1. Concepts and Proposal
Critical analysis
1.The Concept of Heritage
2. Structure of a Proposal
3. Implications of Heritage
4. Legislation and Copyright
5. Critical Analysis
6. Context Analysis
7. Services and Interpretations
8. Stakeholders
9.Target Groups
10.Authenticity
Map a territory
Context analysis proposal budget
Analyse Message(s) promoted
Identify legislation and rights
SWOT
Research and references
Identify Services
Identify Heritage/Stakeholders
Analyze Target groups involved
Identify Existing Gaps
Lessons Assignment Competence
Iolanda Pensa, Heritage Management, Università di Bergamo, 2018.
iolanda.pensa@supsi.ch - http://iopensa.it
As-is analysis
Critical analysis
As-is analysis
Critical analysis
2. The windmills of Kinderdijk,The Netherlands,Author:Tarod,Wikimedia Commons, 2012, cc by-sa.
Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, Hungary.Author:Thaler – Tamás Thaler,Wikimedia Commons, 2013, cc by-sa.
Monastery and chateau in Zbraslav, Prague, Czech Republic.Author: Zdeněk Fiedler,Wikimedia Commons, 2013, cc by-sa.
Baptistery of St. Peter, San Pietro in Consavia church,Asti, Italy.Author: Marco Odina,Wikimedia Commons, 2012, cc by-sa.
3. World Heritage
Heritage is our legacy from the past,
what we live with today,
and what we pass on to future generations.
Our cultural and natural heritage
are both irreplaceable sources of life and inspiration.
http://whc.unesco.org/en/about/
4. Types of heritage attractions
Source:Adapted from Timothy & Boyd, Heritage Tourism, 2003, p. 22 (adapted from Prentice 1994)
Natural history attractions
Scientific attractions
Manufacturing centres (including industrial heritage)
Primary production attraction (including tasting culinary heritage)
Craft centres and workshops (including purchasing souvenirs and handicrafts)
Transportation attractions
Sociocultural attractions (museums, distinctive lifestyles, literary heritage, archeological sites
ancient ruins…)
Galleries
Performing arts attractions
Festivals and pageants
Religious attractions (including sacred places, pilgrimage, temples, churches, mosques, rivers,
grottoes, forests, mountains, cemeteries, points along spiritual routes)
Attractions associated with historic people
Military attractions (including battlefields, war graves, memorials, cemeteries)
Genocide monuments
Pleasure gardens
Theme parks
Villages and hamlets
Countryside and treasured landscapes
Towns and townscapes
Villages and hamlets
Seaside resorts and seascapes
Regions
5. Museums
Source:Timothy & Boyd, Heritage Tourism, 2003, p. 23
Art museums
Sport museums
Music museums
War/armory museums
Industrial museums
Stamp/coin/postcard museums
Science museums
Local historical museums
6. Winning images of Wiki Loves Monuments 2013.Wikimedia Commons, cc by-sa.
9. Sala Almeyda - Archivio Storico Comunale - Palermo (PA).Author: EnricoRubicondo,Wikimedia Commons, 2016, cc by-sa.
10. Archivio Pietro Pensa, Pergamene 2, 14. Investitura ecclesiastica, Milano, 1745 maggio 28. Giovanni Battista Campagnoli, vicario generale della diocesi di
Milano, investe il chierico Giovanni Giorgio Anselmo Serponti della cappellania dei S.S. Francesco e Andrea, di iuspatronato Serponti, eretta nella chiesa
parrocchiale diVarenna, vacante per la morte del cappellano Alessandro Cassina. Perg. mm. 430x245, rr. 22, sigillo pendente.
11. Tomb of Safdarjung, New Delhi, India.Author: Pranav Singh,Wikimedia Commons, 2012, cc by-sa.
12. sixthofdecember, Cape Coast Castle's main courtyard and the Atlantic Ocean / Gulf of Guinea in the background, 2012, cc by-sa.Wiki Loves Monuments Ghana 2012 (114).
16. Map of the winning photos of Wiki Loves Monuments Italia byGiuseppe Ragusa of the team OpenDataSicilia, screenshot 2017.
Settings/contexts of heritage supply
Urban areas
Rural areas
Protected areas
Source:Timothy & Boyd, Heritage Tourism, 2003, pp. 43-48
17. Spacial variation of heritage tourism
Source:Adapted from Timothy & Boyd, Heritage Tourism, 2003, pp. 48-50
Points
Areas
Linear tourist attractions (slave routes)
Nodes
Intangible heritage
Heritage institutions within the built landscape (i.d. museums)