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Call for Papers
Responsibilities and Opportunities in Architectural
Conservation: Theory, Education, and Practice
3 -4 November, 2008 Petra
University, Amman, Jordan |
The CSAAR 2008B conference will be held jointly with the
DMACH 2008
conference,
for more info,
click here >>
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Organized by:
The Center for the Study of Architecture in the Arab Region
In Collaboration with
College of
Architecture and Arts,
Petra University, Amman, Jordan
Keynote Speakers:
HRH Prince Sultan bin Salman
Al-Saud,
The Secretary General of the Saudi
Commission for Tourism & Antiquities and President of Al Turath
Foundation, Saudi Arabia
Peter Phillips,
President, Australia ICOMOS, Australia
Patricia M. O'Donnell,
Principal, Heritage Landscapes
Preservation Landscape Architects & Planners, USA
Introduction
Architecture and heritage are intertwined through
conservation. Architecture is a container of heritage in the
sense that anything related to history and culture had
occurred in space and in a place, the raison d’être of
architecture. A guiding hand in human endeavors, heritage is
a record of cultural precedents in any society, and as such,
it is a foundation for growth and advancement in any human
discipline, profession, or industry. Past poetry and poets
in a country, established glass manufacturing and its
developers in a region, and old houses of a style line and
their designers in a city all add to the body of heritage in
their respective settings. These accomplishments are
credited to the culture of the place—a city, province,
country, or the world—through time and are referenced by the
spatial environments that contained or witnessed them, being
a building, an urban district, a designed landscape, or an
interior space. This is to say: a) that such accomplishments
represent conspicuous events, pattern of occurrences,
general trends, consummate persons, and societal ingenuity
that coalesce to make the weave of the culture of the place
through time; and b) that such spatial environments are
important, first and foremost, by the virtue of being
associated with the cultural phenomena.
The centrality of “place” in the construct of heritage makes
heritage a fundamental driving force in architecture and
other built environment fields. Place and space are the
framers of architectural thinking, imagination, and
production. Practitioners, researchers, and educators in
architecture and environmental design fields are deservedly
entrusted with the built environment heritage and are
expected to lead professionally in protecting its integrity
through diverse means and approaches. Are they leading? This
loaded question aims in essence at invoking self
reflections, collective dialogues, and, ultimately, personal
positions on the role and responsibilities that architecture
and design professionals have to reckon with in the way of
conserving heritage buildings, sites, and cities.
In addition to sustaining the cultural well being of
societies, heritage conservation holds professional
rewarding prospects. For example, existing buildings and
districts in older cities and urban cores are the frequent
domain of sizable architectural and planning projects all
over the world. When conservation professional expertise is
lacking or unavailable, as occasionally—and sometimes
frequently—is the case, opportunities for architects and
planners are rendered in vain. The incessant opportunity of
conservation projects versus the uneven availability of
qualified professionals to engage in them makes it
imperative for the architectural and environmental design
community to look into ways for enhancing the conservation
capacity of its members at the theory, practice, and
education platforms.
Conference Theme and Research Tracks
For
the architectural community to engage meaningfully in
heritage conservation, responsibilities and opportunities
revolving around this activity need to be recalled,
analyzed, and articulated. The conference addresses the
responsibilities and opportunities theme through main
program, the subject of this announcement; and through a
special program, the subject of a separate announcement for
the conference on Digital Media and its Applications in
Cultural Heritage (See website: http://www.csaar-center.org/conference/DMACH2008/)
The main program has the four
research tracks below. We invite architectural
practitioners, educators, and researchers and their
counterparts in the environmental design fields to develop a
paper in any of the topics listed under the theme tracks.
The Heritage Idea and the
Conservation Response
• Heritage values as applied to the built environment
• Authenticity and accuracy in restoration and
reconstruction
• Conservation as a protective response
• Established and emerging types of cultural resources
• Significance assessment of architectural cultural
resources
• Architectural character as a framework for maintaining
integrity of historic buildings
• Conservation principles out of conservation philosophies
• Intervention or treatment types
• Conservation standards and guidelines
• Historic preservation versus archaeological conservation
• Conservation in allied disciplines (landscape
architecture, city planning, interior design, art)
• International thoughts and doctrines in conservation
• research trends in the field of cultural heritage
Conservation in the Design
Realm
•
Heritage messages and their expression in architectural
design forms
• Conservation principles, standards, and guidelines in
architectural practice
• Adaptive re-use design process
• Additions to historic buildings
· Design
on archaeological sites
• Construction documents for rehabilitation and restoration
projects
• Cases and comparisons
Conservation Context and
Geography
•
Jurisdictional context of conservation and ensuing politics
• Conservation legislation, laws, and public policy
• The economic and financial faces of conservation
• Authority and decision-making in discharging conservation
service
• Conservation, the environment, and sustainability • International comparisons and collaborations • Heritage sites and tourism • Cultural tourism and the sustainable management of
heritage sites • Attending to heritage across the Mediterranean
Conservation Education,
Information, and Technologies
•
Heritage conservation education, training, and professional
enhancement
• The place of heritage and conservation in architecture,
design, and engineering curricula
• Historic site presentation and public education
• Approaches for the identification and documentation of
historic buildings and environments
• Survey techniques in archaeology
• The word, the drawing, and the image media in service of
heritage and conservation
• Data acquisition and recording techniques associated with
buildings and cultural districts
• low-cost systems for documentation and monitoring of
cultural heritage
• New materials and technologies for conservation and
safeguarding of cultural heritage
Important Dates
Full paper submission |
March 30, 2008 |
Notification of acceptance |
May 30, 2008 |
Deadline for final papers |
July 15, 2008 |
LATE PAPER SUBMISSION
Papers may still be accepted for oral presentation
shortly before the conference takes place. Papers submitted
on or before May 30, 2008 will be considered in the review
process. It may not however, always be possible to include
late Papers in the Conference Proceedings. Instead, late
Papers may be published in an online volume of CSAAR Transactions on the
Built Environment (ISSN 1992-7320).
Abstract Submission
Abstract submissions should be approximately 500 words and must
be in English. Abstract and full paper submissions should be sent in MS Word or
PDF document format. Abstracts should be e-mailed to scientific committee
co-chairs (conservation@csaar-center.org).
Full paper submissions are required to be done online at csaar submission and
review system following the link below. Submissions will be peer reviewed.
Full Paper Submission
Posters, Panel Discussion & Workshops
The conference also welcomes proposals for:
* Poster papers
* Plenary Session/ Panel Discussion
* Workshops
Proposals may address any of the topics falling within the
scope of the conference themes.
Schedule (for Posters &
Workshops Proposals)
Proposals due: March 15, 2008
Notification of Acceptance: May 30, 2008
Position papers due (panels): May 01, 2008
General Note: Workshops and Panel Proposals should be submitted by e-mail to conference co-chair (jamalq@kfupm.edu.sa)
Instructions for submitting proposals for poster papers,
workshops and panel Discussion
available here>>.
Conference Fees and
Registration
Authors are invited to complete the registration process before
August 15th, 2008. Deadline for
authors to send registration fees is
October 15th. Failing
to send the registration fees on or before this date will result in excluding
the paper from the proceedings.
Click here for online registration>>.
Conference Proceedings
All papers accepted for publication at the conference will be published in
the conference proceedings, which will be available to delegates at the time of registration. In
addition, papers will be published in a volume of CSAAR Transactions on the
Built Environment (ISSN 1992-7320), an online version of the conference
proceedings.
List of accepted papers
List of accepted papers can be found
here >>
Location & Accommodation
Amman is the capital city of the Hashemite Kingdom of
Jordan, a city of 2,125,400 inhabitants (2005 estimate), and the
administrative capital and commercial center of Jordan.
Amman, the modern and ancient capital of Jordan, is one of the oldest
continuously inhabited cities in the World. Amman is located in a hilly area
of north-western Jordan. The city was originally built on seven hills, but
it now spans over an area of nineteen hills (each known as a jabal or
"mountain"). The main areas of Amman gain their names from the hills and
mountains on whose slopes they lie. The seven hills of Amman are an
enchanting mixture of ancient and modern. In the commercial heart of the
city, ultra-modern buildings, hotels, smart restaurants, art galleries and
boutiques rub shoulders comfortably with traditional coffee shops and tiny
artisans' workshops. Everywhere there is evidence of the city’s much older
past. Sunset is perhaps the best time to enjoy Amman, as the white buildings
of the city seem to glow in the fading warmth of the day.
Information regarding
conference venue, accommodation and travel information is
available here >>
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Roman theater in Amman |
Excursion
For those who might be interested to extend their stay in
Jordan to discover the undisclosed corners of the country,
we strongly recommend the post-conference excursions. You
can choose from the price range of following packages: <click
here>
Conference Program
Conference program will be available later.
Conference Site
Coordinator Dr. Suheir F. Soudani,
Petra University, Jordan
Conference Secretariat Samer Taweel,
CSAAR
same[at]csaar-center.org
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