Over the past few months, the Italian Ministry of Culture has launched a specific survey, creating a site to map and monitor abandoned cultural heritage in Italy with the aim of restoring it and ensuring its preservation, not least through the appropriate use of the patrimony. This applies to both heritage sites protected by express provisions and those subject to ope legis proceedings. The first step in this strategy is the identification of abandoned cultural heritage consisting of sites that, unlike others, elude most intervention programmes because they are little known and located in hard-to-reach areas. In many cases, they represent an extraordinary combination of architecture and nature that, first of all, needs to be made better known, in such a way as to enable the recovery of the values they enshrine. In implementing ministerial directives, the University of Camerino and the Superintendence for Archaeology, Fine Arts and Landscape of the Provinces of Ascoli Piceno, Fermo and Macerata signed a programme agreement to expand the knowledge of abandoned heritage sites. The objective is to rethink the development methods for the valorisation of abandoned heritage sites by also taking into consideration social, economic and community aspects, to achieve a degree of harmonisation, balance, and consistency between the historical and cultural values of each site and its context.
Nei mesi scorsi, il Ministero della Cultura, ha avviato uno specifico censimento, creando un sito per mappare e monitorare i beni culturali abbandonati presenti sul territorio nazionale, con l’obiettivo di restaurarli, per assicurarne la conservazione, anche attraverso un’adeguata destinazione d’uso. Il primo passo di questa strategia è l’identificazione del patrimonio culturale abbandonato, formato da beni che, a differenza di altri, sfuggono alla maggior parte dei programmi d’intervento, in quanto poco conosciuti e collocati in zone difficilmente raggiungibili. In molti casi, essi rappresentano uno straordinario insieme di architettura e natura che ha necessità di essere, in prima istanza, inserito in un nuovo circuito di conoscenza che possa consentire il recupero dei valori di cui sono depositari.
Recupero, restauro e valorizzazione di ‘beni abbandonati’: un programma per l’area delle Marche centro meridionali
Enrica Petrucci
;Maria Giovanna Putzu;Claudia Vagnozzi;
2023-01-01
Abstract
Over the past few months, the Italian Ministry of Culture has launched a specific survey, creating a site to map and monitor abandoned cultural heritage in Italy with the aim of restoring it and ensuring its preservation, not least through the appropriate use of the patrimony. This applies to both heritage sites protected by express provisions and those subject to ope legis proceedings. The first step in this strategy is the identification of abandoned cultural heritage consisting of sites that, unlike others, elude most intervention programmes because they are little known and located in hard-to-reach areas. In many cases, they represent an extraordinary combination of architecture and nature that, first of all, needs to be made better known, in such a way as to enable the recovery of the values they enshrine. In implementing ministerial directives, the University of Camerino and the Superintendence for Archaeology, Fine Arts and Landscape of the Provinces of Ascoli Piceno, Fermo and Macerata signed a programme agreement to expand the knowledge of abandoned heritage sites. The objective is to rethink the development methods for the valorisation of abandoned heritage sites by also taking into consideration social, economic and community aspects, to achieve a degree of harmonisation, balance, and consistency between the historical and cultural values of each site and its context.I documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.