The cultural heritage of Syria and the Gateway Arch in St. Louis are
among the diverse cultural heritage sites threatened by neglect,
overdevelopment or social, political and economic change, a preservation
group announced Tuesday.
The World Monuments Fund's watch list for 2014 includes 67 sites in 41
countries and territories, from Japan to the United States.
The New York-based group has issued its watch list every two years since
the mid-1990s to call attention to important landmarks threatened
around the world in an effort to promote awareness and action. The list
is assembled by a panel of experts in archaeology, architecture, art
history and preservation.
"Some sites are famous, others struggle for recognition," said Bonnie
Burnham, president of the organization. "It is our goal to help as many
as possible.
"For some sites, inclusion in the Watch is the best chance to survive."
The list cited escalating violence in Syria for the devastating effect
on some of its monuments, including the citadel of Aleppo and the
fortress of Qa'lat al-Mudique.
Eero Saarinen's Gateway Arch, a mid-century modern structure, was at
risk due to "encroaching corrosion," the result of the challenges its
extreme height and design presented for its preservation, the group
said.
It also singled out the Hudson River Palisades, saying the planned
construction of a commercial building nearby would spoil views from the
cliffs on both the New Jersey and New York sides of the river.
Among the list are three former industrial sites in England — the
Grimsby Ice Factory, Battersea Power Station and Deptford Dockyard —
obsolete structures the fund said could be converted for cultural and
community purposes.
The list also includes Yangon, Myanmar, whose religious structures and
late 19th- and early 20th-century colonial buildings were threatened
with destruction from the demand for commercial and residential
properties, the fund said.
U.S. sites on the list also included sculptor Donald Judd's buildings at
The Chinati Foundation, a contemporary art museum in Marfa, Texas;
Frank Lloyd Wrights' Taliesin in Spring Green, Wis.; and woodworker
George Nakashima's house and workshop in New Hope, Pa. The modern
heritage sites were included because they all require creative
approaches to their conservation, the fund said.
Also on the watch list are places threatened by what the fund called
"large-scale cruise-ship tourism." It said Venice, Italy, was a dramatic
example of that, and said it hoped that placing the ancient city on the
list would lead to an analysis of the adverse impact large vessels were
having on the environment.
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