1. What is the built heritage conservation
process?
·
When and how does a built heritage conservation project begin?
·
When does it end?
·
Are there specific moments along the way when a heritage site
manager can make timely decisions to continue, alter or stop a
project?
·
Are there phases in this process that the manager can easily
understand?
Those are some of the basic questions that all
heritage managers and decision makers ask themselves at one time
or another when they are faced with the challenge of initiating
a conservation project in the built environment.
The built heritage conservation process
cannot yet be expressed in terms of an international standard
of practice. The international heritage conservation organizations
and institutions have not yet agreed on such a standard but there
are certainly many points of agreement among them concerning important
steps, activities and products or outputs of the conservation
process.
In the contemporary project management world,
the project management process is well understood.
It has been defined to ensure that clients and professionals know
at all times in which phase of the project they are, what decisions
need to be made and what products or outputs are expected. Though
the terms may vary somewhat from one professional field to the
next, the life cycle of a project generally follows this pattern:
1.
Initiating the Project
2.
Planning the Project and studying options
3.
Selecting an option and preparing contractual documents for execution
of the work
4.
Executing and Controlling the work
5.
Commissioning the Project (i.e. passing it on to the client for
operation)
6.
Monitoring and evaluating the Project
In the built heritage conservation world, things
are a bit different. We have to do all of the above but because
we deal with built cultural heritage archaeological sites,
buildings, and city neighborhoods we need to spend more
time and resources to understand what we have and to assess its
physical condition. Also, part of our job is to understand and
preserve values. Values are the positive
characteristics attributed to heritage places and objects by legislation,
governing authorities, and other stakeholders. Therefore
we need to elucidate and understand values and the physical resources
they are associated with if we are going to safeguard them for
the benefit of the next generations.
This implies that we need to engage many stakeholders
people, institutions, and government agencies in
the process and work with them to understand why a particular
place is important. We also need to identify together what physical
resources best represent these values and need to be preserved.
The following text and diagrams explain summarily
the various important steps in the built heritage conservation
process and the type of information or documents that need to
be acquired or produced during each phase. Each phase of the process
is complete with a beginning and an end. To move from one phase
to the next, a decision must be made by a manager
or a client. This is the point at which the manager or the client
must decide to continue, alter or stop the process.
2. General Principles
There are a few key essential principles that
apply not exclusively to any one phase, but instead to all of
the phases. Instead of listing them for each step, we describe
them here. These essential principles include:
·
Involve stakeholders One of the first requirements is to define internal and external
stakeholders. Internal stakeholders include your project team,
local people, researchers, or whomever else you find important
to involve at this early stage. External stakeholders include
community members, government personnel, donor agencies, international
community members, and other individuals and institutions that
have some interest in the project. In conducting your project,
it is important at every step to make sure that you involve the
appropriate internal and external stakeholders in the proper manner.
·
Clearly define your timeline Each phase of the process
requires careful planning and organization. It is thus imperative
to make sure that you are clear about how much time and effort
a given task will take and communicate this to your internal and
external audiences. Of course, especially at the beginning of
a planning process, your estimates may not be very accurate.
·
Budget sufficient financial resources and human capacity
In all cases, to develop, implement, and monitor each phase
will require some amount of financial resources. You need to budget
carefully.
·
Document your decisions For just about every phase
you should write down how you decided to proceed. Of course, this
would quickly become repetitive, but we cannot emphasize enough
the importance of documenting the reasons for your decisions at
each step of the way. Not only does this give you the opportunity
to analyze why things worked or did not, but also, it serves as
a basis for others to understand the logic of your choices.
The six phases of the built heritage conservation
process are:
1.
INITIATION
2.
ASSESSMENT
3.
OPTIONS
4.
PROJECT DEVELOPMENT
5.
IMPLEMENTATION
6.
OPERATION (incl. monitoring & evaluation)
3. What activities take
place during each Phase?
Phase 1: INITIATION
Is there a good reason or opportunity
to conserve this site?
This is when a project begins. What usually triggers
the beginning of this Phase is a need,
a problem or an opportunity.
For the heritage site manager or the decision
maker, this critical first phase involves understanding the situation
in which his project will take place and clearly defining the
problem or issue that he is trying to solve and why it is important
to do so. The Initiation Phase must take place with his entire
team and other important stakeholders to make sure that everyone
involved in the project has the same or at least a similar understanding
of what needs to happen. Based on this step, the managers will
define the goal and objectives of the project and the activities
that will be undertaken to reach them. In many cases, organizations
invest considerable time and financial resources into research
that provides information necessary to carry out this step. In
other cases, especially in emergency situations, they do this
very quickly.
The output or end result of the Initiation
Phase is a well-defined project, a clear concept
of what you want to do and how you want to go about doing it.
This is usually captured in the form of a comprehensive report.
To move to the next phase, a decision must be
made to allocate time, money and people to investigate and assess
the problems or issues.
Phase 2: ASSESSMENT
What do we really have and what condition
is it in?
It is during the Assessment Phase that
a Project Manager is assigned and that a team is created to begin
the work necessary to understand the heritage place or property
and all the related issues. The assessment is usually divided
into three major activities:
1.
Assessing the significance of the place
2.
Assessing the physical condition of the resources
3.
Assessing the management system in place
Critical at this stage are the thorough analysis,
interpretation and correlation of data coming from a broad range
of different research and investigation activities.
The output or end result of the Assessment
Phase is a good understanding of the significance, the physical
condition and the management. It should be a sound knowledge base to
help make informed conservation decisions. The result is usually
captured in the form of a report or sometimes a site management
plan. It contains a statement of significance that
explains why the site is important and what is valued by the various
stakeholders, the important issues that need to be considered,
an assessment or diagnostic of the condition of the physical assets,
and an assessment of the management system in place. It makes
recommendations for conservation and new development options (roads,
services, etc.) that should be considered or studied and describes
urgent or longer-term conservation measures that need to be put
in place or tested.
To move to the next phase, a decision must be
made to allocate time, money and people to study the feasibility
and estimate the cost of the various conservation options.
Phase 3: OPTIONS
What fundamental choices do we have?
At this point we all agree on what is
important to conserve and why. We also have a clear diagnostic
of the physical condition of the place or property and we know
how it is being managed. The project team is now asked to determine
the fundamental choices we have to conserve it.
Various conservation approaches will be studied
during this phase. In the case of an archaeological site, the
professional team may recommend the option to rebury it completely
because it would be very costly or technically difficult to conserve
it; another option could be to partially rebury it, and conserve
and interpret a small area. Another option could be to build shelters
over parts of it, and so on. On-site and laboratory testing will
be conducted to determine what conservation techniques can be
used and their efficacy to protect the resources. Visitors
management and control strategies will be suggested as well as
approaches to interpret the heritage and its values to the visitors.
Each option will be carefully examined. A cost estimate and work
schedule will be prepared for each valid option. The advantages
and disadvantages of each option will be argued and recommendations
will be made to meet your institutional requirements and constraints.
Phase 4: PROJECT DEVELOPMENT
How can we turn the best option into a final
project?
Phase 5: IMPLEMENTATION
How can we realize this project?
The input that triggers the beginning
of this Phase is the decision to go ahead with the conservation
work. Clearly, this is a critical step in the project cycle. After
all, it is the step in which you actually carry out your project
activities. Up until this point, the team has been researching,
studying, examining, testing, consulting, and planning your activities.
Implementation is putting all of the research and planning efforts
you conducted in the previous phases into action. During this phase, professionals, contractors and specialized workers
undertake the conservation work according to the documents prepared
in the previous Phase.
The output or end result of the Implementation
Phase is a completed project. The next phase begins when the conservation
work is complete and staff and financial resources have been allocated
to operate the site.
Phase 6: OPERATION
How can we ensure the long-term sustainability
of this cultural resource?
At this point, warranties are enforced
(such as mechanical systems, roof, windows, specialized equipment
etc.) and a life cycle maintenance program is set in place. Maintenance
manuals are prepared and maintenance staff is trained. The project
records are archived. Management establishes a monitoring program
for critical components and the project data is routed to a database
for maintenance or re-treatment purposes. An evaluation of the
Project is made and the lessons learned are captured in the final
Project Report. The final Project Report is prepared and disseminated.
The site is open to the public or for its intended use and a site
or property manager is assigned the responsibility for its continued
use, maintenance and safeguard.
This Phase generates on-going operational, monitoring
and maintenance activities. When a new need, problem or opportunity
occurs, the cycle will begin all over again.