ABSTRACT

Managing Historic Sites and Buildings looks at the choices and the tensions that exist in conservation and interpretation of the heritage. Preservation and presentation are central activities, arguably means and ends in the conservation of the historic environment. But are they self-reinforcing or do they work against each other? In a series of essays which span form prehistoric sacred site to Second World war military remains, from medieval monastery to 1970s housing estate, we look at contemporary concerns and debates about the way the past is shaped, physically and metaphorically , by these two aspects of heritage management.
Starting from the position that the fundamental purpose of the whole process is to communicate understanding about the human past, these essays examine how far the ideologies, strategies, tactics and techniques of preservation and presentation are mutually supportive. the success of integrated approaches that are inclusive of social, economic and green environmental concerns is understood, but the value of developing truly sustainable management for individual historic places is only just becoming evident. At the heart of such an approach lies a crucial relationship between the activity of preserving historic places and of promoting understanding of their significance.

chapter |12 pages

Visiting Avebury

chapter |11 pages

Community Archaeology

Bringing it Back to Local Communities

chapter |10 pages

Setting and Structure

The Conservation of Wigmore Castle

chapter |13 pages

Norton Priory

A Resource for the Community

chapter |13 pages

The Tradition of Historical Consciousness

The Case of Stokesay Castle

chapter |11 pages

Brodsworth Hall

The Preservation of a Country House

chapter |14 pages

Time to ‘Leap the Fence'

Historic Parks and Gardens

chapter |16 pages

Preservation, Restoration and Presentation of the Industrial Heritage

A Case Study of the Ironbridge Gorge

chapter |16 pages

Conservation of Twentieth-Century Buildings

New Rules for the Modern Movement and After?

chapter |14 pages

Conserving Recent Military Remains

Choices and Challenges for the Twenty-first Century