Abstract

PurposeThe study, within the Increasing Resilience of Cultural Heritage (ResCult) project, aims to support civil protection to prevent, lessen and mitigate disasters impacts on cultural heritage using a unique standardised-3D geographical information system (GIS), including both heritage and risk and hazard information.Design/methodology/approachA top-down approach, starting from existing standards (an INSPIRE extension integrated with other parts from the standardised and shared structure), was completed with a bottom-up integration according to current requirements for disaster prevention procedures and risk analyses. The results were validated and tested in case studies (differentiated concerning the hazard and type of protected heritage) and refined during user forums.FindingsBesides the ensuing reusable database structure, the filling with case studies data underlined the tough challenges and allowed proposing a sample of workflows and possible guidelines. The interfaces are provided to use the obtained knowledge base.Originality/valueThe increasing number of natural disasters could severely damage the cultural heritage, causing permanent damage to movable and immovable assets and tangible and intangible heritage. The study provides an original tool properly relating the (spatial) information regarding cultural heritage and the risk factors in a unique archive as a standard-based European tool to cope with these frequent losses, preventing risk.

Highlights

  • Disaster risk reduction has become a priority for the international community

  • Based on the previous classification results and the parameters derived from the risk and vulnerability analysis, the INSPIRE data models (DM) has been extended

  • In the representation of hazard, some attributes were added for including in the Resilience of Cultural Heritage (ResCult) database model (DB) all the parameters useful to perform the analysis developed by the ResCult project

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Summary

Introduction

Disaster risk reduction has become a priority for the international community. United Nations explicitly declared the urgency to protect the relevant assets for humanity, including cultural heritage (UNDRR, 2015). In the heritage field, adequate documentation to store information, enrich and improve the knowledge and communication had always been acknowledged as essential for heritage protection, enhancement and resilience (capability to adapt to new conditions suitably) (UNDRR, 2017). © Elisabetta Colucci, Francesca Matrone, Francesca Noardo, Vanessa Assumma, Giulia Datola, Federica Appiotti, Marta Bottero, Filiberto Chiabrando, Patrizia Lombardi, Massimo Migliorini, Enrico Rinaldi, Antonia Spano and Andrea Lingua. The full terms of this licence may be seen at http://creativecommons.org/licences/by/4.0/legalcode

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