Abstract

The district of Fındıklı in the Northeast city of Rize in Turkey is environmentally and culturally rich with its rural, built, and natural heritage. The city of Rize has been experiencing more frequent and severe rainfall, flooding, and landslides in the last decade. River flooding along the coast and in the center of the city is destroying infrastructure and residential areas, while landslides are becoming more destructive and repetitive in the hinterland of the district. Vernacular heritage is particularly exposed to the catastrophic consequences of floods and landslides, e.g., through the deterioration of historic building façades. This paper aims to identify the vernacular settlements under the threat of natural disasters in the selected case area. ArcGIS software was used to reveal the changes in spatial planning since 1969 in combination with geo referenced built and natural heritage sites at risk in the district. The comparison between the maps of 1969 and 2019 aerial pictures on ArcGIS illustrates the river transformation, coastal change, urban sprawl, and deforestation as threats to vernacular heritage in the area. Furthermore, this paper will highlight landslide-prone sites in the hinterland and river floods on the coastal area on the current map to show heritage sites at risk. The findings of this study intend to present the accelerated effects of floods and landslides along with the mismanagement of land use and rivers on vernacular heritage at a district scale to inform decision- and policymakers on needed actions.

Highlights

  • Natural and anthropic pressures, which are enhanced by climateinduced factors, are threatening cultural heritage sites [1,2]

  • The aim of this paper is to identify vulnerable vernacular built and natural heritage sites in the hinterland of Fındıklı in Rize, Turkey, which are threatened by floods and landslides

  • The analysis of this case study relied on the availability of data from the relevant stakeholders’ databases regarding the locations of the heritage sites, floods, and landslide-prone areas

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Summary

Introduction

Natural and anthropic pressures, which are enhanced by climateinduced factors, are threatening cultural heritage sites [1,2]. Climate-induced impacts such as sea-level rise [4], extreme rainfalls [5], storm surges [5], flooding [6], landslides [7], gully erosion [8], and multi-hazard threats [9] have already been observed in many cultural heritage sites [10], which caused structural damage, displace­ ment, and loss of lands and traditional local knowledge [11]. The impacts of climate change and disasters on cultural heritage sites differ. It is significant to address these impacts on cultural heritage at local and regional scales explicitly to implement adaptive and flexible strategies at national and global levels [12]. This paper considers flooding and landslides as responses to natural and anthropic activities impacting the environmental situation of the selected case area

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