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The resilient urban revitalisation of Rambagh Gate and Ramparts in Punjab, and heritage conservation projects related to Haryana’s Church of Epiphany and Delhi’s Bikaner House won UNESCO awards on Thursday. Twelve projects from China, India, and Nepal were acknowledged by the awards jury in this year’s UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation.
“With people, heritage and creativity at its core, the resilient urban revitalisation of the Rambagh Gate and Ramparts in Punjab, India, has garnered the highest honour, ‘Award of Excellence’,” UNESCO Bangkok said in a statement.
The project was lauded by the jury for ensuring the continuity of the site’s existing uses, while enhancing inclusivity and access to the broader community, it said. Three projects — the Fanling Golf Course in Hong Kong SAR, China; Dongguan Garden Residences in Yangzhou, China; and Karnikara Mandapam at Kunnamangalam Bhagawati Temple, Kerala, India — garnered an ‘Award of Distinction’ each.
An ‘Award of Merit’ was handed to five projects — Yan Nan Yuan, at Peking University in Beijing, China; Pan Family Residence in Suzhou, China; Church of Epiphany in Haryana, India; David Sassoon Library and Reading Room in Mumbai, India; and Bikaner House, in New Delhi.
The ‘Award for New Design in Heritage Contexts’ went to Erlitou Site Museum of the Xia Capital in Luoyang in China, UNESCO Bangkok said. Deliberating since November, the jury selected a total of 12 projects on the basis of their understanding of place, their technical achievements, and their sustainability and impact, as specified in the awards criteria, officials said.
This year, the jury reviewed 48 project entries from eight countries across the Asia-Pacific region. Entries were notably diverse in scope and typology.
The jury noted, taken together, all entries collectively represent significant ongoing progress in heritage conservation awareness and practice in the region, they said. The Karnikara Mandapam at Kunnamangalam Bhagawati Temple, in Kerala, Pipal Haveli, in Punjab, and Sikami Chhen, in Kathmandu, Nepal, were awarded with the ‘Special Recognition for Sustainable Development’ for their transformative heritage practices which contribute to larger principles of sustainable development, the statement said.
The jury in 2023 was composed of seven international conservation experts directed by a chair. The geographical representation of the jury members spanned the Asia-Pacific region, just as jurors’ expertise — archaeology, intangible cultural heritage, landscape design, museology, built heritage conservation — reflected a wide range of perspectives, it said.
Every year, since 2000, the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation programme has been recognising the efforts of private individuals and organisations in restoring, conserving, and transforming structures and buildings of heritage value in the region, the statement read.
The programme encourages others to undertake conservation projects within their own communities, whether independently or through public-private partnerships, it added. UNESCO introduced a new category ‘Special Recognition for Sustainable Development’ in 2020, together with an updated set of awards criteria to acknowledge the role and contribution of cultural heritage to sustainable development within the broader framework of the UN 2030 Agenda, the statement said.
“The awarded projects serve as a testament to how cultural heritage can be successfully preserved whilst at the same time mobilised to be integrated into various local development strategies.”
The award winners were selected according to their demonstration of success among various conservation criteria, such as their articulation of the spirit of place, their technical achievement, their appropriate use or adaptation, their engagement with the local community, and their contribution towards enhancing the sustainability of the surrounding environment and beyond,” UNESCO Bangkok said.
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