BU-IIA Funded Project: Historic Houses for the Twenty First Century: Heritage, Innovation and Sustainability

Description

Irrespective of the ownership model (and there are many) historic houses are tending to incorporate multiple functions based on visitor attraction and public use: heritage site, tourist destination, events, hotel, restaurant/café, community space, farm shop; in addition to a range of activities and land uses associated with their parks, gardens and other outdoor spaces. Our project is grounded within this context of achieving sustainability for heritage through transformational change, with a particular focus on the sector in Wales. It adopts and seeks to reapply primary themes and findings from Innocastle, an Interreg Europe project which explored the pan-European policy framework for stimulating rural and regional development through historic castles, manors and estates; and HERIT, an Erasmus+ initiative focused on the provision of digital tools for the sector. Our project is designed as a strategic knowledge-exchange initiative to develop practical research-informed answers and guidance on the following core questions: 1) What is the role of the historic house in twenty-first century Wales? 2) How can historic houses innovate to achieve sustainable futures?

Funding awarded through the Bangor University Innovation and Impact Award (Research Wales Innovation Funding). Value = £9297
1 Apr 202231 Mar 2023

External organisation (Government)

NameHEFCW
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom

External organisation (Government)

NameHEFCW
Country/TerritoryUnited Kingdom