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Industrial Heritage Re-Tooled
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Table of Contents

Introduction, James Douet Part I: Values and meanings Chapter 1: Why preserve the industrial heritage?, Neil Cossons Chapter 2: What does the Industrial Revolution signify?, Helmuth Albrecht Chapter 3: Industrial Archaeology: a discipline?, Barrie Trinder Chapter 4: The heritage of the industrial society, Louis Bergeron Part II: Understanding the evidence Chapter 5: Industrial archaeology, Patrick Martin Chapter 6: Identifying industrial landscapes, Iain Stuart Chapter 7: Recording and documentation, Miles Oglethorpe and Miriam McDonald Chapter 8: Process recording, Gustav Rossnes Chapter 9: Industrial archives and company records, Belem Oviedo Gámez Chapter 10: Photography and image sources, Jan af Geijerstam Part III: Realising the potential Chapter 11: Choosing what to preserve, Paul Smith Chapter 12: Legal protection, Keith Falconer Chapter 13: Urban regeneration and planning, Massimo Preite Chapter 14: Adaptive re-use, Benjamin Fragner Chapter 15: Financial and fiscal incentives, Bode Morin Chapter 16: Heritage at risk surveys, Jaime Migone Chapter 17: Conservation plans: Helen Lardner Chapter 18: Adaptive re-use and embodied energy, Mark Watson Chapter 19: Post-industrial landscapes, Norbert Tempel Chapter 20: Industrial ruins, Masaaki Okada Chapter 21: Conservation and community consciousness, Hsiao-Wei Lin Chapter 22: Industrial heritage and the World Heritage Convention, Peter Stott Chapter 23: World Heritage, concepts and criteria, Michel Cotte Chapter 24: Thematic World Heritage Studies, Stephen Hughes Part IV: Sharing and enjoying Chapter 25: Industrial museums, Massimo Negri Chapter 26: Care of industrial and technical collections, Johannes Großewinkelmann Chapter 27: Conserving industrial artefacts, Eusebi Casanelles and James Douet Chapter 28: Industrial heritage tourism, Wolfgang Ebert Part V: Teaching and learning Chapter 29: Teaching in schools, Gràcia Dorel-Ferré Chapter 30: University training, Györgyi Németh Chapter 31: Distance and on-line learning, Tuija Mikkonen Part VI: TICCIH Chapter 32: The work of TICCIH, Stuart B. Smith Chapter 33: TICCIH’s Charter for Industrial Heritage, Eusebi Casanelles Appendix: The Nizhny Tagil Charter for the Industrial Heritage Index

About the Author

James Douet is an industrial archaeologist and building historian, joint author of the Nizhny Tagil Charter , and editor of the TICCIH Bulletin . He works and teaches in Barcelona, Spain.

Reviews

“This book is a welcome contribution to the field of Industrial Heritage in providing an overview of the state-of-the-art of industrial heritage world-wide, in defining the field, in serving as a guide to best practices, and in setting forth international standards for the recording, documentation, conservation, evaluation and presentation of industrial heritage sites. It is a must read for anyone working in the field, and will prove highly interesting and informative to members of the general public who are curious to know what industrial heritage is all about.” — Robert Passfield, Senior Historian Emeritus, Parks Canada

"As befits the organisation it comes from, the scope of the book is truly international. Based around the 2003 Nizhny Tagil Charter (usefully appended at the end) the book aims to flesh out the doctrines and be a ‘definitive international guide to contemporary best practice’. ... It is a book to dip into for advice from some of the best-informed players in industrial heritage for iconicxamples and for best practice, ... It is also a key publication for any university reading list with courses that deal with aspects relevant to industrial heritage." — David de Haan, Industrial Archaeology Review

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