Bulletin KNOB (Mar 2012)
Bouwhistorische waardenkaarten. Een gebiedsgerichte benadering van bouwhistorisch erfgoed
Abstract
One of the spearheads of the modernisation of preservation of monuments and historic buildings (MoMo) is to have cultural history play a fully fledged role in spatial planning. The cultural-historical assessment is a very important aspect here and makes it possible to assess cultural-historical values early on in a spatial process. The building-historical values map is a strong instrument to define building-historical values. On the basis of inventories in Amsterdam, ‘s-Hertogenbosch, Leiden, Nijmegen and Utrecht experiences have been collected and bottlenecks ascertained, from which a standard approach has been developed for the realization of a building-historical values map. The building-historical values map as developed by the convention of municipal building historians, starts from an area-oriented approach analysing both already protected and unprotected areas. The map is a product that is easy to make, which in the first instance is an important condition, especially for municipalities (still) lacking building-historical know-how. Subsequently, the building-historical values map provides possibilities for broadening and deepening policy on monuments and historic buildings. The map may serve as a set of instruments in granting Wabo (general provisions built environment Act) licences and as a means of selection in drawing up the municipal historic buildings register. The first step is making a rough ‘building-historical spot map’. On this map all built-up areas existing around 1830 according to the first land registry map are projected at a macro level on the most recent parcel map. The addresses and buildings database (BAG map) and the large-scale basic map (GBK) included in municipal geographical information systems (GIS) form a good starting point for this. Where the built-up areas of the past are overlapping those of today, a colouring is applied. Thus the area with possible hidden values will be indicated in its largest dimensions. During the second step the selected area is subjected to a building-historical inventory in order to examine whether there actually are indications of the existence of ‘hidden values’. This desk research consists of studying digital aerial photographs and street-view photographs and checking the available building-historical data in property files, sometimes supplemented with a visit to a property. This is to result in the ‘building-historical expectations map’. The third step consists of adding all listed buildings, listed buildings on the municipal historic buildings register, and unprotected, image-defining premises, so that the assessment of more recent cultural-historical values will also be mapped out. Soon the new-style preservation of monuments and historic buildings will force the parties compiling and defining zoning plans to include cultural-historical values in their assessment of interests. The building-historical values map is a very practical tool for this and may give a strong impulse to an area-oriented assessment of cultural-historical heritage. As in most municipalities the historical building substance and the cultural-historical values have not been sufficiently mapped out yet – of some towns and villages hardly any knowledge exists about the historical values behind the facades – it is inevitable that the building-historical map will have to be a growth map, which is to grow step by step from expectations map towards values map, and which will gradually lead to adjustment and refinement.