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10 th INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS Smart heritage, smart territory VALLADOLID from 10 th to 12 th November 2016 www.facebook.com/bienalarpa #BIENALARPA www.jcyl.es/arpa Biennial of Heritage Restoration & Management

Biennial of Heritage Restoration And Management 2016 10 th INTERNATIONAL CONGRESS smart heritage, smart territory Valladolid from 10 th to 12 th November 2016 Organised by The Autonomous Government of Castile and León Regional Ministry of Culture and Tourism President: Juan Vicente Herrera Campo Regional Ministry: María Josefa García Cirac Director Juan Carlos Prieto Vielba General Director of the Santa María la Real Foundation Place Centro Cultural Miguel Delibes Av. Monasterio Nuestra Señora de Prado, 2 Valladolid Technical Director Servicio de Planificación y Estudios: Dirección General de Patrimonio Cultural Consejería de Cultura y Turismo Monasterio de Ntra. Sra. de Prado Avda. Monasterio de Ntra. Sra. de Prado, s/n 47014-Valladolid (España) Telephone: (00 34) 626 04 51 28 secretariacongreso.arpa@jcyl.es www.jcyl.es/arpa www.facebook.com/bienalarpa @bienalarpa

General objetives of the congress Smarter heritage for a clever territory Small-town and rural depopulation is progressive and unstoppable. If forecasts hold true, 70% of the world s population will live in large cities by 2050. This will result in a worrying equation: thousands of historic buildings will be at risk of ruin or neglect in places where depopulation and exploitation will occur and big cities will be under great urban pressure. Is this preventable? Yes indeed, and the key lies in a paradigm shift in heritage management. We accept that, in only 35 years from now, many of us will live in intelligent large cities, but they will all look the same, or almost, thanks to the globalization derived processes. In order to differentiate themselves from one another and to maintain their identity (their innermost intelligence), those cities will have to place their historical memory in an outstanding position, caring for historical centres, churches, monasteries, palaces, bridges or castles, that is, their cultural and historical heritage. However, in order to achieve this challenge we must ensure that heritage becomes an attraction, a development epicentre for the city and permanent connection with communication networks. Otherwise, it will be doomed to demise. Likewise, in depopulated or less populated areas, historical heritage has to be permanently interconnected in order to keep it alive and to prevent it from disappearing. This could be done through conservation and promotion programs, ensuring its survival through a thorough control. Thus, new technologies and new management models are essential in both cases. In Europe, most of the investment aimed at protecting, conserving, restoring and promoting historical heritage has been by the public sector. We have moved from an era in which Europe was overtaken by the restoration and rehabilitation of historic buildings to another in which, after several years of budget adjustments, a new model has begun to be promoted, based on public-private partnerships, preventive conservation and, of course, a comprehensive management of heritage, breaking traditional paradigms. Regarding technology, the constantly referred-to Internet of things (IoT) will transform, and is in fact already transforming, our world, including heritage. The race is long and we are facing a strategy shift aimed at achieving a smart, efficient and sustainable heritage that will generate clever territories in turn, allowing everybody to jump into Big Data in order to fully and irreversibly enter into 21st century. This conference will serve to discuss strategies, tools and projects that are already in place to meet this challenge. Thematic areas B1 Block 1: Technology development Innovation is a process by which using existing knowledge, or generating it if necessary, we create products or processes that may be new or can improve existing ones to achieve progress or success in the market. The heritage sector should not be left out of the advances that the era of communication brings to the 21st century s society at large, and to its economic impact, in particular. Therefore, technological development becomes essential for the different interventions involved in the sector s value chain. Important solutions based on research and development are already being implemented and make a valuable contribution. However, more technological contributions are needed for issues related to identification and protection, preventive conservation, restoration and in all aspects associated to management, dissemination, promotion and enjoyment. B2 Block 2: Heritage management / territorial management The approach to heritage assets must be shifted. So far, research was strictly grounded on academics, focusing on creating specific visions in which the typology and the detail were the primary aspects that featured any attempt to underscore the importance of heritage. We now know that in order to understand heritage, we firstly need to establish the relationship with the landscape, being is its container and common denominator of the territory, and which gives personality to the surroundings by defining an unbreakable linkage that generates the concepts of positioning, location and structuring. Secondly, we need to establish its relationship with mankind as the main element defining, shaping and structuring the landscape, determining its use, utility and scale. B3 Block 3: Public-private partnerships The responsibility, which has historically been developed by the Administration of heritage conservation, has been dramatically reduced. It is therefore time for accountability, firstly, by the civil society, which should increase its engagement and take advantage of a field able to become a productive sector with enormous growth potential and, secondly, sizing the role of the Administration in order to reach a balance that allows to make progress towards sustainable management models. This type of management would drive the objectives to obtain a great valuable contribution of heritage assets in general and to the industry, thanks to the development of competitive and responsible cultural industries capable to measure their results and social impact.

Thursday 10 th of November Friday 11 th of November 16.00 17.00 h Reception for participants and hand out of the documents 17.00-17:15 h Official opening of the Conference 17.15-17.30 h Enrique Saiz Martín General Director of Cultural Heritage of Castilla y León s Regional Government Juan Carlos Prieto Vielba Director of the Congress Presentation and methodology of the conference 17.30-18.15 h Miguel Ángel de la Iglesia Santamaría Superior Technical College of Architecture of Valladolid Opening lecture: Excerpts of the memory. Intelligent projects 18.15-19.00 h Alejandro Miranda Roger Beatriz Alonso Ballesteros Mónica López Sánchez Ángel Palomino Cluster AEICE Duero-Douro initiative, heritage for development; towards a world leading intelligent territory 19.00 20.00 h Communications 09.30-11.15 h Communications 11.15-11.45 h Break 11.45-12.30 h Rosa Ruíz Entrecanales Heritage Department of Avila. City Council of Avila Comprehensive management of the Avila Walls 12.30-13.15 h Luis Pérez de Prada National Heritage The royal palaces: management of heritage with territorial structure 13.15-14.00 h Carlos Bayod Factum-Arte 3D digital technology for heritage conservation 16.30-20.30 h AR&PA 2016 Awards panel Public presentation of the eight candidate projects for the International AR&PA Awards 2016 for Cultural Heritage intervention Jury: Manuel Roberto Guido Representative of the Directorate General for the valorization of cultural heritage of the Italian Ministry of Culture Javier Rivera Blanco Professor in Architecture and Restoration History Martha Thorne Dean of IE School of Architecture and Design and Executive Director of the Pritzker Architecture Prize

Saturday 12 th of November 09.30 10.30 h Communications 10.30-11.00 h Luis Serrano Muñoz Community of Madrid Antonio López Sánchez Retineo Engineering Old and new technologies applied in the restoration of the Tower of Alcalá la Vieja 11.00-11.30 h Pablo Hermoso de Mendoza GNOSS Put your cultural data to work: the establishment and exploitation of a cultural knowledge network 11.30-11.45 h Break 11.45-12.15 h Javier León González Mario Tena Marín Polytechnic University of Madrid Architectural heritage structure conservation management 12.15-12.45 h Francisco Ramos Martínez Juan Gallardo Carrillo Intelligent Heritage Big data, open data and open science: applications in cultural heritage 13.15-13:45 h Álvaro Domingues Geographer. University of Oporto Intelligent heritage, intelligent territory? 16.30-17.15 h Marco Scerbo University of Florence The Grand Beauty, a new path for regional development: experiences from Tuscany 17.15-18.00 h Paula Silva General Manager of Cultural Heritage of the Culture Ministry of Portugal Closing lecture: Integrated approach on cultural heritage in Portugal 18.00-18.30 h Break 18.30 h Closing event Ceremony of Diplomas ARPA 2016 Awards on Cultural Heritage 12.45-13.15 h Alexandre Alves Costa Architect. University of Oporto When light meets silence

Selected Scientific Committee and Workgroups The Autonomous Government of Castile and León Ana Carmen Pascual Díez Silvia Escuredo Hogan Jesús del Val Recio Marco Antonio Garcés Demaison Benito Arnáiz Alonso Milagros Burón Álvarez Consuelo Escribano Velasco José Javier Fernández Moreno The University of Valladolid Miguel Ángel de la Iglesia Santamaría Germán Delibes de Castro Flavia Zelli CARTIF Foundation Pedro Martín Lerones Santa María la Real Foundation Vanesa Marcos Sánchez Conference Papers Submissions should be 12 A4 pages maximum in Word format, font Times New Roman (12 points) and foot notes at the bottom of the page. A maximum of eight pictures in digital format (JPG, 1200x1024 pixels resolution) accompanied by a Word file with explanations of each one. Illustrations, although can be interspersed in the text, where applicable, should also be provided separately. It all must be sent by email to the Technical Director following instructions in the attached template before October 23 rd. Acceptances or rejections of papers will be announced by November 3 rd. Those papers selected by the Scientific Committee will be exhibited in public (compulsory procedure) for up to 20 minutes and published in digital format. Registration Free registration. There is limited availability. Registration form will be accepted on a first come first serve basis until November 5 th. Credits To receive credit for various university degrees related to the topics of the International Congress, a certificate which mentions the 20 contact hours involved will be issued. Intelligent Heritage of Castile and León Ángel Palomino Lázaro URBYPLAN Mª Pilar Pérez Fernández