Heritage (Apr 2022)

A Case Study on Supporting the Preservation, Valorization and Sustainability of Natural Heritage

  • Zacharias Pervolarakis,
  • Antonis Agapakis,
  • Emmanouil Zidianakis,
  • Antonis Katzourakis,
  • Theodoros Evdemon,
  • Nikolaos Partarakis,
  • Xenophon Zabulis,
  • Constantine Stephanidis

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/heritage5020052
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 2
pp. 956 – 971

Abstract

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Caves can be considered as features of the landscape that have been formatted through a long period and are signs of the past climatological conditions, of prehistoric animal and human inhabitation, and provide habitat for species. In the near past, caves have also gained tourism interest since they offer unique sightseeing experiences. The sustainability and protection of cave heritage have been recently discussed mainly because over-tourism has been proven to have negative side effects on the preservation of the heritage site. Technology today has provided widely adopted inexpensive technical means to support immersive visiting experiences to sites of heritage interest that could support their valorization and sustainability in forms more friendly to the site. In this work, such an alternative visiting approach is explored through a use case applied to the Alistrati cave near Serres, Greece, where a VR tour guide can support immersive visiting experiences to the heritage site. By employing means of digital preservation of heritage sites the VR solution aspires to offer immersive close to reality engaging visiting experiences.

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