CIPA-ICORP-ISCARSAH 2017 Joint Meeting Conference Proceeding
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CIPA-ICORP-ISCARSAH 2017 Joint Meeting Conference Proceeding Edited by CIPA-ICORP-ISCARSAH 2017 Joint Meeting Committee Foreword ICOMOS holds its General Assembly every year and triennial General Assembly every three years. Till 2017, ICOMOS has held 19 sessions of its triennial General Assembly, twelve in Europe, three in Asia, three in America and one in Africa. The General Assembly and the Scientific Symposium provides great opportunity for heritage professionals and enthusiasts to come together on a common platform to deliberate on various aspects of heritage conservation and management. Young professionals and enthusiasts also get a chance to interact with experts and comprehend the emerging issues and case studies on conservation and management of cultural resources. ICOMOS India organized the 19th triennial General Assembly in Delhi, India from 11th – 15th December, 2017. The theme of Scientific Symposium is “Heritage & Democracy”. More than 1,500 delegates from 84 countries around the world attended the events. These provided the great opportunity to promote international co-operation and strengthen understanding and communication in the field of heritage. This proceeding is generated by the papers presented in CIPA-ICORP-ISCARSAH 2017 Joint Meeting. According ICOMOS principles, cross-disciplinary collaboration between ISCs has been encouraged. For promoting the exchange of information and knowledge on cultural heritage conservation, CIPA, ICORP and ISCARSAH, the three ISCs of the 28 International Scientific Committees (ISCs) of ICOMOS are organized cooperatively the CIPA-ICORP-ISCARSAH 2017 Joint Meeting (CII 2017). After disasters, information concerning the state of cultural heritage is essential. To share the information of cultural heritage conservation and coordinate protection efforts, CIPA together with ICORP and ISCARSAH cooperatively involved in this joint working. CIPA applies technology from the measurement, the visualisation and the computer sciences for the benefit of documenting cultural heritage; ICORP enhances disaster risk management and resilience for built cultural heritage; ISCARSAH serves as a network for experts in the field of conservation of heritage structures. Individually, they have been successful in their efforts to protect cultural heritage through conducting research, developing conservation theory, holding international conferences and training activities. The idea of the above three-ISC collaboration of the joint meeting can be traced back i to April 2016. Afterward, in August, part of the members of the board, Professor Andreas Georgopoulos, Professor Mario Santana and Professor Alex Yen, Dr Rand Eppich, and Gustavo Araoz, President of ICOMOS, made an initiative discussion and drafted a proposal. The partnership of the three ISCs was officially confirmed during the meeting of ICOMOS 2016 General Assembly in Istanbul this October. Through the close collaboration, CIPA, ICORP and ISCARSAH aim to share the resource such as research results and experts, making the network of cultural heritage conservation extended. To promote the cooperation, CIPA, ICORP and ISCARSAH have appointed Associate Professor Alex Yen and China University of Technology, Taiwan as the Chair of the Joint Meeting Committee for the coordination works. The joint meeting was held on 9 December 2017 during 2017 ICOMOS triennial General Assembly in New Delhi, India. It is the very first time that a joint meeting are collaborated by three ISCs. The achievements of the cooperation are highly appreciated. With the cooperation between China University of Technology, Taiwan, ICOMOS India (led by Dr Rohit Jigyasu and Ms Shalini Dasgupta) and Bureau of Cultural Heritage, Ministry of Culture, Republic of China, CII 2017 has successfully organized with the warmly participation of nearly a hundred attendees from 18 countries. The selected papers and abstracts of CII 2017 on cultural heritage studies are cross-disciplinary by covering topics at least in two fields of CIPA, ICORP and ISCARSAH. Topics of interest include, but are not limited to, the following areas: 1. Research trends, results and findings 2. Integration platform 3. Education and knowledge dissemination 4. Public participation and engagement 5. Case studies for application 6. Possible collaborations of ICOMOS ISCs for the future Editorial Boards Committee Alex Yaning Yen Andreas Georgopoulos Gorun Arun Mario Santana Rohit Jigyasu ii Contents Foreword …………………………………………………………… i Contents …………………………………………………………… iii Programme ………………………………………………………… 1 Keynote Speakers and Moderators ……………………………..… 3 I. Selected Papers ……………………………...……………………… 9 1. PROJECT ANQA IN SYRIA: CAPACITY BUILDING IN A WAR TORN COUNTRY Samir Abdulac, Elisabeth Lee and Stefan Simon ......................................................... 10 2. RISK MANAGEMENT POTENTIAL OF TECHNICAL DATA INVENTORIES ON BUILT CULTURAL HERITAGE: A CASE STUDY FOR THE CHURCHES OF THE PORTUGUESE ROUTE OF THE ROMANESQUE Adriana Nunes, Esmeralda Paupério, Xavier Romão,, Humberto Varum ................... 20 3. AUTHETICITY AND INTEGRITY OF ARCHITECTURAL HERITAGE: THREE CASES OF HISTORIC HOUSES AND HUMAN-CAUSED DISASTERS IN SEOUL In-Souk Cho ................................................................................................................. 37 4. POST-DISASTER NEEDS ASSESSMENT IN VANUATU AFTER CYCLONE PAM Robyn Riddett, and Kanefusa Masuda ......................................................................... 47 5. COLLABORATIVE INTEGRATED KNOWLEDGE MANAGEMENT SYSTEM FOR HERITAGE STRUCTURES Satwant Rihal, and Hisham Assal ................................................................................ 54 iii 6. IMPACT OF WORLD HERITAGE INSCRIPTION ON LOCAL SOCIETIES Yohei Endo ................................................................................................................... 63 7. ASSESSMENT ON THE ISSUES TO THREATEN CULTURAL ASSETS THROUGH RISK ANALYSIS: ON THE BASIC OF FIRE OF ISTANBUL HAYDARPAŞA TERMINAL IN 2010 Aysel Tarım ................................................................................................................... 72 8. SAFETY OF TALL MASONRY TOWER ON MANMADE FILL IN ANGKOR WITHOUT SPECIAL FOUNDATION Yoshinori Iwasaki ......................................................................................................... 86 9. UNMASKING THE URBAN PALIMPSEST THROUGH SUPERIMPOSITION OF HISTORIC MAPS: THE CASE OF ISTANBUL'S AKSARAY DISTRICT Meltem Vatan, Efsun Ekenyazıcı Güney, and Bengü Uluengin .................................... 98 10. HOMO GRAVITAS Ramiro Sofronie ......................................................................................................... 117 11. EVALUATION OF THE BIRTHPLACE OF MIMAR SINAN, AĞIRNAS AS CULTURAL HERITAGE AND THE RISK OF LOSS OF HERITAGE E.Sibel Onat Hattap ................................................................................................... 133 12.A WISH LIST OF DRR AND DRM ACTIONS FOR CULTURAL HERITAGE Xavier Romão, and Esmeralda Paupério .................................................................. 143 13. UNDERWATER MAPPING: A TECHNOLOGY REVIEW Peter Tian-Yuan Shih ................................................................................................. 159 iv 14. CONTESTED BUDDHISM CULTURAL HERITAGE IN XI’AN, CHINA: THE CASES OF FAMENSI AND XINGJIAOSI MONASTERIES Meng-Chi Hsueh ........................................................................................................ 168 15. THE MEIHE VILLA IN TAIWAN: A HERITAGE BUILDING WITH FENGSHUI SIGNIFICANCE Bor-Shuenn Chiou ...................................................................................................... 179 16. INDIGENOUS YOUTH EDUCATION FOR AGRICULTURAL HERITAGE LANDSCAPES: A CASE STUDY IN TAIWAN Kuang-Chung Lee ...................................................................................................... 194 17. THE EVOLUTION OF MANUFACTURING EQUIPMENT AT MODERN SUGAR REFINERY FACTORY DURING JAPANESE COLONIAL PERIOD: CASE OF SUGARCANE SQUEEZER Kae-Cherng Yang ....................................................................................................... 201 18. PRESERVATION AND REUSE OF CULTURAL HERITAGE SPACES REVITALIZED THROUGH CULTURAL AND CREATIVE INDUSTRIES Szu-Ling Lin ............................................................................................................... 208 19. STABILIZATION OF DECAYING HOUSES: STRATEGIES FOR THE CONSERVATION OF TRADITIONAL SETTLEMENTS IN KINMEN Yi-Jen Tseng , Hsin-Ying Huang ................................................................................ 217 20. HERITAGE AND DEMOCRACY LANDSCAPES OF MEMORIES: A STUDY OF REPRESENTATION FOR TRANSLOCAL CHINESE CULTURAL HERITAGE IN KAIPING, GUANGDONG, CHINA Bo-wei Chiang ........................................................................................................... 228 v 21 A STUDY FOR APPLYING PHOTOGRAMMETRY TECHNOLOGY TO DIGITALIZE INDOOR SCENE OF MONUMENTS AND TEMPLES Wun-Bin Yang, Tsung-Juang Wang , and Alex Ya-Ning Yen....................................... 236 22. COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT AND CULTURAL LANDSCAPE –THE CASE OF LONGAN CULTURAL LANDSCAPE IN SOUTHERN TAIWAN Chun-Hsi Wang .......................................................................................................... 243 23. A STUDY ON DISASTER PREVENTION SPACE PLANNING: A CASE STUDY OF QIONG-LIN SETTLEMENT Chin-Fang Cheng, and Alex Ya-Ning Yen .................................................................