1. Terms
of reference and preparation of the report
1. On 30 June 2011, Ms Rihter and 23 colleagues tabled
a motion for a resolution on “Destruction or restoration of industrial
heritage”, which was referred to the Committee on Culture, Science,
Education and Media for report on 3 October 2011. The committee
appointed me rapporteur on 6 December 2011. In April 2012, Mr Keith
Falconer, former head of Industrial Archaeology at English Heritage
in the United Kingdom, was commissioned to prepare a background
report.
2. On 28 June 2012 in Strasbourg, the Sub-Committee on Culture,
Diversity and Heritage considered a draft outline for the report
and on 21 September 2012, the Sub-Committee held a conference in
Maribor, Slovenia, on the theme of industrial heritage, which was
organised jointly with the National Assembly of the Republic of
Slovenia, with the city of Maribor – European Capital of Culture
– and with the Forum of Slavic Cultures.
I
wish to thank Ms Rihter, former Chairperson of the Sub-Committee,
who initiated this report, for her support in organising this very
successful conference.
3. At its meeting from 2 to 4 October 2012 in Strasbourg, the
committee decided to change the title of the report to “Industrial
heritage in Europe”. Mr Falconer, in the light of the rich discussions
in Maribor, completed his report. The subsequent sections are built
on the extremely valuable contribution and wise suggestions of Mr
Falconer, Mr Hilderbrand de Boer, Vice-President of the European
Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH) and members of the Europa Nostra
Industrial and Engineering Heritage Committee, to whom I am very
grateful.
2. Objectives of the
report
4. Europe is recognised as the cradle of industrialised
society. The Industrial Revolution was pioneered in Britain in the
18th century, flourished in western Europe from the early 19th century
and had spread throughout the European continent by the end of the
19th century. The new scale of industry was to transform society
and lead to the globalisation of industry. However, it is not only
the material manifestation of industry that has contributed to the
European identity but also its intangible heritage. The staple industries
of what is now being called the Great Age of Industry (coal, iron
and steel, textiles and heavy engineering) may have largely disappeared,
but the cultural testimonies live on.
5. European industrial heritage is a vast subject which in some
countries has been a developing concern over the latter part of
the 20th century. There has been a significant acceleration in interest
across Europe from the 1960s onwards with international contacts
built up and transnational conferences and projects initiated from the
1970s. The Council of Europe has shared these concerns and has been
involved since the 1980s. Recommendation No. R (90) 20 of the Committee
of Ministers recognised the need to promote awareness and appreciation
of industrial heritage.
Much
has changed since then with the collapse of communism in eastern Europe.
As the subject matter is dynamic – chronologically, geographically
and demographically – a constant stream of new sites and industries
has to be considered for conservation, rehabilitation or reuse;
industries decline, contract, change or re-organise and the immaterial
component of this heritage should be documented by various media
before the memory disappears.
6. Europe is justly proud of its industrial heritage, not least
because it is a heritage which is universally recognised as being
of profound international significance in the development of global
industrialisation, but equally important, it is also locally the
main provider of sense of identity of many territories. It is a
heritage with which we can still identify, preserve its buildings
and archival and photographic sources, and share its memories. It
is also a common European heritage, with the transfer of technology
and processes scarcely recognising national boundaries.
7. Across Europe, there are innumerable examples of such transfers
of expertise, engineers and indeed of migration of labour. Thus
lacemaking in Calais may reflect its English roots, car manufacture
in London its Parisian influences, a textile mill in Schio its Belgian
model while a colliery in Serbia has an Austrian steam engine and
the gasworks in Athens were built by French engineers. The migration
of labour is not a modern phenomenon – Huguenots from France established
the English silk industry three centuries ago while British iron
workers skilled the early 19th century iron industries in France
and Belgium and British “navvies” constructed several of the early
railways in Europe. More recently, Polish, Italian and Turkish immigrants worked
the coal mines in Nord Pas-de-Calais and Limburg, all bringing distinctive
cultures to their new workplaces.
8. The understanding and appreciation of this heritage and its
most significant sites must therefore be passed on to future generations.
What exactly to keep of the Great Age of Industry – machinery, buildings
and landscapes – and how to sustain what is kept, is the dilemma
for Europe. This report discusses the dilemma confronting many countries
faced with obsolete, but historic, industrial sites, with special
reference to countries in central and eastern Europe. It shall look, inter alia, at the transfer of best
practice from western Europe, where there has been 50 years of experience
of managing historic industrial sites, to countries where these problems
are more recent.
3. Definition and
scope of the industrial heritage
9. Although Europe’s industrial heritage is the cumulative
product of industrial intervention on the environment and its inhabitants
for over two millennia, as witnessed by the Neolithic flint mines
in eastern England and the Roman flour-milling complex at Fontviellle,
it was the change in scale of production over the last two centuries
that led to a largely industrialised society throughout much of
the continent. Therefore this report focusses on this latter period
(19th and 20th centuries).
10. To nuance this statement, it is necessary to underline that
many industrial sites of antiquity and the medieval period, such
as the mercury mines of Almaden and Idrija and the silver and lead
mines of the Erzeberge on the Saxony/Czech border and Lavion in
Greece, operated into the modern period. However, such sites are
generally well recognised and valued since many of them are included
on the World Heritage List or on national “Tentative Lists”, like
the major industrial sites of the 17th and 18th centuries.
11. Industrial heritage encompasses the extraction, production
and processing of all types of raw materials (mineral and organic),
the working, manufacturing and marketing of those products and the
supporting infrastructure, settlement, utilities, transport and
communications. Industrial housing is the most prolific surviving
evidence of the industrial era, but the least understood, the least
researched and perhaps the most vulnerable. Machinery is an essential
part of the industrial heritage and, though more difficult to deal
with, its study and preservation deserves the same attention as
the buildings it occupies.
12. The industrial heritage is constantly changing. Many of the
industries that expanded greatly after 1800 contracted enormously
in the second half of the 20th century and their environmental legacy
is extremely vulnerable and fragile. The staple industries of the
Great Age of Industry – coal, iron and steel, textiles and heavy
engineering – have largely disappeared in many countries to be replaced
by 20th century creations such as the car, aircraft and electronic
industries, the service and leisure industries and the food and
beverage industry. These latter industries have also undergone great
changes and are equally part of Europe’s industrial heritage. These
changes in technology, processes and organisational patterns are
equally part of the industrial heritage and a particular challenge
for the industrial heritage is to keep evidence of these changes
over different periods.
4. The current state
of industrial heritage in Europe
13. The significance of the industrial heritage was first
officially recognised by governments from the late 1950s onwards
and, for example, in the United Kingdom in the succeeding half century
thousands of sites were statutorily protected, many hundreds preserved
and made accessible to the public and many more converted sympathetically
to other uses. During the 1970s and 1980s, northern European countries
– and especially Germany, France, Sweden, Belgium and the Netherlands
– have expanded that vision by ambitiously preserving vast sites.
In recent years, the successful and continuing expansion of initiatives,
such as the European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH) has demonstrated
the potency of the message.
14. The situation was to be very different in the former communist
countries, where a legacy of obsolescent industries had to be addressed.
In the former German Democratic Republic, for example, where lignite
had become a prime source of energy, its open cast mining in Lower
Lusatia had transformed and devastated the landscape. With German
unification that very devastation is now being turned to advantage.
The IBA Furst-Puckler-Land initiative is strengthening the identity
of the region by creating a chain of water parks and reusing the
huge redundant industrial structures, such as the overburden conveyor
bridge F60 and the bio-towers in Lauchhammer, as cultural monuments.
15. In Poland there has been much industrial heritage activity
with the preservation of several mines and ironworks, while the
vast textile mills in Lodz have been converted into shopping malls
and hotels. However, the Upper Silesian region of Poland has posed
more severe problems of rehabilitation. The region experienced intensive
industrialisation during the communist era, but many of those industries
were unable to compete in the post-1990 open market and the legacy
of contaminated old industrial sites will have to co-exist with
new centres of future-orientated industries for some time to come.
16. In the Czech Republic there have been ambitious attempts to
preserve significant sites such as the steam-powered sewage works
in Prague and the coal mines and ironworks at Kladna and Ostrava
and the latter is a European Route of Industrial Heritage (ERIH)
Anchor Point,
while in Russia iron and steelworks dating
from the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries are being preserved in the
Urals. In other former communist countries, many sites of industrial
heritage still remain to be appreciated and protected. However,
there are also very positive examples of transfer of experience
in Lithuania, Latvia, Estonia and Finland that have benefited from
close international collaboration with Denmark, Norway and Sweden.
17. There is no comprehensive overview of the state of the industrial
heritage across Europe, though some indication of current development
is provided in the national reports prepared for the main conferences
of the International Committee for the Conservation of the Industrial
Heritage (TICCIH) every three years. Detailed analysis of these
reports might produce an indicative, albeit patchy, overview. The
ERIH website
also provides a lot of information
about the sites in that network and their European context.
18. However, it is suggested by Europa Nostra’s Industrial and
Engineering Heritage Committee that a sector-by-sector approach
(for example transport heritage, the heritage of the textile industries,
the heritage of flour-milling, the iron and steel heritage, the
coal-mining heritage, etc.) would better underline the European nature
of the industrial heritage and the place of this heritage in the
European identity: Europe, “the first industrial continent”. The
commissioning of such pan-European thematic reports, initially in
an overarching summary form, would be a significant advance in the
assessment of Europe’s industrial heritage.
19. Attempts at compiling comprehensive sophisticated industrial
heritage databases for the continent by professionals have so far
not met with much success, although the TICCIH is currently developing
a digitised system for an international database. Experience in
some countries has shown that collaboration between national agency
staff and expert enthusiastic volunteers can be of more immediate
value, particularly when dealing with thematic surveys.
5. Actors involved
in the industrial heritage of Europe
20. Beyond individual States, local and national associations
and local or State authorities (ministries of culture), several
pan-European organisations are directly or indirectly concerned
with the industrial heritage.
21. The Council of Europe has been involved in industrial heritage
for many years, since first recognising the issue in the mid-1980s
at its conferences in Grenada, Lyons and Madrid and stressing the
need for a global multi-disciplinary view and for strategies for
increasing awareness and providing incentives. It published the report
of the Bochum Colloquy on “Mining engineering monuments as a cultural
heritage” in 1989, held further events in Spain and the United Kingdom
in the 1990s and promoted “Our Common Inheritance” campaign in 2000,
and its European Heritage Network (HEREIN) encompasses industrial
heritage.
22. The European Union has conducted several industrial heritage
initiatives including: under its “Raphaël Community action programme
for heritage”, a project on inter-war airports in Paris, Berlin
and Liverpool; under its “Culture 2000” programme, the Working Heritage
Project studied regeneration in Roubaix (France), Schio and Terni
(Italy), Colonia Guell (Spain) and Birmingham’s Jewellery Quarter
(United Kingdom); while another project linked three museums in
France, Belgium and Italy; and under its “Interreg programes”, the
pilot European Route of Industrial Heritage.
23. The European Route of Industrial Heritage developed out of
an Interreg project of the same name covering a small area in north-west
Europe and has now expanded greatly geographically. It currently
presents more than 900 sites in 35 countries with 80 Anchor Points,
16 Regional Routes and 13 Theme Routes; though in its current form
it is mostly concerned with networks between museum sites, it is
increasingly embracing other preserved industrial sites.
24. The International Committee for the Conservation of Industrial
Heritage
has over the last three decades done
much to promote industrial heritage, but is anxious to remain a
worldwide organisation without any special focus on Europe. It is
the official advisor on industrial heritage to the International
Council on Monuments and Sites (ICOMOS) and has produced thematic
reports for the World Heritage Convention on canals, railways, bridges,
collieries, company towns and agricultural landscapes. It has produced
“Joint ICOMOS–TICCIH Principles for the Conservation of Industrial
Heritage Sites, Structures, Areas and Landscapes” (“The Dublin Principles”)
and its own “Nizhny Tagil Charter
for the Industrial Heritage”.
Many
European countries have a national chapter affiliated to TICCIH
and run national conferences and workshops. TICCIH’s comprehensive handbook
Industrial Heritage Re-tooled was
published in November 2012. The next Congress – TICCIH 2015 – will
be held in Nord-Pas-de-Calais, in France. Since 1965, ICOMOS has
produced many charters and guidelines that have relevance to industrial
heritage, including those on principles of recording, cultural tourism, and
the Burra Charter
which, building on the original Venice
Charter,
sets out a logical sequence of investigations,
decisions and actions for conservation initiatives.
25. Europa Nostra
has long been involved with industrial
heritage. Many European heritage awards (Europa Nostra Awards since
2002) have recognised industrial sites, including most recently
the 1920s No. 2 Blast Furnace in Sagunto, Spain. Other commended
sites in the past include Antwerp station, the
Vias Verdes railway pathways, the
Rio Tinto Mining District and the Bilbao Transporter Bridge in Spain,
Amsterdam’s Westergasfabriek, the Millennium Centre in Budapest,
Chatham Dockyard and Glasgow Central Railway Station in Scotland,
the Louise Briquette Factory Domsdorf in Germany, the Cibali Tobacco
and Cigarette Factory in Istanbul and the Old Paper Mill Complex
in Konstancin Jeziora in Warsaw. Europa Nostra devoted its 2006
Cultural Heritage Review to industrial heritage as it did its annual
congress in Newcastle in 2008. Europa Nostra has a specialised Industrial
and Engineering Heritage Committee which advises among other things
on above-mentioned awards.
26. In many countries, the lead in the promotion and preservation
of the industrial heritage has been taken by volunteer enthusiasts
and this must be nurtured as it is a resource of considerable commercial
as well as cultural value. State bodies can encourage capacity-building
schemes with the outlay of only modest resources and utilise the
expertise of bodies such as the Committee on Information and Liaison
for the Archeology, Study and Presentation of the Industrial Heritage
(Comité d’information et de liaison pour l’archéologie, l’étude
et la mise en valeur du patrimoine industriel – CILAC)
in France and the Association for
Industrial Archaeology (AIA)
in the United Kingdom. The European
Federation of Associations of Industrial and Technical Heritage (E-FAITH),
an organisation run by volunteers,
seeks to facilitate co-operation between voluntary associations across
Europe and campaigns for endangered sites. It holds annual weekend
workshops and has produced a Memorandum stressing the cultural significance
of the industrial heritage as part of its campaign calling for a European
Industrial and Technical Heritage Year in 2015.
6. Appreciation of
industrial heritage across Europe
27. Support from the Council of Europe, awards from Europa
Nostra and funding from national and the European Union programmes
have greatly encouraged voluntary and non-governmental organisations’ (NGOs)
efforts and the cumulative result of all this interest has been the creation
of a considerable library of publications dealing with all ramifications
of industrial heritage, hundreds of associations devoted to championing
of various aspects of the subject, tens of thousands of sites in
western Europe being designated as protected sites and many thousands
more preserved or converted to other uses. Most importantly, it
has led in some countries to a general appreciation at a popular
level of the value of national industrial heritage.
28. However, public perception and opinion must still be constantly
nurtured and moulded. As early as 1985, the Council of Europe Lyons
conference urged a Europe-wide campaign for education about industrial
heritage and therefore educational curricula at all levels should
contain material outlining the significance of industry in shaping
European society throughout the modern period. In many countries,
a considerable number of conservation successes have been achieved
by the publication of lavishly illustrated books extolling the appreciation
of industrial sites. These have increased public awareness of industrial
heritage issues and have thus influenced local politicians and planning
authorities. Films often have a major role to play as evidence of a
lost way of life from an industrialised era – national film archives
contain a wealth of such evidence which is only now being appreciated.
Similarly, photographic archives, aided by computer-aided retrieval
and online access, are making such material available to the general
public. Television has also been very instrumental in informing
and inspiring the public from the 1960s onwards: programmes celebrating
the achievements of famous engineers and chronicling the way of
life of industrialised society have caught the public imagination.
29. These industrial heritage programmes are constantly being
rebroadcast on digital channels and most new historical and archaeological
series now routinely include industrial sites and events. These
events can be entertaining as well as inspirational – the European
Industrial Heritage Nights are a case in point, while the regeneration
of industrial sites can embrace wider cultural and leisure activities
which introduce a different audience to industrial heritage, as
demonstrated by Emscher Park in the Ruhr and C Mine in Limburg.
All these various media must be employed to mould favourable public
perception and broadcast the message of Europe’s shared industrial
inheritance, while the creative industries must be encouraged and
supported to convey that message by innovative tools such as apps
and GPS tourist information guides.
7. Recognition, protection
and preservation of industrial heritage
30. The industrial heritage is highly vulnerable and
often at risk, most often lost for lack of awareness, documentation,
recognition or protection but also because of changing economic
trends, negative perceptions, difficult environmental issues or
as a result of its overwhelming size and complexity. The informed management,
conservation, interpretation and enjoyment of the sites and their
cultural appreciation are therefore the primary aims of conserving
industrial heritage and this may involve differing levels of protection ranging
from local lists and conservation areas through statutory designated
individual sites at varying grades up to World Heritage Sites and
landscapes. Each country will have its own designation codes and
these vary widely from country to country. Some countries such as
Germany and the United Kingdom have developed and refined statutory
designation over more than a century, giving very generalised protection
cover to tens of thousands of industrial heritage sites. Others
such as France focus on fewer, more fully documented, sites. Countries
in central and eastern Europe, such as Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina,
may only be at an embryonic stage.
31. The Council of Europe’s European Heritage Network (HEREIN)
presents summaries of these national heritage policies. Legal protection
is usually the end result of an assessment of significance and it
is therefore the veracity of the processes of identification and
assessment that are crucial to the effectiveness of the protection
and these can change greatly over time and especially so with industrial
sites. Thus a site that may have been common a few decades ago may
have now achieved great significance as a rare survivor. It follows that
ideally all assessments should be regularly reviewed and updated
if necessary. It can be argued that the assessment of the significance
of a site can also be influenced by locational factors: whether
it is in the central/north, the Mediterranean or the east – the
three European macro regions with a similar state of art –; whether urban
or rural; the relative size of the site; whether it dominates a
small town or is absorbed in the urban tissue of a metropolis.
32. A common strand throughout the process in many countries has
been an alliance between volunteer expert knowledge and the official
use of that knowledge. This too has constantly evolved over a period
of fifty years. Today much expertise resides in official bodies
and much use is made of paid consultants, but some of the best work
is still achieved through the use of expert volunteers.
33. The lessons that can be learnt from experience in countries
that have highly developed designation include:
- The value of volunteer expertise:
for every subject there are likely to be single-minded enthusiasts
and their knowledge and passion should be harnessed to good effect.
English Heritage works closely with the Association for Industrial
Archaeology and the Council for British Archaeology (CBA) to maintain
a vision for the stewardship of the industrial heritage while in
France, CILAC has a close relationship with the Ministry of Culture.
- The use of advisory panels composed of experts and representatives
of official agencies gives a degree of transparency to the consideration
of sites for protection.
- Assessments of significance must be kept up to date as
they can change greatly over time.
- Good contextual frameworks allow prioritisation of scarce
resources.
- All sites of interest should be entered in official planning
databases or their equivalent, both by private individuals as well
as official agencies. This allows a constructive dialogue between
property developers and conservationists.
- The compilation of comprehensive overviews of historic
resources permits selection of outstanding sites whether for protection
at the highest levels or for nomination for World Heritage status.
- Public opinion is very important, especially so in issues
of protection and preservation, and must be carefully cultivated.
In western European countries, where there is a long tradition of
public exposure to industrial heritage, this may seem rather obvious
but it may be quite unfamiliar in many other countries, where it
will require sustained programmes of education and media attention
to raise public awareness of the contribution that industry has
made to European and thus their own culture. Public vigilance, generated
by appreciation, is a necessary first line of defence against vandalism
and other threats to empty and disused historic industrial buildings,
but it is equally important to persuade owners to avail themselves
of the considerable body of guidance on reducing such risks.
34. The European industrial heritage resource can be viewed as
a pyramid with at its base hundreds of thousands of un-assessed
and therefore unprotected industrial sites, rising through tens
of thousands of identified and designated sites, and with a few
thousand preserved sites as World Heritage sites at its pinnacle. Though
UNESCO recognises that industrial heritage is generally under-represented
in the World Heritage List, appropriately, Europe, in view of its
role in global industrialisation, dominates the current List in
terms of industrial sites. Thus, out of the 46 such sites in 2012,
36 are in Europe. The United Kingdom has eight, the Netherlands
and Belgium four each, Germany, France, Sweden and Italy three each,
Switzerland two and Austria, Finland, Norway, Poland, Portugal and
Slovenia one each. In addition, there are 18 more industrial sites
included in the Tentative Lists for various European countries.
An analysis of all the sites shows that they are dominated by the
transport, mining and primary production industries, with the manufacturing
industries less well represented.
35. World Heritage sites must be of outstanding universal value
and, this being the supreme accolade, inscriptions must be limited.
Therefore, there may be a special case for having a slightly lower
standard for industrial heritage sites that are of clearly European,
if not world, significance. There are already some industrial sites
included in the forthcoming European Label sites – the Industrial
city of Tomas Bat'a in Zlin, Hlubina coal mines and steel blast
furnaces in Vitkovice in Ostrava in the Czech Republic, Kremnica
Mint in the Slovak Republic, and the Gdansk Shipyards in Poland. However, these sites, by definition,
should have specific relevance to the emergence of the European
political identity, a condition that may be rather restrictive for
most industrial sites and it may be appropriate to look elsewhere
for a model. The Japanese recognise Heritage Constellations of Industrial
Modernisation which are thematic clusters of historic sites of special significance
and the idea might be translated to a European context. Thus lignite
sites in Saxony, textile mills in the Sedan area, collieries in
Limburg, hydro-electric generating stations in Norway, textile colonia
in Catalonia, metal-working sites in the Rhur and in Sheffield,
blast furnaces in Sweden, the Urals and in Cumbria, jewellery and
furniture workshops in Birmingham and Paris and colliery railways
in north-east England, might be the type of sites that would benefit
from pan-European recognition.
8. Conserving the
industrial heritage by its conversion to new sustainable uses
36. Recognition and protection are not the only elements
for the sustainable preservation of industrial heritage: community
sentiment, community skills and community involvement are crucial
drivers to preserve the past and give impetus for future regeneration
projects. Industrial sites are more than just bricks and mortar; they
embody all manner of local testimonies and identity and are part
of a social landscape and intangible heritage. In any regeneration
we should preserve this sense of place (genius loci),
respect the memories of ancestors who built it, excite the imagination
of children who are passing through it and strengthen the sense of
belonging of the people who inhabit it. True sustainability will
embrace these qualities and utilise them to good effect.
37. Industrial heritage – by its scale and its impact on surrounding
landscapes – can play a pivotal role for territorial regeneration.
The rehabilitation of industrial heritage will depend on many factors,
ranging from its heritage value, its scale and location in the surrounding
environment (urban, sub-urban or rural setting), its conversion
potential to new uses identified through local development strategies
or its potential to integrate in a cluster of related industrial
activity or industrial heritage. The success of such projects will
also depend on interaction with other cultural resources and cultural
heritage that are available locally, but also regionally and internationally
(through cultural walks, cultural routes and networks, heritage
day events, theme activities, etc.).
38. If industrial heritage is to be the catalyst for territorial
regeneration, we have to capture the testimonies that created it.
A starting point in a successful regeneration project will therefore
be preliminary meetings with the local communities to ascertain
their views and wishes and accommodating these in the project. For example,
in Roubaix, community groups led the way in the conversion of the
Conditioning House and the Princes Regeneration Trust in the United
Kingdom has had great success in assisting community partnerships in
developing project proposals to convert historic industrial sites
and has produced a “toolkit” for such projects.
39. The physical sustainable reuse of industrial buildings and
sites is somewhat simpler and nothing new – industrial buildings
can often offer cheap, easily utilised space. However, the considered
reuse of industrial buildings respecting the character and the integrity
of the buildings is a feature of only the last four decades while
respecting the character of the community is even more recent. There
is now a considerable body of literature discussing the economic
issues, encouraging investment, giving guidance on good practice
and highlighting good examples. Good practice examples of physical
conversions range from spectacular conversions such as the Albert
Dock and the Gothenburg waterfront, the Ruhrgebiet, Saltaire, Dean
Clough and Manningham Mills in Yorkshire, Carl Zeiss factories in
Jena and the Lingotto Car Factory, developments such as the GWR
Swindon Engineering Workshops, the steel works at Terni and Naples,
gasholders in Vienna and Dresden, and a multitude of much more modest
conversions of ordinary industrial buildings. More recently, we
have exemplars of economic and employment strategies like the textile
mills of Augsburg and the more community-orientated projects of
the Monfalcone Shipyards and the Arsenale in Venice.
40. Conservation-led regeneration in historic industrial districts
such as the Amsterdam Canal Ring, the Ile de Nantes and Birmingham’s
Jewellery Quarter and of the mills of Lodz, Ancoats, Roubaix and
Schio has shown the commercial value of such developments, but recent
research has shown that there is much advocacy work still required
to encourage developers to take on industrial sites. A catalogue
of good practice and case studies drawn from a wide range of countries,
including from central and eastern Europe, would provide good guidance.
41. The reuse of industrial buildings is now being seen as ecologically
sound because of the potential energy sources in buildings (building
structure, materials, etc.) and the industrial heritage can therefore
be considered as a non-renewable resource. There are, however, huge
issues of contamination remediation to be undertaken in a number
of industrial sites. Many solutions are very damaging to the integrity
of the industrial heritage resource concerned. European Union water
purity directives, for example, though essential, can have serious implications
for upland mining remains. “Industrial Heritage – Ecology &
Economy” was the theme of the XIV TICCIH Congress held in 2009 in
Freiburg (Germany) and some of the published papers of the congress discuss
the problems facing post-industrial landscapes and the conflicting
priorities posed by European Union directives and the sustainable
preservation of monuments.
9. Financing industrial
heritage projects
42. Many industrial heritage projects can never be financially
self-sufficient and will require some measure of external support.
There are in existence many and varied sources of finance for industrial
heritage projects whether inventory and research programmes or restoration
projects. European agencies have supported several projects of all
types while local authorities, State bodies and universities have
supported others. The preservation sector – museums and sites –
usually need a large degree of funding for capital projects and
this can be met by a variety of sources. For instance, in the United
Kingdom, the Heritage Lottery Fund, part of the National Lottery,
has over the last fifteen years been by far the largest sponsor
of industrial heritage projects, having spent a billion euros on
over 2 000 projects with national agencies providing some 25 million
more.
43. However, private finance has been the main source of funding
in the conversion of most industrial premises throughout Europe,
often in partnership with local authorities or State bodies to make
up any conservation deficit. Recent research has shown that developers
are still wary of tackling industrial sites and constant encouragement
and incentives are still required. In the granting of planning permission,
there should be provision for investment in a preliminary investigation
in order fully to understand the building to be reused, so as not
to lose historical values and for subsequent investment to help
interpretation in situ. Some national agencies
publish annual lists of buildings at risk and provide special advice
and support for the restoration of particularly difficult buildings,
many of which are industrial.
10. Conclusions
44. “The industrial landscape is a misunderstood heritage,
at worst urban rustbelt, dangerous, a toxic wilderness; at best,
an outstanding historical resource to be re-used, regenerating communities,
offering real richness and opportunity, reinforcing cultural identity
and creating new commercial prospects. But it can also be a vivid
reminder of how today’s world came to be the way it is, when industry
employed whole communities and provided the heartbeat for many towns
and cities. In this respect these historic industrial landscapes deserve
our closest attention” (Sir Neil Cossons, in “Why save the industrial
heritage?”, publication Industrial Heritage Re-Tooled,
TICCIH 2012).
45. Across Europe, the industrial heritage is highly vulnerable
and often at risk, most often lost for lack of awareness, documentation,
recognition or protection, but also because of changing economic
trends, negative perceptions, difficult environmental issues or
as a result of its overwhelming size and complexity. It is therefore vital
for politicians at local, regional and national level to fully understand
and use the potential of industrial heritage, which can become a
key element for territorial regeneration.
46. In the context of a wider territorial and socio-economic regeneration,
the effective rehabilitation of industrial heritage will depend
on many factors, ranging from its heritage value, its scale and
location in the surrounding environment, its conversion potential
to new uses, and its potential to integrate in a cluster of related
industrial activity or industrial heritage. The success of such
projects will also depend on interaction with other cultural resources
and cultural heritage sites that are available locally, but also
regionally and internationally, for example through cultural walks,
cultural routes and networks, Heritage Day events, theme activities,
etc.
47. The good examples of such projects that the rapporteur draws
on from the hearing which was organised by the Sub-Committee on
Culture, Diversity and Heritage in Maribor (September 2012) demonstrate
that the best way of preserving the industrial heritage lies not
so much in statutory protection, despite its obvious importance,
but in the way communities recognise and appreciate their industrial
heritage, through study, understanding and the sharing of knowledge.
A sense of community ownership is vital.
48. The draft resolution includes a number of issues that I believe
should be considered to ensure that the legacy of Europe’s Age of
Industry is safeguarded for future generations. Among them, I would
insist in particular on the following elements.
49. We need to encourage study and research at regional, national
and European levels, to provide an overview of Europe’s industrial
heritage resource, country by country and/or thematically. In particular,
the preparation of pan-European thematic reports, initially in an
overarching summary form, would be a significant advance in the
assessment of Europe’s industrial heritage and would also contribute
to a deeper understanding of the value of such a common inheritance.
50. The existing legislation on the protection of historic sites
is not necessarily adequate for industrial sites and should not
be applied mechanically. More flexibility seems to be required and
it might be sound to consider the introduction of a recognition
category of European Industrial Heritage Site and/or identify “Constellations
of Europe’s Great Age of Industry”.
51. Stronger co-operation between key stakeholders should be sought.
UNESCO, the European Union and the Council of Europe should join
forces and seek collaboration with major international non-governmental organisations
active in the domain of industrial heritage. Such collaboration
should be designed, in particular, to network, share and translate
good practice from countries with successful sustainable case study
examples to sites in countries with lack of experience of such projects,
and to strengthen the public awareness of the European Industrial
Heritage, inter alia by creating
a comprehensive and representative list of European industrial monuments.
52. Within this framework, support could be provided to the E-FAITH
campaign for a European Industrial and Technical Heritage Year in
2015.
2015 would be 25 years on from Council
of Europe’s Committee of Ministers recommendation to promote awareness
and appreciation of industrial heritage and declaration of such
a year could be equally a celebration of 25 years of achievements
and a present concern for the sustainable future of Europe’s industrial
heritage. This date would be particularly appropriate as the TICCIH Conference
will be held in France in 2015. It could also be envisaged to adopt
industrial heritage as the theme for a Heritage At Risk Year, to
emulate the success of the 2011 initiative in England which drew
together the many strands involved in regeneration and led to new
supportive initiatives.
53. At all levels, there is a need to reinforce partnerships with
private and non-governmental organisations and seek interaction
with cultural resources and cultural heritage that are available
locally, regionally and internationally (for example through cultural
walks, cultural routes and networks, European Heritage Day events,
theme activities, etc.). The provision of resources through private/public
partnerships could help overcome the conservation deficit that the
rehabilitation of industrial sites can often pose.
54. Member States should nurture the volunteer enthusiast resource
by providing capacity-building initiatives. They should encourage
the establishment of a network of multidisciplinary task forces
bringing together expertise in relevant domains such as building
history, monument protection, urban planning, financial strategies,
investment and partnerships. These national task forces would provide
a valuable service to facilitate sustainable regeneration processes,
using industrial heritage sites as key elements. They should also be
encouraged to initiate projects to study how best to utilise energy
embodied in industrial buildings and to reconcile ecological measures
such as water purity directives with the preservation of historic
industrial remains.
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