Heritage Culture and Conservation

About The Book

What strategies did cities develop from the 1970s as their industrial base experienced terminal contraction? How did cities manage the transition from their traditional industrial base to one suited to a global economy? Central to these processes was a strategy to improve the built environment by either adapting historic urban buildings or by demolishing and replacing them. Proposed demolitions revealed both the extent to which the historic environment was considered relevant in a contemporary world and what value it was assigned by a complex matrix of agencies. In the context of these different agendas and fluctuating power bases this book identified a four stage process of using the historic environment to secure urban regeneration: firstly recognising the meaning of space; secondly managing urban change; thirdly seducing urban users and fourthly manipulating the historic environment. The book will prove useful to students and professionals working in the fields of history heritage planning and regeneration.
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