthetic qualities, have been represented in art, poetry, photography, literature, folk-art, folklore mythology or other imagery, constitute natural, cultural and architectonical landscapes. An asset, item or place included under this criterion will have characteristics of scale, composition, materials, texture and colour that are considered to have value for the local district. This may encompass: Aegina, Afaia Temple, Reconstruction Creative or design excellence The contribution of a place to the quality of its setting landmark quality A contribution to important vistas.
A heritage asset, item or place will not necessarily need to conform to prevailing good taste, or be designed by architects, to display aesthetic qualities. Vernacular buildings that sit well within their cultural landscape due to the use of local materials, form, scale or massing, may also have aesthetic value.
For a place to be considered a local landmark, it will need to be visually prominent and a reference point for the local district. In the case of a heritage area, the individual components will collectively form a streetscape, townscape or cultural environment with signicant aesthetic characteristics.
The Vapheio cups. Pair of gold cups found in the tholos tomb of Vapheio in Laconia. The relief representations depict scenes of bull-chasing. They are unique masterpieces of the CretoMycenaean metalwork, dated to the rst half of the 15th century B.C.
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2.2.6 Historic Values Historic values encompass a societys history, and therefore encompass a range of values and may be are attached to natural, tangible, movable and intangible heritage resources. Historic values are important because they keep human memory alive and memorable resources are considered to be time-markers visible in the landscape, therefore is the Heritage Environment a very powerful cultural and heritage tourism attractor. An item or place may have historic value because it has inuenced, or has been inuenced by, an historic gure, event, phase or activity, it may have been the site of an important event. Heritage assets can be powerful if it shows patterns in the development of the history, has signicant time and memory markers from the built and natural environment has indigenous plant species and geological features that have historic signicance, has a distinctive creative or technical achievements to show, exemplies characteristics of a particular type of human activity in the landscape, including way of life, custom, process, land use, function, design or technique or the works of a particular architect or designer, or of a particular design style, demonstrates ways of life, customs, processes, no longer practised in danger of being lost, or of exceptional interest, if it reects a variety of changes over a long time A heritage item or place or area included under this criterion should: Be closely associated with events, developments or cultural phases that have played an important part in the localitys history Have a special association with a person, group of people or organisation important in shaping the locality (either as the product or workplace of a person or
Tomb of Marathon, Greece
In Ancient Greece, messengers (dayrunners) who carried the news of war from one city to another, enjoyed great esteem and respect; the roads were problematic, they had to pass through h o s t i l e t e r r i t o r y, a n d traveling posed great dangers at that time. The states would assign specially trained "messengers" or "runners" or "roadheralds, with great stamina and strength of character to carry messages in times of war as well as peace.
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group, or the site of a particular event connected with them). Be an example of technical or creative achievement from a particular period. Contributions can be made in all walks of life including commerce, community work and local government. Most people are associated with more than one place during their lifetime and it must be demonstrated why one place is more signicant than others. The associations should be strong and veried by evidence and, ideally, demonstrated in the fabric of the place. A heritage item or place included under this criterion may be a standing structure or archaeological deposit and will generally be an important benchmark or reference site. A place of research value should provide, or demonstrate a likelihood of providing, evidence about past activity. This may include important information about construction technology, land use or industrial processes not available anywhere
else. The information should be inherent in the fabric of the place. A place included under the second criterion should: Show qualities of innovation or represent a new achievement for its time. Demonstrate breakthroughs in design or places that extend the limits of technology. Show a high standard of design skill and originality, or innovative use of materials, in response to particular climatic or landform conditions, or a specic functional requirement, or to meet challenge of a particular site. Many of the places included under this criterion are industrial sites, though examples of engineering (such as bridge construction and road design) might also meet this criterion. Most communities will have a special attachment to particular places. A place would be considered for inclusion under this criterion if it were one that the community, or a signicant part of the community, has held in high regard for an extended period.
The name of the athletic longdistance endurance race, the "marathon", comes from Feidipides, the Greek runner, who was sent from the town of Marathon to Athens to announce that the Persians had been miraculously defeated in the Battle of Marathon.
2.2.7. Spiritual and Special Values Special values to the community can be considered as part of other values but are particularly important for some places and some communities and be made to tourism attractors, especially for those target groups, who are already familiar with structures within a cultural or religious system. Religious tourism and pilgrimages - 33 -
Feidippides ran the entire distance without stopping, but moments after proclaiming his message "Nenkkamen" ("We have won!") to the city, he collapsed from exhaustion.
are strongly associated with specic values of a place or a resource, like Mekka and Rom. Special values also dene if a place spiritually important for maintaining the fundamental health and well-being of natural and cultural systems, like the Yellowstone Park or the Especially Protected Resorts of the Russian Federation in Northern Caucasus.
2.3
Secondary Criteria
Assessing the signicance of heritage resources for tourism means to select features of certain tourism value, which not only are distinct, but also visit-worthy, physically and mentally accessible to visitors. They may belong to any heritage class, being natural, manmade, or spiritual. All distinctive and visit-worthy features are being categorized in specic heritage classes, so that they can be later on processed as information with specic tourism value and specic features, which may be easily documented by respective experts. The classication of heritage resources in pure heritage classes helps planners to deal with the distinctive characteristics of each class separately and enables them to distil the essence of heritage resources for visitors in a shorter time period.
particular period or way of life, the work of a particular builder or architect, or an architectural style. To be considered a good representative example, the place should have a high level of authenticity.
Rarity
Rarity demonstrates rare, uncommon or endangered aspects of cultural heritage. This criterion encompasses places that either are rare from the time of their construction, or subsequently become rare due to the loss of similar places or areas. An item or place of rarity value should: provide evidence of a defunct custom, way of life or process; or demonstrate a custom, way of life or process that is in danger of being lost; or demonstrate a building function, design or technique of exceptional interest.
Representativeness
This criterion demonstrates the features of a class of cultural places, environments, objects and manifestation of intangible values. A place included under this criterion should provide a good example of its type. A place may be representative of a common building or construction type, a - 34 -
Modiers
Assessing the signicance of heritage assets means to select features for specic consumption types like tourism, antiques and gourmet shopping, museum and exhibition visitations, book reading, history games, traditional handicraft and serially produced material cultural heritage items, to name but a few. Their values shall be physically accessible mentally accessible to visitors. They may belong to any heritage class, being natural, manmade or spiritual. All distinctive and visit-worthy features are being categorized in specic heritage classes, so that they can be later on processed as information with specic tourism value and specic features, which may be easily documented by respective experts. A subset of modiers is suggested
to allow a thorough assessment of an asset to be offered to cultural consumption. The relation of heritage interpretation to heritage signicance is close. While the rst includes the possible ways of presenting the importance of an item, beyond its utilitarian value, the latter refers to its historical, scientic, cultural, social, archaeological, architectural, natural or aesthetic value, its setting (the area beyond its boundaries), use, associations, meanings, records, related items and objects. Cultural heritage assets and items may have a range of v a l u e s a n d m e a n i n g s f o r d i ff e r e n t individuals or groups- or no values at all- if not known or interpreted.
2.4
To produce an effective Statement of Signicance means to encapsulate the assets values and meanings. Simply stating that an asset is signicant-, wont do. It is needed to explain why it is signicant, to whom and what it means. The Statement of Signicance allows the asset to be appreciated and embraced, not only by the experts community, but by the end user as well. In this way a wide spectrum of different target publics is emotionally mobilize and policy makers increase their awareness in regards to protecting the asset by legislation. To write a good Statement of Signicance requires to:
record and compose knowledge and ideas about the object. ensure that the crucial provenance details and associations of a given heritage asset is fully recorded. facilitate debate and discussion about the asset and pass the values to future generations summarize the meaning and importance of an asset to a succinct message extract the cultural values hidden in the material and or immaterial form of the asset and enable those values to be communicated to different target publics create a reference point for checking future uses or work on the asset to ensure the preservation and conservation of its important values.
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Wilde Life (pure natural environment) Man-Nature Interaction (parks, cultural landscapes,
Built Environment Movable Cultural Heritage (objects and collections) Material Cultural Heritage (culture based consumables)
Spiritual Heritage, Values and Beliefs Religion Customs and Traditions Lifestyles
Signicance & Assessment MAIN PRINCIPLES 1. Historical Values 2. Aesthetical Values 3. Scientic, Research, Technical Values 4. Social Values 5. Spiritual Values Tourism Modiers 1.Provenance 2.Integrity 1.1. Authenticity 2.1 Completeness 1.2. Originality 2.2. Exemplarity 1.3. Designation 2.3. Bio-and Cultural Diversity LEVELS OF SIGNIFICANCE 1. Spatial Level 1.1. Global Level 1.2. National, 1.3. Regional, 1.4. Local 2. Social Level 2.1. Community, 2.4. Personal 2.2. Group, 2.3. Family,
3.Distinctiveness
3.3 Familiarity
4. Accessibility
Interpretive Potential
5.1 Current Asset Status, 5.2 Legal Asset status, 5.3 Intervention Capacity, 5.4 Asset Knowledge, 5.5 Audience Segmentation, 5.6. Interpretive Opportunities, 5.7 Media Selection, 5.8 Presentation Techniques
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What aspects of the asset might interest different audiences? # What makes the asset signicant? Is the asset an outstanding example of something? Is it the rst, largest, or most complete of its kind? (the asset can be signicant without being the biggest or earliest.) # Are there any documents that describe the importance of your asset? Has your municipality or any other organization identied the asset as signicant? What have they said about it? # Whats special about your resource? What makes it different from other resources in the region, the nation, or the world? # ......... Does your selected heritage asset provide opportunities for the public to learn about the historic, cultural or natural heritage of the place that hosts the asset? How? # Is your resource more authentic, original, or intact than other assets of its type? (Staying relatively unchanged for a long period of time is pretty unusual, but if so there is a possibility to attract the interest of many different audiences.) # ...... # # #
Personally, what do you think are the most interesting aspects of the asset in question? ............. If your resource is historic, what makes it typical for its time period? # If its cultural, how does it relate to local traditions? ............. If its natural, what makes it typical of the area? # ...... Are there other nearby examples of this type of resource? How are they similar or different? ......... What are the key events that relate to the history or development of your resource? Can you link them to larger events in the region or the nation? # .. How has the asset changed over time? # .. Do different parts or aspects of the asset have different stories to tell? # What else might be signicant about the heritage asset? #
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Use an existing map or diagram of your resource, or draw one. # What you should draw depends on the kind of the heritage asset youre interpreting. # For businesses (such as hotels, restaurants, or craft shops etc.), use the space to draw a map of your property, including any buildings and landscape features. If your resource is a building with several oors that visitors can access, you should diagram each of those oors. # For events and performances, draw a map of the place where the activities will be held. # ...
For objects (coins, furniture, pottery, machines, buildings etc.) that will be presented in an interpretive display, draw a diagram of your display space. # Once youve drawn heritage space features: label all the specic features youd like to point out to the target publics selected label features that highlight the signicance of the asset(s) to be interpreted illustrate your stories: if youre telling the story of a past event that occurred in the spatial proximity of the asset you are interpreting , include the locations where the events actually happened.
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EXAMPLE
RHODES
building europe:
Knights at work!
The Interpretive Context
Citizens Services
Private Life
Multiethnic Governance Faith, Social Life and the Arts
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1 SHPERE OF GOVERNANCE
1.1! Multiethnic Governance 1.1.1# Grand Masters Palace IMAGE ONE 1.1.2# Knight Street 1.1.3# Inns of the Knight Street IMAGE THREE
1.1.3.1# Auvergne 1.1.3.2# Anglettere 1.1.3.3# Italie 1.1.3.4# France 1.1.3.5# Espagne 1.1.3.6# Provence
!
1.2!
2 CITIZEN SERVICES
2.1! Health 2.1.2# New Hospital of the Knights # (Archaeological Museum) IMAGE TWO 2.1.2# Old Hospital of the Knights (Paint # Collection) Justice 2.2.1# Castellania (Archbishops Palace) 2.2.2# Basilica Mercatorum (Merchants Cabin) Defense 2.3.1# Defense Lines
2.3.1.1# Tongue of France 2.3.1.2# Tongue of Germany 2.3.1.3# Tongue of Spain 2.3.1.4# Tongue of Provence 2.3.1.5# Tongue of Italy 2.3.1.6# Tongue of Auvergne
2.2!
2.3!
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2.3.3.1# Tower of St. Athanassios 2.3.3.1# Tower of Spain 2.3.3.1# Tower of St. John 2.3.3.1# Tower of France (Windmills)
2.3.4# Bastions
2.3.4.1# St. George Bastion 2.3.4.2# Bastion dell Caretto
3.5! 3.6!
4
4.1! 4.2! 4.3! 4.4! 4.5!
SPHERE OF PRIVATE LIFE Hasan Bey House Guy de Melais House (National Bank) Diomede de Villagurt Costanzo Operti Prince Djem House
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Nicholas de Montmirel House Catalan House House of the English Prior Cemetary of the Knights Old Jewish Cemetary Holocaust Memorial
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03
TELL THE STORY
3.1
Storytelling is as old as prehistoric times, because its a powerful tool for conveying and sharing ideas, beliefs, values and traditions. Because stories are so effective at explaining the meaning of things, theyre at the heart of interpretation. No matter how simple a heritage asset might seem, it has a variety of stories to tell. It doesnt have to be the oldest or most impressive resource in your community it can still tell a story. Not all stories have the same emotional impact, and not all stories convey the signicance of the asset with the same power and relevance. The secret to successful interpretation is to capture the essence of the asset. If there are three or four really interesting aspects connecting the asset with your audience, how can you link them together in a way thats memorable for them, is the quintessence of a quality cultural heritage service. How can the audience remember why the asset is signicant? To focus on a concise story and avoid causing the audience suffer mental overload, its useful to organize contents into storylines. These are the main messages the audience shall to carry away at the end, whether you are producing a leaet for an opera play, or a label for a homemade marmalade. Asset messages and meanings are easily communicated across a multicultural and multigenerational audience by telling stories that help them appreciate whats special about your resource. Storylines are crucial to interpretation, because they give different audiences clear threads to follow, rather than a series of disconnected facts. No matter what kind of an asset one wished to interpret an interesting story will always capture the audiences attention.
A good storyline
explains something signicant about the interpreted; is written as a complete sentence focusing on a single message we would like the audience to remember; goes beyond a mere description of facts; is presented at a level of detail thats appropriate for the audience links tangible things to intangible ideas (explain how different aspects of the asset reect ideas, meanings, beliefs, and values); allows the audience visitors to decide for themselves what the asset means and derive their personal connections, while giving the opportunity to different personal discoveries.
Without a storyline
A tour can become a collection of random stops with no link. A restaurant dish simply expensive. A local store visit boring. A ea market day waste of time.
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Assign a number
to each of your stories. F o r e a c h s t o r y, identify maximum
ve elements
of the story youd like to emphasize, or series of events youd like to explain. Remember that
3.2
Common threads between the asset and the rest of the world are needed to facilitate understanding and appreciation of the asset. If museum visitors, or restaurant guests, or your ea market customers understand how the collection and the dish offered relates to the bigger picture, and why the asset is important and the resulting services offered acquire a special added value. To help any user group make sense of a given asset, one needs to link the asset to larger trends and events. Names and dates are a part of interpretation, but theyre meaningless without the wider socio-historical context, which offers many bridges to associate the asset with the users every day horizon. One way to develop a context for your resource is to ask a series of w-questions that help you link a simple fact to a much larger chain of events. By making that link, youre helping to explain why the asset is signicant why people should care about it. - 45 -
magical number 7 is
the the maximum capacity of the human working memory
Link
tangible
to
things
intangible
ideas by connecting the physical things that visitors see, and the meanings behind them.
WHAT HAPPENED?
The ames of World War II are licking Europe. In Greece begins armed resistance against the triple Occupation (Italian-German-Bulgarian). In Western Greece starts the struggle of the Hellenic National Liberation Army (ELAS). The latter develops into the biggest Volunteer Army in Europe.
W+2
Questions Who What Why When How How long
WHEN?
On Sunday, the 7th of June 1942, the armed ght begins ofcially in Western Greece.
WHERE?
In Domnista, Aris Velouchiotis, Commander-in-Chief of ELAS, declares the Revolution against the Foreign Occupation and its local collaborators. The armed struggle starts from the wild sierras of Roumeli, a region with tradition in partisan warfare.
WHY?
Because the Greek nation wishes to get rid of the enemy, to escape from the deplorable conditions of living during the Occupation and bring the political instability to a halt.
WHO?
As in 1821, in the armed struggle participate, people from all social classes and ideologies. Peasants and priests, outlaws and policemen, National Army ofcers and teachers, all Greeks who envisage a free fatherland.
HOW?
Greece ghts back. The secret war in the cities, supplements the armed Resistance in mountainous areas. Gradually, organized partisan groups grow in numbers, giving hope to the local populations by successfully confronting the enemy forces.
AND FINALLY
The enemy collapses, but political disagreements lead the country to a Civil War. The latter signies a period of violent encounters. Greece is creating its post-war identity. - 46 -
3.3
Critical issues
The chronicle of the Operation Kalavrita 17 October 43: Battle between Germans and partisans from Kerpini Report: 86 Germans captured, three of whom injured. 25 November 43: Operation Kalavrita is planned and signed. 5 December 43: Walking and mechanically driven German forces start moving from Aigio, Patras, Tripoli and Pyrgos towards Kalavrita. 7 December 43: The partisans execute German captives on Mt. Helmos. 8 December 43: The Germans order the execution of the civilians. Report: Mass executions in the villages of Kerpini, Rogoi, Zachlorou, Mega Spilaio, Souvardo, Vrachni. 9 December 43: The German forces enter Kalavrita. They lie to the people there, claiming that they were looking for the hostages from the battle of Kerpini and they wanted to keep the partisans away. They said that they would not hurt anyone They burn ve houses and break down another one... 10 December 43: There comes the order for the execution of the entire male population of Kalavrita, aged 13 to 18. 11 December 43: Three German captives from the battle of Kerpini are buried. The Germans, from now on, allow entering but they ban going out of the city. 12 December 43: The Germans take supplies and inform the local people that they will leave Kalavrita the following day. 13 December 43: The church bells ring, calling the villagers of Kalavrita at the Primary School. The people gathered are divided into the male population and the women and children. The men are transported to the Kapi hill where they are executed. Kalavrita is on re. The women manage to open the gate of the school and escape. 14 December 43: The women bury the dead on the Kapi Hill Report of the Operation: About 700 dead civilians.
If the interpretive offer addresses an audience with specic needs, such as visually impaired people, you should consult with them and test your ideas and designs to ensure they work. If you are interpreting a critical issue (WWI, genocides, disasters, social and religious phenomena), involving representatives of the relevant audience groups in the editorial process it is essential for a quality implementation.
The Nuremberg Trial What the Germans did, such as the Holocaust of Kalavrita, as part of the Operation Kalavrita is against the rules which regulate the relations among the countries. Thus, after the end of World War II, the trial of the German Nazis began in Nuremberg. The accused accounted for their crimes against humanity and peace during the war. According to the International Law several were sentenced to be hanged. Available at: http://www.aitoliki.gr/gefyralikwn/indexen.php
Kalavrita, Greece, WWII Interpreting a Critical Issue and connecting to the Cultural Heritage Consumption Mix: Source: Bridge of Oaths in Western Greece, C.I.P. Leader+ Transregional Cooperations, 2008
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Try seeing how the town of Kalavrita developed after the Holocaust.
Indoor Activities: Travel back in time!
Outdoor Activities If you are curious to learn about the outbreak of the Greek War of Independence in 1821, visit Kalavrita on March 21. At the square you will listen to discussions among members of the Society of the Friends and war lords, you will see Bishop Germanos of Patras declare the beginning of the Greek War of Independence. Take part in sports activities at the Helmos ski resort, on the mountain where the Klephts and partisans once walked...
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There are many approaches to writing a storyline, but theyre all designed to help you create a single sentence that says something important about your resource: Start with a general topic, narrow it down to a more specic topic, and turn it into a statement:
The medieval city of Rhodes was a multicultural society with a multiethnic governance.
Check Does your plan help to explain the signicance of your resource? Does your concept go beyond a mere description of facts? Does you approach link tangible things to intangible ideas?
Turn a Topic into a Statement General Topic Decide on a single focus for your story.
My topic is the Medieval City of Rhodes and how it has been governed by a multiethnic community.
Identify several things youd like the audience to know about your assets combing them and combine them into a single idea like the spheres of life for the Medieval City of Rhodes) Combine these observations into a single idea that the audience can remember explain the signicant of Rhodes for the world its distinct identity; link tangible parameter (the architectural character) to intangible ideas (religious unity of the Knights and political independence):
The fortications of Rhodes were frozen at 1522 so that Rhodes is the only European walled town that still shows the transition between the classical medieval fortication and the modern ones
This statement is the real point of your interpretation. The storyline answers a question that visitors are likely to ask: Why should I care about the Knights of St. John in Rhodes? Theres no magic formula for telling a good story. Its a combination of logistics and creativity.
Think of your story as a screenplay. Movies start right in the middle of the action. After they hook the audience on the story, they go back and ll in the background details, using dialogue and even ashbacks before they develop the story plot
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What themes best help you explain the signicance of your resource?
Example 1 Sailor Roger Jervis, now a Coffee Shop!
You own a coffee in the proximity of Fort St. Nicholas in Rhodes. The lovely place you are located, was one of the key defense point in the Siege of Rhodes in 1480.
Freedom vs Slavery
The Turkish forces try to invade Fort St. Nicholas with a new trick: With boards and barrels, they fashion a pontoon bridge with a line xed at one end. The line is dropped into the water and guided through the ring of an anchor secretly xed on the rocks around the fort. By pulling this line form the opposite shore the platform would stop at the rocks and the Turkish troops would jump on shore and invade the fort. But on the night of the 17th of June 1480, just before the operation is launched an English sailor dives unobserved in the water and severs the line. Set free and carried by the currents of the Aegean Sea, the bridge drifts away from the shore to the open sea with all troops in it, under the re and cheers of the defendant of St. Nicholas. Theme Subthemes
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To create effective interpretation, you have to do more than just describe, classify and signify the asset. one needs to look beyond the obvious and think about what it means.
Instead of telling visitors what to think, good interpretation encourages visitors to think for themselves.
The best stories dont always start at the beginning. Even though actual events happen in a particular order, your story doesnt have to and probably shouldnt. Instead of focusing on what happened rst, ask yourself what will get the audience interested in your story. Marco: Si Messere! But what about the people? Signor Malatesta: Ah! The people Its easy, my boy, to rule over hungry, insecure people. Locals know that the Turks are becoming stronger, the Greek weaker and the Venetians are eager to swallow all other merchants. Dont worry. Give them a Genoese passport and make them feel citizens of a strong stato da mar like our Republic. A revolution never comes if people have to take care of their wealth. And , ah: Do not try to convert the Greeks to Catholicism. This brings only trouble and we are merchants, not priests. Giovanni: What about the Republic, Messere, dont we have obligations there? Signor Malatesta: Signor DArco! It is the Republic that is much obliged to you! It is you that risked life and ship to take over the island. La Signoria is in your debt now! Marco: -But Signor Malatesta: Marco! Go and nd the other ship owners, tell them to form a union to administer the island and collect taxes. Get our money back! Fix the prices for mastic and alum. Dont export too much, prices fall then. Go!
Danilo Malatesta, Councellor to the Doge di Genova, invented a perfect plan to crush the guild of the Venetian merchants. The cunning old man invites Marco and Giovanni into the Palazzo della Signoria and connes them a plan.
Signor Malatesta: When you get to the island you should immediately rebuild the Castle. Dont forget that the Venitians want to take la isola from you. Giovanni: Si, Signor. And the Turks are becoming stronger. Marco: True, Grand Father! Manuale Zaccaria exported 1330.000 tons and gained 50,000 pounds, but he uses armed men to escort the processed alum from the mines to the port and from there to Europe. Signor Malatesta: Thats not the only danger. There is also the Greek, who rules in Constantinople. If the old lion gets awake la isola e perduta. I know he needs money. Pay him taxes and make him feel everything is under control. - 53 -
Whats the turning point of your story? Give a clue about the outcome of the story, without revealing the ending?
Marco: Si, Messere. Shall we use force to keep everything under control, if we need to? Signor Malatesta: Marco, Marco. Force is an expensive thing. Use your head instead. Rebuild the defences and make locals think of you as saviours. Tell them you use force only for outside enemies. Giovanni : Si, Messere! We will not disgrace our families, the Malatestas and the Arcos Signor Malatesta: Youth speaks of you, my boy. You are not an Arco anymore. You are from the noblest House of Europe, descending from Emperor Justinian. You are a Giustiniani now! All of you are Giustinianis now! You all stay together, rule together, get rich together. Only together! Now! Swear to death you are going to keep these instructions and make other follow them!
Another way to capture the audiences attention is to tell a vignette a short scene that says it all. Once youve worked out the best sequence for your story, refer to the map or diagram of your asset. Mentally superimpose your storyline on the map and consider these questions:
Given the logistics of the heritage space, are users likely to follow the sequence developed? If not, what can you do to help users experience things in the right order, might this be an photographic exhibition in a restaurant, a museum collection, permanent exhibits in a craft shop, or a World Heritage Site. Do you need to rethink the sequence, or is there another way you can clarify it for visitors? Should you adjust the elements of the story? Based on any observations you made about the questions above, are you going to make any changes to your story? If you are, what changes are you considering?
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04
SELECT THE
AUDIENCE
4.1
Before implementing any interpretation, one needs to consider the audience: What types of groups is an asset able to attract, if interpreted? Cultural consumers may include any group with a particular interest in the subject matter offered, ranging from music buyers and opera goers to gourmet shoppers and day trippers, vacationers and local residents. Each group will be looking for a different type of experience, so theyll be looking for different types of interpretation. The response to interpretation also depends on their level of education, learning style, language and cultural traditions and on practical issues like the available time budget.
Audience targeted interpretation considers the needs of groups that might be looking for experiences tailored to their needs. The more we know about the cultural consumer groups we wish to address, the more effectively you can communicate with them. In addition audiences at heritage places are usually multilingual and multicultural. English as a rst foreign language is a good option. To obtain feedback from people with different needs and perspectives, as part of your target audience is a necessary step for quality of the interpretive context: men and women; members of minority groups; people with physical challenges; multigenerational audiences (children, adolescents, adults, seniors) multiethnic groups multilingual groups An interpretive strategy shall include also a range of target publics that are not classied as consumers as visitors, but are a sine qua non condition for the overall success: consider talking to: Board or staff members of cultural heritage organizations (especially those who interact with visitors); owners or managers of nearby heritage resources, or other resources that share your theme or focus; municipal ofcials, representatives from community groups (local historical society, chamber of commerce, etc.), and others who are familiar with your community; people afliated with the history of your resource (family members or descendants, ethnic or religious groups); neighbors (especially those who might be affected by your interpretation); and investors or other funding sources.
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4.2
Approach the Audience with Suitable Media An interpretive story by itself, does not ensure the overall success, no matter how well structures it is. Considering the right interpretive medium to present the interpretation is as much as art as science. Interpretive media include everything from printed brochures to guided tours to digital formats and recently apps in smart phones. When planning the interpretation strategy, one should focus on the written word to develop the story skeleton, the story plot and the narrative and carefully select the medium through which the interpretive concept will be realized. There exist many media options for telling their stories. Interpretive media include outdoor panels, museum labels, booklets, brochures and guided tours, events, like storytelling, musical or theatrical performances festivals, and digital lms. New technologies are appearing with dizzying speed like QR Codes and apps for smart phones. Any story that does not link to a specic audience, is ex principio decient. The selected audience shall determine the paths the interpretive story has to take and how the selected asset will be presented. That way, its more likely that your message will resonate with them. Choosing how you tell the interpretive narrative is as much an art as a science.
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Multi-Media
Multi-media items are the fastest growing and evolving segment of interpretation media. Todays trendy items might be at a yard sale by this time next year. For technologies that survive the shakedown, costs inevitably decrease, making them more affordable later on. Types of multimedia currently include: Audiovisual (slide shows, lm, video) Computer-based (mainly interactive stations) Roving (handheld audio or video units, tours on CD or DVD, radio broadcast) Visitor-controlled (podcasts, cell phone delivery) Smart Phone Apps QR Codes
Interpretive Displays
This type of display can help to connect a wide variety of objects to a larger story, and help visitors make sense of them. They also provide opportunities for creative educational programs.
Web-Based Interpretation
Today a heritage asset without a Web site becomes invisible. Most Web sites provide information about how to access heritage assets, site and resources. If specically designed by professionals with expertise in the interpretation of heritage, websites can be a valuable interpretation tool.
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END USERS
EXPERIENCE
Put yourself in the shoes of visitors, cultural consumers and/ or other end users. The common denominators is to provide for an experience that is genuine, fresh, accurate, meaningful and exciting
Are your visitors, guests, users familiar with technology such as podcasts, smart phones? Do you want to attract more visitors with these kinds of skills? Focus on the message, rather than the medium. If your stories arent well conceived, the technology wont be worth the investment.
NARRATIVES Are
STAFF
If youre considering personal (face-to-face) interpretation, can you devote the time and effort necessary to make it truly effective? If you are a restaurant owner wishing to interpret the traditional dishes, dont provide prepared yourself or your staff to do it right and seek the advice of experts. If you are a museum curator consider if you can to provide your staff with solid training, supportive supervision and opportunities to research new material?
the interpretive narratives selected good candidates for multi-media interpretation? Could your stories benet from music, sound effects, recordings or video? Do they have dramatic storylines that could come to life in this kind of presentation? If you have a lot to say, consider working with experts to develop a short audio or video presentation.
ASSET
Does your asset have interesting features that can be experienced outdoors, no matter when people visit? If so, make sure that you provide materials that visitors can pick up when no ones available to greet them or share your stories. If you are a restaurant owner wishing to interpret the traditional dishes, dont provide prepared yourself or your staff to do it right and seek the advice of experts.
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Do you have any other objects, artifacts, or original documents you can use to enhance your stories? Can you acquire or borrow them?
1 HOUR
is the maximum for an interpretive presentation, might that be
SAFETY
Interpreting the values of traditional pottery in a local craft shop is not as quite as risky as interpreting wild nature. Whether you are a glass maker, or an outdoor activity organizer, always consider visitor safety, as accidents do happen. You should be especially conscious of safety when you decide where to place interpretive signs to enrich the experience and warning signs to regulate behaviour. For example, if visitors are likely to read a sign from their cars, or stop to listen to an audio presentation, do they have a safe place to pull off the road? If visitor are touring the local craft shop, located in a traditional building is the use of stairs properly designated? If your Museum is a Castle with narrow corridors and open vistas are there enough warning signs place at the right spots? Appropriateness: Does the interpretation youre planning have the potential to frame and picture the natural, cultural or historical environment of the asset in question? Will the interpretive offers impact on the integrity or ambiance of the asset? Maintenance: Is your staff available for maintenance (and possibly security) of your interpretive media? Does your organization have the time and budget to make periodic updates to your interpretation?
than a visit to the mall. Appreciating a regions good wine and tradition products or handicrafts leads to ask for them and that makes a difference in the market. Cultural consumers do not only wish to experience the tangible nature of an item or place has to offer, but to explore their own thoughts and feelings, as well. Cultural consumers consume, what they value, and to value means to know and understand. What the might expect from the experience, is what will make the difference in the market. Consider what they might know about an asset before they arrive. They might have a general idea what is offered, but they wont be able to connect all the dots. If you want your clients, visitors, guests become cultural consumers and go away satised, you have to put the pieces together into a message they can understand and appreciate.
Try to match your audience groups to the kind of experience theyre looking for. If your resource is famous for bird watching, your audience is rather an expert audience: they might want to know what birds have been seen this week, how many birds are nesting on the property this year, and the locations of other bird watching sites in your area.
EXPECTATIONS
When cultural consumers experience a heritage asset, theyre looking for something they value and that something might be natural, cultural, scientic, recreational, spiritual, intellectual or inspirational. An asset like a top quality heritage site and its environment may lead to substantially more consumption
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Instead of assuming that your audience groups wants to see and do everything you offer, discover how they can nd what interests them. If you regularly get visitors who are familiar with your subject matter, you might need to split your interpretation into two tracks one for experienced visitors, and another for casual visitors. Most people will spend less than an hour focusing on your interpretation. Although they might stay longer than that, theyll be looking for other activities to keep them busy. If you want visitors to stay longer, one approach is to work together with other resources in the area. Rather than duplicating efforts,
look for ways to complement what visitors will experience elsewhere. Personal contacts like friendly and helpful staff is a sine qua non; Physically and cognitively accessible, user-friendly information that allows to quickly and easily learn what opportunities are available for all consumption types and activities;
interactive experiences that involve in the learning process directly anda wide variety of media that accommodate their personal learning styles; souvenirs of their visit something they can take home.
Culture, Ethnicity, Race and Religion Europeans Australians Americans, African Americans, Latinos Orthodox, Catholic, Protestant Christians , Jews, Muslims , Hindu etc. Groups associated with the history or development of the asset
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05
ENSURE
ACCESSIBILITY
Accessibility
is dened as the communication with the public, the accessibility of the destination and its attractions and the atmosphere of the place. It includes the existence of a strategy, the quality of information and hospitality, the presence and quality of secondary or complementary tourist services, internal and external accessibility, attractions and events. Heritage places should be accessible to everyone, including people with mobility or sensory impairments, the elderly, parents with small children and anyone who is temporarily disabled as a result of illness or injury. Improved access can open up wider markets for owners and managers, which could be promoted to increase visitation. Time lack is a feature of post-modern society; leisure time is thus treated as more precious than ever. Culture is a people industry and customer service is critical: with a high level service, the more likely it is for local businesses and cultural heritage operators to create a memorable impression on the users and consumers of cultural services. The supply side shall deliver outstanding experiences from the rst moment that consumers click on a web site or look at a brochure, to when they leave a heritage place, or the business related to the heritage sector. # # Consumers are willing to pay a price, but they should receive value in return. Pricing policies are xed prices indicating the right to consume types of heritage. Entry prices
should be based on the analysis of the services rendered presupposing visitor participation at all costs, or there can be a scale according to target groups, or a policy for networking heritage clusters with signicant advantages for ticket or package holders. Pricing policies should reect the balance between price and returned value. Once a visitor enters a heritage place on an entry price he has a contract with the cultural operator. The price paid should reveal the services he is entitled to, the expected quality, behavioural norms- if necessary, the sense of contributing to a good cause (usually restoration, conservation, maintenance and expansion projects) and the ability to express his opinion regarding the fullment of the contract.
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5.1
Visitor Facilities
Access into heritage places is often difcult because earlier design and construction techniques did not usually consider people's varying abilities to the extent they do today. Technological improvements in assistance equipment and improvements in building design have helped to correct earlier inequities. Access to the historic landscape means unassisted barrier-free movement from arrival to destination. Accessibility to heritage resources should include a continuous route which allows the individual to experience a range of environments found at a given places. Whenever possible, all areas of a heritage place or building should be accessible. Access must be provided from the main access point, onto, into and through the site, historic building or historic landscape. There should be at least one accessible public entrance into a site and appropriate door width, threshold and conguration. If one public entrance is not achievable, then an alternative building entrance for the disabled should be identied (by signs) and it should remain unlocked during hours of operation. It is expected that, once inside a historic building, the public visitor or employee will have barrier-free access to all services provided to the general public. This includes bathrooms, ofces, restaurant dining, etc. Corridors and interior doorways must be wide enough for a wheel chair, modest oor level changes must be ramped, and thresholds must be shallow. At a minimum, all services on the accessible entrance oor must be available to all visitors including the disabled. The extent to which a historic interior can be modied without loss of its historic character will depend on the size, scale, and detailing of the features along the
accessible route. Heritage sites are composed of character-dening features, so that careful consideration must be given to avoiding alterations to those features that contribute to the sites signicance. In some instances, complete accessibility may be possible by resurfacing an entrance path. In other instances, new trails, ramps or parking may be necessary to accommodate the public. Alterations and interventions should not change to the historic character of signicant places. Alterations to non-character-dening features are acceptable in order to provide the highest level of access within the building with the lowest level of impact. Less signicant interior spaces can be considered in order to provide necessary amenities on the oor of principal access. Toilet facilities should be provided for the general public and one accessible unisex unit (sized for wheelchair use and with a privacy latch) must be provided. All public spaces on at least the level of the accessible entrance should be made accessible. For individuals with physical disabilities any change in grade including stairs and some ramps are severe barriers. There should be at least one accessible route using appropriate grades or ramps from a site access point, such as a designated parking space for all including visitors with disabilities, to an accessible entrance. Existing paths or trails should be evaluated to determine if their grade, alignment, width, and surface material are appropriate. Other outdoor features, such as drinking fountains, trash receptacles, and interpretive wayside exhibits should be designed in such a way that they are easily reachable and understandable by everyone. In historic public parks, recreational facilities including swimming areas, camping grounds, picnic areas, playgrounds, and ball elds, should be
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constantly evaluated to offer a variety of recreational activities to disabled people. One of the best solutions to landscape accessibility is minimizing the distance between arrival and destination points. This may require accessible parking, with curb cuts and a path within easy reach of an historic building, picnic area, or an
interpretive trail. For some landscapes, a natural or historic site grade that is very steep or composed of massive terracing and steps may prohibit full access without damage to the character of the property. In this case, partial accessibility to some elevations may be necessary.
5.2
Signage Systems
Directional Signage includes roadside signs for motorists, drivers and simple navigation before, during and after a trail, warning signs of both informative and preventative nature, navigation to facilities and recreational opportunities within a heritage area (park, archeological site, museum, etc). It manages any information that is related to accessibility, (parking and transport possibilities, bus schedules, etc) amenities, detailed description of the site, maps, route markers and street names, diagrams and photographs, other available tourism packages, activities in proximity or connections to other attractions and ancillary services, such as local tourism bureaus, maps, regional products, etc. Directional Signage also includes any forms of identication and information signs, Welcome signs, signage for accredited and non-accredited visitor information services, regional tourist drives, themed tourist routes, regulatory signage (parking, no-parking, prohibited, free etc.), roadside advertising, guide and service signs, signage in rural and urban areas etc. Interpretive Signage strives to attract visitor attention by producing connections to meanings and phenomena. Interpretive Signage describes the sensitivity and signicance of each heritage resource and - 65 -
has to be both educational, accurate and tell the stories of past and present landscapes. Interpretation content needs to assist visitors to develop an awareness and understanding of local cultural heritage, to recognize ecosystem and cultural values, to encourage actions taken in relation to protection of natural heritage and cultural heritage. Interpretive Signage coordinates communication with the public by presenting the mission and the values of tangible and intangible resources. It is includes a variety of programs and services such as audiovisual programs, historic furnishings, museum exhibit labels, publications, wayside exhibits, graphics design, interpretive, site signage, contextual design, websites.
Example
Below is an outdoor display panel from Epirus, Greece. Pysogianni Village of Stone Masons. It introduces readers into the cultural landscape of the 19th century Balkans and the arts guilds of Northern Greece by answering 3 simple questions: what-whyhow-when. Then a small description of the picturesque village follows
WHAT HOW
Mastorochoria, the masons villages in the valley of Sarantaporos have given birth to construction arts and handicrafts, which ourished from the 18th to the 20th century. Masons, wood- and stone carvers, stone dressers and carpenters, painters, icon painters and silversmiths have inherited to us the most eloquent landscapes.
Artisans and artists belong to guilds. They practice their profession travelling around in a hierarchically organized group, with rigid rules and codied language. Practicing a profession elsewhere but in the place of birth constitutes a social condition, which re-structures local societies. While men are absent, farming and husbandry become the responsibility of women. Economic relations become urbanized: they are regulated by contracts, deposits, and money orders. The fame of these unknown creators exceeds regional boundaries. They become heroes in poetry, literature, and folk singing. After all, they have inherited to humankind tangible masterpieces in three continents
The increase of the population in the wider area and the consequent scarcity of economic resources have urged rural populations to seek for other income sources. That is why farmers and stockbreeders become artisans and artists. The creations of those grand masters harmonize with nature and human values.
WHY
TODAY
In the beginning of the 20th century the decline of the travelling guilds in the Balkan Pensinsula is starting. It is due to a series of reasons such as the shrinkage of local populations after the Liberation of the Region of Epirus from the Ottoman yoke (1913), the immigration to other countries, the 2nd World War and - the Civil War gradually deconstruct the social and economic networks of the area. The famous guilds receive their places in history.
Stone bridges, cobblestone pavements, houses and mansions, churches and schools, olive oil presses and mills, icons and frescoes combine practical and aesthetical aspects in a landscape, where built expressions reach perfection.
Source: http://itunes.apple.com/gr/app/ rome-2go/id317902596?mt=8 The term has since come to mean a variety of things, but here we dene it as someone who makes little distinction between his or her home and work lives. The prosumer or connected consumer engages in activities
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belonging to either sphere, regardless of time or location. Because of their complex and mobile lifestyles, which combines a demanding workload and an active family life, prosumers embrace embrace social media (Facebook, MySpace, YouTube, Vimeo, Twitter, Linkedin, etc), blogging, video on demand (VoD), podcasting, VoDcasting, virtual realities (Second Life, There.com), mobile communications, and other Internetbased technologies and services that allow people to stay connected anytime anywhere, valuing any technology that enhances and serves individual needs and connectedness on the go. Connected consumers are looking for personalized, useful information, information which enables to experience both the known and the novel in a solid, seamless and high quality way, with ease of access to services and goods and gives the possibility to create and share this information. Rome2Go App Review at http://appcomments.com/app/id317902596/ Rome_2Go_reviews
By producing a series of different materials to document personal experiences connected consumers create the enabling environment for viral information dissemination and viral direct marketing of local businesses: By watching personal documentations recipients are inclined to purchase the product or the service in question, both as laymen or professionals. As connected consumers think globally, they celebrate diversity and have good communications skills, regarding travelling as opportunity for self-actualization, selfgratication, self-enrichment and enhancement of self-image. Connected consumers are explicitly seeking for a u t h e n t i c i t y. T h e i r a m b i t i o n s f o r emancipation and self-identity expression, is a well acknowledged fact: they use social media tools to broadcast their experiences and emotions to family and friends in real time. Connected consumers are buyers and sellers at the same time, marketing virally items and places, products and service in real time, in the case their experiences have been met (sweet spots).
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5.4
Heritage entities are cultural markers replete with symbolic elements. Without the ability to access the intangible networks of knowledge and value transmission, visitors cannot recognise and appreciate monuments and objects of art as such. Human cognitive architecture and heritage presentation. Emphasis is given on costly and lengthy conservation projects, on the fabric as a reminder of times past, while what sites and assets signify, their relevance to community and visitors, are left excluded. Conservation is meaningless without interpretation to
bridge the gap between monumentmeaning and monument-fabric. Trying to facilitate access to cultural values embedded in the tangible fabric, interpretation shall relate related to the phenomena from a visitor-centric point of view by linking causal mechanisms of human cognitive architecture and instructional design in order to facilitate higher cognitive results in non-formative settings. Cognitive processing of information with tourism value facilitates perception of phenomena with less effort in shorter time periods. Irrespectively of the medias nature, information ows structured in this way aim to reduce the time the visitors needs to prepare for their visit, and
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Cognitive Accessibility
Cognitive accessibility is ensured by activating human perception through provocation, by relating to prior acquired experiences, and by providing for novelty and variety, surprise and exploration. Capturing the attention means to create bridges between the inherent values of phenomena selected for presentation, and the audiences. Far beyond the dissemination of factual information, cognitive accessibility aims to create meanings, so that visitors can put a phenomenon into personal perspective and identify with it in a way that is more profound and enduring way.
globalizing world and invest in interpretive planning projects to attract and retain visitors interest by offering experiences in a recreational learning environment. Cultural consumers, might that be recreationists or heritage site visitors, festival goers or ea market buyers want to be engaged and discover what is unique about a place or an item, and they are offered a high added value, only via good interoperation of the object and the place. Interpretive products and services at local level add value and visitor are willing to pay a premium price for the right experience: It is the interpretation of a heritage place that will dene local identity and hence difference in the market. In order to survive, local heritage assets have to satisfy the needs and expectations of experience-seeking cultural consumers.# Interpretation opportunities exist as soon as an asset is signied. Interpretation is a
Meanings
Meanings create the asset signicance. Meanings are contextual in nature, including a linguistic, spatial and a social context. To understand the meanings of heritage entities is to understand those meanings within the given context. Communicated through the use of language, meanings are embedded in language and culture. Being culturally and socially constructed they are shared by all who access them, but not by those who are unable to decode them. One of the most signicant contexts of meanings is the spatial context, the sense of the place. Meanings extracted from a visit to a place, heritage or natural site, collection etc. constitute the high added value experience a visitor takes away in memory. In this vein, meaning is the experience- the only experience any visitor has with a place, an item, an event. #
If your interpretation relies on images such as photographs and works of art, give visitors a chance to interact with them in a display setting. Protect your original materials by displaying copies or scans.
Interpretive offers
In order for a heritage asset to be mentally, emotionally and spiritually accessible, it has to be transformed into an easy to follow structure, into a joyful experience. Cultural heritage operators should therefore develop heritage strategies able to defend local heritage against a - 70 -
meaning making multidisciplinary process especially designed to introduce an audience to the spirit of the asset in an entertaining way conveying a message that has personal relevance and meaning to the audience. Interpretation is strategic communication that seeks to create bonds between the audience and the resources, the visitors and the places they visit. It requires research, planning, higher professional skills and consideration of
ACCESSIBILITY TIP
best use of possible media forms and the principal messages to be conveyed to target audiences. Interpretive products and services must present to visitors the meaning behind any type of resources, which creates value and signicance. Attempting full-scale interpretation e.g. a heritage strategy at local level requires multidisciplinary planning and implementation and the assistance of experts build a conditio sine qua non, prerequisite of success.
The site is inaccessible for prams and wheelchairs. Souvenir shopkeepers in the mediaeval village of Lindos keep prams for families with children during their visit at the sites, but wheelchair s cannot enter the site.
Use puppets in your visitor center, your local museum, craft shop, restaurant, coffee shop to demonstrate gures and meaning s of the traditional events in your locality
Are some features of your resource inaccessible during certain times of the year? Does an asset look signicantly different during different seasons? You might seasonal change, if there is any. Are some features of the asset too fragile (or maybe even too sacred) to share with visitors (this is especially signicant for NATURA 2000, RAMSAR sites and other nationally designated habitats, parks and resources of special ecologic value) - 71 -
06
DEVELOP THE CULTURAL HERITAGE
CONSUMPTION
MIX
Once a sum of signicant assets has been proved appropriate for cultural consumption of any type, might that be shopping antiques, touring the place, visiting museums, or winetasting name is needed to describe the new offer. An attractive mix may consist of the most different elements put together: the more diverse, the better for the variety of the experience. Signied elements from the natural and built environment, museums and collections, events and traditional festivals, open-air and indoor-activities, cultural industries, the performing arts, traditional sports and medicine and so much more they all contribute to the creation of a mixed heritage typology, which should reect through visit-worthy features the spirit of the place, the products and the services offered.
EXAMPLE Society of the Friends. Explore the past, enjoy the present! Society of the Friends creates a balanced heritage consumption mix by using the qualities of the place along with basic components of the tourism product: transport, accommodation, catering, services and infrastructure. Society of the Friends is a historic trail in Western Greece, planned on an interdisciplinary basis, being concerned with the signicance, economic evaluation of heritage assets and the creation of accessibility networks. Making assets in peripheral areas mentally, emotionally and spiritually accessible via professional standards for heritage presentation through synergetic planning may inspire new forms of heritage entrepreneurship at local level.
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07
EVALUATE THE PLAN
Creating and launching interpretive products and services isnt a once and done type of task. It is an ongoing dynamic process that requires steady commitment to maintain end user interest in interpreted assets and in their stories. Successful interpretive applications need to follow the market trends without affecting the integrity of the heritage asset in question, need to be continuously updated with new material, different media, and fresh perspectives on the subject matter, allowing for co-creation of contents. How many visitors will keep returning to a museum that never rotates the objects on display, a restaurant that never varies its menu, or a tour with a tired old script? One way to keep interpretive offers from stagnation is to step back every so often and ask how effective they really are. To do that, a measuring stick is needed that allows comparing efforts invested with those of professionals in the eld of interpretation something that shows where success factors exist and where is space for improvements. Three steps are indispensable for the ongoing evaluation: Front-end evaluation is done at the start of designing an interpretive offer might that be a heritage site brochure, a label for a traditional product, a museum collection, an entrance ticket, a visitor information center, a restaurant menu, or a restaurant decoration, the list is endless. Frond-end evaluation aims to nd out what end-users are interested in or already know or feel about the subject, aspects of the asset and profound subject matter, would use this information to help determine exactly what aspects of assets to interpret. Formative evaluation is done during the content and design development stage, and is used to discover whether a draft script, computer game or design layout is working. This is an essential step and should be a part of any larger interpretation scheme or project starting with 25.000,00 onwards. Formative evaluation ensures that the interpretive concept developed harmonizes with design, timetable and budget. Summative evaluation is done at the end of a project and is used to determine whether the - 75 -
Myceanan Gold Lion's-head funeral vessel for sweetened wines, 16th century b.C
evaluate
without fear
resulting interpretation is meeting its objectives. Acquired information shall be used to make future adjustments to the interpretive product/service assessed and to help others learn from experiences made. There is a range of evaluation data-collecting techniques such as questionnaire surveys, focus groups and visitor observation. These observations can measure indicators such as the stopping power and holding power of a display, panel, interpretive stops, heritage assets, smart phone apps as an interpretive medium, interpretive exhibition or collection (i.e. the proportion of people who stop at a display, and how long they feedback with required information in a cost-effective way.
do you store the information and research results collected during the development of your interpretation strategy? have you thought about who should have access to that material?
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Provide an experience that is unmistakably linked to the heritage of the place? Help the interpreted heritage asset achieve goals in management plans, master plans or budgets? Enhance public awareness of conservation challenges related to the interpreted asset?
Highlight steps taken to preserve the assets physical integrity and authenticity? Provide social, cultural and economic benets to your community?
Co-Creation of Contents
How you can inform residents and visitors about future changes in your interpretation, and provide an opportunity for them to comment? How can you address young audiences and the market of connected consumers? Have you taken steps to share the insights you gained during the development of your interpretation strategy?
Evaluation
After your interpretation has been in place for a while, set aside some time to consider whether it meets your goals. Dare to ask tough questions
Are end users really interested in my interpretation? Am I providing a thrilling experience, or are they just looking to bridge the time Collect information
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Quantitative Statistics like the number of visitors and how long they pay attention to your interpretation. Qualitative The opinions, attitudes, perceptions and feelings of your visitors. Indirect Observe end users while consuming the experience you offer, in a discreet way. Direct Use interviews or questionnaires to ask what they think of your product/service Although it might sound politically incorrect to eavesdrop on consumers, listening to what they say can help nd out what they think of your interpretation. It can give you clues to the thoughts and feelings youve inspired and maybe the misconceptions and misunderstandings you need to correct. Do you give visitors a chance to evaluate the effectiveness of your interpretation strategy?
Cultural consumption
Are your heritage offerings connected with cultural consumption at local level? (See page 77 ff)
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CHECKLIST
Getting Started
Include experts in your plan Consult with other people about the assets signicance, stories and audience (existing and potential) Incorporated feedback obtained Identify cultural consumer, visitors, tourists, specic interest groups and their needs Write a succinct summary of your project Decide what your assets are (area, items, objects, intangibles, events etc.) Set the interpretive objectives for each asset (communication and cultural values) Select the interpretive media Stories connect tangible things with intangible ideas, meanings, beliefs and values Allow end users explore asset meanings (dont tell them what to think) Stories and narratives are connected the big picture at local, regional or national level and/or international level, if that is the case Stories and narratives understand the use of language universals and language particularities, where that is necessary Interpretive narratives consider different perspectives on the same story even if they differ from the interpreters personal opinion
Collecting Information
Survey the site, get to know the asset, the resource and conduct a research Identify signicant features of the asset Explain asset signicance clearly explained and embed it in the interpretive context, conrmed by reliable sources Asset signicance respect national heritage registers, inter national treaties and conventions
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AREA OF INTERVENTION 3:
Promote the use of cultural values for development LEAD PARTNER: UNIVERSITY OF THE AEGEAN, GREECE
ERDP PP1: EFXEINI POLI- LOCAL AUTHORITIES NETWORK GREECE ERDF PP2: MUNICIPALITIES UNION OF SINELLO, ITALY ERDF PP3: MOUNTAIN COMMUNITY ALTO BASENT, ITALY ERDF PP4: BULGARIAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY, BULGARIA ERDF PP5: MUNICIPALITY OF DEVIN, BULGARIA ERDF PP6: INSTITUTE FOR COMPREHENSIVE DEVELOPMENT SOLUTIONS, SLOVENIA ERDF PP7: NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR RESEARCH AND DEVELOPMENT IN TOURISM ERDF PP8: INSTITUTE OF NATIONAL ECONOMY, ROMANIA ERDF PP9: KROLY RBERT COLLEGE, HUNGARY EUASP1: MINISTRY OF REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT AND TOURISM, ROMANIA EUASP2: BULGARIAN-ROMANIAN CHAMBER OF COMMERCE AND INDUSTRY, BULGARIA EUASP3: UNIVERSITY OF CHIETI PESCARA, ITALY EUASP4: COMMISSION VI (OF THE REGIONAL COUNCIL OF ABRUZZO, ITALY O1: SYNOTA, ANONYMOUS TRANSMUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT AGENCY, GREECE O2: PATRAS MUNICIPAL ENTERPRISE FOR PLANNING & DEVELOPMENT, GREECE O3: EUROPEAN ATHNEAUM OF FLORAL ART, ITALY O4: INSTITUTE OF ENTREPRENEURSHIP DEVELOPMENT, GREECE IPA PARTNER: UNIVERSITY OF ZAGREB, CROATIA 10% PARTNER: DISTRICT COUNCIL OF SOROCA, MOLDOVA
This document refers to: OUTPUT 2: THE KNOW-HOW BOOKLET FOR CULTURAL HERITAGE OPERATORS ACTIVITY 4.5: Using Natural and Cultural Heritage as a Recreational Learning Resource WORK PACKAGE 4: HERIDUCATOR: USING A PARTICIPATORY PLATFORM TO GUIDE HERITAGE ENTREPRENEURS UNLOCK THE VALUE OF CULTURAL HERITAGE