EAA 2025 – Intertwined pasts
Magnus Rönn och Paula Molander, Kulturlandskapet, har fått en session antagen till EAA:s vetenskapliga konferens i Belgrad 2025. Sessionen heter ”Cultural heritage, architecture, and archaeology as intertwined practices: From management to alteration and sustainable design”.
Sessionen organiseras i samarbete med Leif Östman, Novia University of Applied Sciences, och Helena Teräväinen, Aalto Universitet.
Öppna Call for Papers här till höger för att läsa mera.
Abstract
Session #54 ”Cultural heritage, architecture, and archaeology as intertwined practices: From management to alteration and sustainable design”
This multidisciplinary session is combining three fundamental ideas. Firstly, the built environments must be understood as intertwined and as a perceived world in its wholeness. Secondly, the transformation of cultural heritage must include deep site knowledge combining architecture and archaeology in framing a sustainable design perspective. Thirdly, authorities and private companies are intertwined in safeguarding and managing cultural values as well as designing strong, sustainable architectural qualities. The overall aim of this interdisciplinary session is to identify, explore, and critically reflect on the intertwined positions of architecture, architectural conservation, and archaeology.
Scope and invitation
We invite scholars to present papers that shape our perception and understanding of processes in the ongoing transformation of the surrounding cultural environment run by public authorities and private companies. Intertwined positions may be identified, clarified, and become accessible for critique through studies of architecture and urban design, archaeology, and cultural heritages when sites are transformed. The involved professions may have very different approaches and understanding of sustainability.
Four tracks
We are looking for papers by scholars in architecture and urban design, architectural conservators, and archaeologists to be discussed in the multidisciplinary session. The framework focuses on profession and transformation of cultural heritages as material artefacts. Of special interest in this framework are contributions presenting different kinds of intertwined positions in the four following tracks:
- Design in intertwined relations between epistemologies and new and old policies in built environments including cultural heritage
- Competing positions: Exploitation, protection and inclusion or separation as approaches in design and development epistemologies
- Reflection on concepts showing intertwined positions in architecture and urban design, architectural conservation, and archaeology
- New ways of seeing and understanding cultural heritage, archaeology and architectural qualities in relation to an expanding liberal market agenda