PROGRAMME

   

The workshop programme included two days of plenary and parallel sessions with presentations from participants addressing specific topics, a one day field excursion and a poster exhibition. The excursion went to the Betuwe river area, south of Wageningen on June 9, 2004. More details can be found in the excursion guide

 


Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences (KNAW)

Netherlands Institute of Applied Geoscience TNO (TNO-NITG)

 

Land-Use Planning Group


  

Day 1, Monday, June 7

 

The central theme of the first day was 'the Cultural Biography of the Landscape'. It focused at the integration of the archaeological, historical-geographical values as parts of the archaeological-historical landscape from an archaeologist's and a historian's perspective. 

Plenary session

09.00-09.15

Opening by Prof. A. van der Valk, Wageningen University, The Netherlands

09.15-10.00

Keynote by Mr A. Olivier, English Heritage, United Kingdom- Multi -and Interdisciplinarity

10.00-10.45

Keynote by Prof. J. Breuste,  University of Salzburg, Austria - Framing the landscape of past and present

 

Parallel session 1

Track 1c

11.15-11.40

G. Fairclough - Making the Past Legible in the Future’s Landscape

11.40-12.05

E. Brabec – Landscape Change: The Influence of External Cultural Forces

12.05-12.30

P. Felber – Mechanisms of Remembering Landscape in the Past

 

 

13.45-14.10

J. Kolen – The Biographical Approach to Landscape

14.10-14.35

A. Printsmann, H. Alumäe, M. Külvik, H. Palang, H. Sooväli and T. Oja  – Lookout towers in Estionia: Visual control or Managed Tourism

14.35-15.00

S. Kianicka and M. Buchecker – How authentic is the Swiss alpine Landscape?

15.00-15.25

K. Van Assche – Crimean Tatar architecture. On the parallel construction of heritage, history and ethnicity

 

 

Track 1b

16.00-16.25

D.J. Stobbelaar and K. Hendriks – Reading the identity of place. Reference images as a way to guide the development of landscape quality.

16.25-16.50

P. Grau Møller and M. Stenak – Mapping Historical Landscapes and Environments – Morphology or Function?

16.50-17.15

A. Kont, U. Ratas, R. Rivis  – Changing Coastal Landscapes in Land Uplift Areas in Estonia

17.15-17.40

S. Kulczyk – How Landscape Boundaries reflect the Human Influence?

 

Parallel session 2

Track 1a

11.15-11.40

M. Antrop,  J. Bourgeois, C. Cordemans, P. Lachaert , E. Rogge, E. Thoen, V. Van Eetvelde – A transdisciplinary landscape study of the archaeology, history and geography of the Pajottenland (Flanders, Belgium) – the case of Gooik

11.40-12.05

I. Sarlöv Herlin – Ecology and archaeology in planning and management of landscapes. Similarities and convergences of objectives, perspectives and practices.

12.05-12.30

G. Weber, D. Guex, M. Nedelcu and J. Gobat – Historical changes of landscape, land-use and environmental perceptions in a Swiss alpine floodplain: an interdisciplinary approach.

 

 

13.45-14.10

H. Van Londen - Cultural biography and the power of image.

14.10-14.35

D. Haase – Landscape functions and land use analysis based on historical and current digital data and expert knowledge- how these approaches serve for spatial planning in different landscape types?

14.35-15.00

J. Cuijpers and D. Bekius – Landscape biographical ensembles in Bunnik

15.00-15.25

M. R. Magalhães, M. M. Abreu, M. Lousã, D. Espírito-Santo, N. Cortez, S.L. Campo, N.S. Cunha,  P.G. Silva – The Green Plan as a Tool for Landscape Sustainability – The case study of Loures (Portugal)

 

 

16.00-16.25

A. de Zwart – Archaeology and local authorities; the case of Elst/ Westeraam

16.25-16.50

J. Vervloet – Combining cultural heritage and landscape-architecture; science of art: some theoretical reflections on practical design solutions

16.50-17.15

G. Soeters and P.G. Van der Gaauw – Multiple Landscape, Merging Past and Present in Landscape Planning: case study Maaswerken

17.15-17.40

S. Daene - Prerequisites for participatory approaches in spatial planning.

17.40-18.05

Zbigniew Kobylinski  – Economy, Europe, Democracy: new challenges in protection, maintenance and enhancement of cultural landscapes in Poland

 

 

DAY 2, Tuesday, June 8

 

The programme of the second day provided a change of perspective and focused on the integration of the archaeological-historical landscape from both a planner's and politician's point of view. The central theme was the 'Knowledge-Action Nexus': the interaction between research and practice. Within these two main themes, parallel sessions were organized along six thematic tracks. 

 

Plenary session

09.00-09.45

Keynote by Prof. P.D. Taylor, University of Texas Arlington, USA - Linking heritage and quality of life

09.45-10.30

Keynote by Prof. J.H.F. Bloemers, University of Amsterdam, The Netherlands - Educating Planners and Politicians?

 

Parallel session 1

Track 2c

11.00-11.25

U. Hengelhaupt – Research, Survey and Evaluation of Historical Landscape Elements as part of the “Freyenstein Archaeological Park” Project

11.25-11.50

J. de Jonge – Forward to history. Interactive planning and design in Dutch ‘Belvedere-regions’

11.50-12.15

J. Cuijpers and J. Mulder – Analysis of historic water systems as a tool in modern water management and landscape architecture

 

 

13.45-14.10

G. Ermischer – A question of scale

14.10-14.35

H. Mestdagh, K. Cordemans and J. Verkeyn – Rural development and archaeology in Flanders: living between hope and fear

14.35-15.00

H. Kamermans and M. van Leusen - Predictive Modelling for Dutch Archaeological Heritage Management: a progress report 

15.00-15.25

L. Boomars – The Waddenregion as a multiple landscape: Representations in the media

 

 

Track 2a

15.55-16.20

K. Cordemans, H. Mestdagh and M. Stieperaere – Cultural historical Stewardship: a new tool for our ‘old’ heritage

16.20-16.45

Mrs. Oexle

16.45-17.10

I. Marušič and N. Penko – Fieldnames- what a landscape planner can learn from them

 

Parallel session 2

Track 2b

11.00-11.25

N. Walraven, T.T. Favier, F.P.M. Bunnik, and O.A. Abbink – The value of natural archives in spatial planning: from cultural heritage to lessons learned

11.25-11.50

G. Swensen  - Urban Heritage incorporated in community planning tools

11.50-12.15

M. Duineveld and M. Koedoot – The benefits of the lay-discourse

 

 

13.45-14.10

F. Steiner and K. Butler – The green Heart of Texas

14.10-14.35

E. Luiten - Panorama Krayenhoff: Revitalization strategy for the New Dutch Defence Line (1815-1963)

14.35-15.00

D. J. Almy III – Interventions in Urban infrastructure, recovering public landscape in the City of Bath, Main

15.00-15.25

E. Ennen - Linking heritage and quality of life: created heritage in new designed urban areas

 

 

15.55-16.20

D. Boogert – Archaeology, an interpreted source of information for environmental planning

16.20-16.45

A. Hartz, C. Dams and G. Körner – The importance of the historical dimension of the process of re-inventing the urban landscape – Experiences from the Interreg III B Project Saul (Sustainable and accessible urban landscapes)

16.45-17.10

S. Van de Steene, C. Ampe and J.Verkeyn – The abbey of the dunes reintegrated in the Present-day landscape Koksijde, Belgium

Plenary session

17.20-17.40

Plenary closing session

 

 

 

Poster sessions

 

  • M. van den Berg – The potential use of groundwater gauges within Dutch Archaeological Heritage Management

  • A. Kattenberg – The mapping of peat extraction: combining magnetometry and coring

  • J. Gremaud – Spatio-temporal dynamic of the vegetation of a Swiss alpine floodplain: from seed to landscape

  • A. van Doorn -  Mapping landscape history in the Mediterranean: methodologies applied to a small case study area in Southeast Portugal

  • M. Koedoot - De Gouw and Groetpolder: Concerning local meanings associated with the preservation of cultural heritage.

  • J. Bouwmeester - The cultural biography of a landscape - Zutphen Looërenk, landscape in layers.

  • Posters of sponsors of the workshop