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TICCIH 2009<br />

I n d u s t r i a l<br />

H e r i t a g e<br />

Ecology & Economy<br />

XIV International TICCIH Congress in Freiberg, Germany<br />

30th August – 5th September, 2009<br />

<strong>Third</strong> <strong>Announcement</strong> – Provisional Programme<br />

1


2<br />

<strong>Third</strong> <strong>Announcement</strong> and Provisional Programme<br />

XIV International TICCIH Congress Freiberg/Germany 2009<br />

With this <strong>Third</strong> <strong>Announcement</strong> we would like to provide first detailed information about<br />

the provisional scientific programme of the XIV International Congress of The International<br />

Committee for the Conservation of the Industrial Heritage (TICCIH) to be held from<br />

30th August to 5th September, 2009 at the Technical University and Mining Academy of<br />

Freiberg in Germany.<br />

Following our call for papers in the Second <strong>Announcement</strong> last year more than 200<br />

colleagues from all over the world had offered papers, sessions, workshops and posters<br />

for the main congress topic “Industrial Heritage, Ecology and Economy” as well as for other<br />

topics concerning the questions and problems of industrial heritage in these days. We like to<br />

thank all of them for their engagement and their interest for TICCIH and our congress. During<br />

the last weeks the Programme Committee discussed all proposals and finally made the decision<br />

about the papers, sessions, workshops and posters which are going to be accepted for<br />

the congress. The provisional programme published in this <strong>Third</strong> <strong>Announcement</strong> is the result of<br />

these efforts. We hope that this programme will match the expectations of all those who sent<br />

proposals for the congress and moreover will find the interest of the international scientific<br />

community and all people who are devoted to industrial heritage. They are welcome to join<br />

the congress in Freiberg.<br />

All accepted speakers and those who are interested to participate in the scientific programme,<br />

the excursions and tours as well as in the social events of the congress are now called to<br />

complete the final registration and payment form in this announcement. Deadline for the<br />

final registration and the payment is 30th May, 2009. Please note that after this deadline<br />

registration and payment are only possible with a special late registration fee. All necessary<br />

information and additional downloads are also available on the congress homepage<br />

(www.ticcih2009.de) which will be updated regularly. For any further details or questions<br />

feel free to contact the congress office (info@ticcih2009.de).<br />

On behalf of the TICCIH 2009 Organizing Committee we are looking forward to welcoming<br />

you in Germany.<br />

Helmuth Albrecht Eusebi Casanelles Norbert Tempel<br />

President of the Organizing and TICCIH President National Representative<br />

Programme Committee Freiberg 2009 TICCIH Germany<br />

3


Welcome Note<br />

As Saxon State Minister of Science and the Arts and the official patron of the XIV International<br />

TICCIH Congress 2009 in Freiberg/Germany I like to invite you to Saxony and to<br />

participate in the congress under the topic “Industrial Heritage, Ecology and Economy”. It<br />

is a great honour for our country to host the International TICCIH Congress with industrial<br />

heritage experts from all over the world.<br />

Saxony is one of the oldest and heaviest industrialized regions of Germany with a large<br />

number of technical and industrial monuments from the middle ages up to the 20th century.<br />

Industrial heritage activities in our country are dating back to the beginning of the 20th century<br />

and led to one of the earliest heritage laws in Germany which explicitly incorporated the<br />

technical and industrial monuments. A formal registration, documentation and preservation<br />

of these monuments started in the late 1920s and had been intensified since the 1950s.<br />

Centres of documentation and scientific research in the field of industrial heritage since that<br />

time had been the Technical Universities of Dresden and Freiberg. The first lecture position for<br />

industrial heritage was established in Dresden in 1979, the first chair for industrial archaeology<br />

in Freiberg in 1992 and the first German university programme in industrial archaeology at<br />

the Technical University of Freiberg in 2001. Today more than 20,000 technical and industrial<br />

monuments are listed in Saxony. Numerous mining museums, a large number of technical<br />

museums and the Saxon Museum of Industry, founded in 1998, are representing the great<br />

industrial tradition of Saxony.<br />

The wealth and the variety of this tradition are a blessing and a burden at the same time. It<br />

opens the chance to preserve an important part of the history and culture of an old industrial<br />

landscape and of the history of its working and inventive people. But it also leads to problems<br />

in financing all the necessary activities in preservation, restoration and reusing of the industrial<br />

heritage sites. Especially in weak economical times it is not easy to convince the public and<br />

the politicians to spent money for monuments which are not part of the main stream of the<br />

public understanding of “cultural heritage”, which are often seen as ugly, sometimes in rotten<br />

condition and because of their size and their contamination are causing special economical<br />

and ecological problems. Nevertheless, it is to point out that the industrial history is an important<br />

part of the Saxon history. The industrial culture is the birthplace of our modern society.<br />

Its physical remains must be preserved, interpreted and integrated into a broader understanding<br />

of history, culture and cultural landscapes.<br />

New ways of understanding, preserving and financing have to be found. During the last<br />

months a public discussion about the role and the future of industrial heritage and industrial<br />

culture had been initiated in Saxony. As the State Minister of Science and the Arts I welcome<br />

and support this discussion. The XIV International TICCIH Congress 2009 in Freiberg should<br />

be a milestone in this process in our country, like the last German International TICCIH Congress<br />

in Bochum in 1975 had been an important break-point for new industrial heritage initiatives<br />

in the Ruhr-Region.<br />

Dr. Eva-Maria Stange<br />

Saxon State Minister of Science and Arts<br />

4 5


View of Silver Mine “Reiche Zeche“ and the City of Freiberg/Saxony<br />

Exhibition hall of the Saxon Museum of Industry in Chemnitz<br />

Visitor Mine F60 former open cast brown coal mine of Lichterfelde (built 1988/91), Project IBA Fürst-Pückler-Land<br />

Contents<br />

Organizing and Programme Committee 8<br />

Timetable of the Congress 10<br />

Timetable of the Provisional Scientific Programme 11<br />

Scientific Programme 13<br />

Congress Excursions and Tours 32<br />

How to get to Freiberg 48<br />

Further Information 50<br />

Final Registration Form 52<br />

Payment Details 53<br />

Who’s TICCIH ? 54


Organizing and Programme Committee<br />

Freiberg/Germany, August 30 th to September 5 th , 2009<br />

Patronage<br />

Dr. Eva-Maria Stange (Saxon State Minister of Science and Arts)<br />

Organizing Committee<br />

President: Prof. Dr. Helmuth Albrecht (IWTG TU Freiberg, Germany)<br />

Members: Dr. Rita Müller (IMC Chemnitz, Germany)<br />

Dipl.-Ing. Antje Boshold (IBA Fürst-Pückler-Land GmbH, Germany)<br />

Dipl.-Ing Norbert Tempel (National Representative TICCIH-Germany)<br />

Dr. Axel Föhl (TICCIH-Germany)<br />

Dr. Piotr Gerber (Wroclaw/Poland)<br />

Dr. Miloš Matěj (Ostrava/Czech Republic)<br />

Dipl.-Kffr. Daniela Walther (Congress Secretary’s Office, Germany)<br />

Programme Committee<br />

President: Prof. Dr. Helmuth Albrecht (IWTG TU Freiberg, Germany)<br />

Members: Prof. Dr. Marie Nisser (TICCIH Honorary President, Sweden)<br />

Dr. Györgyi Nemeth (TICCIH Hungary)<br />

Dipl.-Ing. Norbert Tempel (National Representative TICCIH-Germany)<br />

Congress Secretary’s Office<br />

Dipl.-Kffr. Daniela Walther (IWTG TU Freiberg)<br />

Congress Organizers<br />

Institute for History of Science and Technology, TU Freiberg (IWTG)<br />

Saxon Museum of Industry, Chemnitz<br />

International Building Exhibition (IBA) Fürst-Pückler-Land GmbH, Großräschen<br />

TICCIH Germany<br />

Co-organizers of the congress<br />

Technical University (TU) Bergakademie Freiberg<br />

Industrial Museum of the Rhineland, Oberhausen (LVR-Industriemuseum)<br />

Industrial Museum of Westphalia, Dortmund (LWL-Industriemuseum)<br />

German Mining Museum, Bochum (DBM)<br />

Förderverein Montanregion Erzgebirge e.V., Freiberg<br />

German Waterhistorical Association (DWhG)<br />

Congress Secretary<br />

For general information about the congress, please contact the congress secretary’s<br />

office:<br />

Congress Secretary’s Office<br />

E-Mail: info@ticcih2009.de<br />

Phone: 0049-3731-392226<br />

Fax: 0049-3731-392832<br />

Postal address:<br />

Congress Secretary’s Office TICCIH 2009<br />

IWTG — TU Bergakademie Freiberg<br />

09596 Freiberg<br />

Germany<br />

8 9


Timetable of the Congress<br />

The congress will be held from 30th August to 5th September, 2009 at the congress and lecture rooms of the Technical<br />

Uni-versity and Mining Academy of Freiberg in the historic city centre of Freiberg. All conference facilities are within walking<br />

distance of five minutes.<br />

Post-Congress<br />

Tours<br />

(optional)<br />

05.09.<br />

Saturday<br />

04.09.<br />

Friday<br />

03.09.<br />

Thursday<br />

02.09.<br />

Wednesday<br />

01.09.<br />

Tuesday<br />

31.08.<br />

Monday<br />

30.08.<br />

Sunday<br />

Pre-Congress<br />

Tours<br />

(optional)<br />

Saxony<br />

(5 days)<br />

Sessions<br />

Sessions Sessions Congress<br />

Excursion<br />

IMC<br />

Chemnitz<br />

Congress<br />

Excursion<br />

IBA-Project<br />

Fürst-Pückler-<br />

Land Lusatia<br />

Arrival Plenary<br />

Opening<br />

Session<br />

Morning<br />

Workshops<br />

Poster<br />

Sessions<br />

Poland<br />

(4 days)<br />

IMC<br />

Special<br />

Plenary<br />

Session<br />

Sessions Sessions<br />

IBA Special<br />

Plenary<br />

Session<br />

Sessions<br />

Berlin<br />

Afternoon (3 days) Arrival<br />

TICCIH<br />

Meeting<br />

City Tour<br />

Chemnitz<br />

Workshops<br />

IBA Tour<br />

Workshops<br />

Czech Rep.<br />

(4 days)<br />

ERIH<br />

Meeting<br />

Visit to the<br />

Silver Mines<br />

of Freiberg<br />

IMC<br />

Reception<br />

in Chemnitz<br />

Organ<br />

Concert<br />

Freiberg<br />

Cathedral<br />

Movie<br />

“Industrial<br />

Photographers<br />

Bernd and<br />

Hilla Becher”<br />

IBA<br />

Reception<br />

in Plessa<br />

Congress<br />

Concert<br />

City Tour<br />

Freiberg<br />

Ruhr<br />

Region<br />

(3 days)<br />

Evening Opening<br />

Reception<br />

and<br />

Welcome<br />

Party<br />

Farewell<br />

Garden<br />

Party<br />

Timetable of the Provisional Scientific Programme<br />

Time Monday, 31st August Wednesday, 2nd September Thursday, 3rd September Saturday, 5th September<br />

Session PS 1: Opening Session A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 W2 A2 A6 A7 A8 C5 D6 A1 D7 D8 D9 D10 P 1<br />

09.00 – 09.30 1 1 1 1 1 1 14 7 1 1 1 1 8 1 1 1 1<br />

09.30 – 10.00 2 2 2 2 2 2 15 8 2 2 2 2 9 2 2 2 2<br />

10.00 – 10.30 3 3 3 3 3 3 16 9 3 3 3 3 10 3 3 3 3<br />

Coffee Break<br />

Session PS 2: Introductory Session A2 A3 A4 A5 A6 W2 A2 A6 A7 A8 C5 D6 A1 D7 D8 D9 D10 P 2<br />

11.00 – 11.30 4 4 4 4 4 4 17 10 4 4 4 4 11 4 4 4 4<br />

11.30 – 12.00 5 5 5 5 5 5 18 11 5 5 5 5 12 5 5 5 5<br />

12.00 – 12.30 6 6 6 6 6 6 19 12 6 6 6 13 6 6 6 6<br />

Session A1 B1 D1 D2 D3 D4 A2 A3 A4 A5 C3 C4 A2 A6 A7 A8 C6 D6 M2<br />

P 3<br />

14.00 – 14.30 1 1 1 1 1 1 7 7 7 7 1 1 20 13 7 7 1 7<br />

14.30 – 15.00 2 2 2 2 2 2 8 8 8 8 2 2 21 8 8 2 8 TICCIH General<br />

14<br />

15.00 – 15.30 3 3 3 3 3 3 9 9 9 9 3 3 22 9 9 3 9 Assembly<br />

Coffee Break<br />

Session A1 B1 C1 C2 W1 D4 A2 A3 A4 A5 C3 D5 A2 M1 A7 B2 C6 W3 Farewell Events:<br />

16.00 – 16.30 4 4 1 1 1 4 10 10 10 10 4 1 23 10 10 1 4 Visit to the historic Silver Mines “Alte<br />

16.30 – 17.00 5 5 2 2 2 5 11 11 11 11 5 2 24 11 2 5 2 Elisabeth” and “Reiche Zeche”<br />

17.00 – 17.30 6 6 3 3 3 6 12 12 12 12 6 3 25 12 3 6 3<br />

17.30 – 18.00 7 7 4 4 4 7 13 13 13 13 7 4 26 13 4 7 4 Farewell Garden Party<br />

10 11<br />

ERIH<br />

Meeting<br />

PS = Plenary Session A = Internal Sessions B = TICCIH Special Sections C = External Sessions<br />

D = Free Paper Sessions W = Workshops P = Poster Session M = Meeting<br />

Please note: The Scientific Programme as detailed above is provisional and subject to change.


Overview of the Scientific Programme<br />

A Internal Sessions of the Programme Committee<br />

A1 Economical and Ecological Aspects of Industrial World Heritage Sites<br />

A2 Creative Re-Use: Industrial Heritage, Building Assessment, Real Estate and Brownfield<br />

Redevelopment<br />

A3 Conservation, Restoration and Management of Technical Heritage<br />

A4 Telling the whole Story: New Conceptual Approaches to the Understanding of Landscapes<br />

and Community Development<br />

A5 Power Stations: Technology and Society<br />

A6 Industrial Heritage Tourism<br />

A7 Art and the Industrial Revolution<br />

A8 Railways and Harbours: Economic and Ecological Problems<br />

B TICCIH Special Sections<br />

B1 Economy and Cultural Heritage? - The Relevance of Cultural Aspects in Mining Activities<br />

B2 Industrial Heritage in Polar Areas<br />

C External organized Sessions<br />

C1 Hydroelectricity Heritage<br />

C2 1/125 of a Second – Photography and the Industrial Heritage<br />

C3 In or out of the global Box? Industrial Heritage from different Perspectives<br />

C4 Economic Improvement and its Impact on Cultural Landscapes in the 18th and early<br />

19th Century – an Issue for Industrial Archaeology?<br />

C5 Sland Traps: United States Environmentalism and the Opportunities and Challenges for<br />

Industrial Heritage<br />

C6 Modern Methods of Data Capture and Knowledge Management for a fast and efficient<br />

Documentation of Industrial Heritage Objects<br />

D Free Paper Sessions<br />

D1 Management of Cultural and Environmental Areas<br />

D2 Large Scale Industrial Heritage Projects – Concepts and Problems<br />

D3 New methodological Aspects of Industrial Heritage Sites<br />

D4 Planning, Evaluating and Presenting Industrial Heritage Projects<br />

D5 Large Scale Heritage Projects – Mining<br />

D6 Conceptual and methodological Aspects of Evaluation and Redevelopment<br />

D7 Industrial Heritage and Identity<br />

D8 Industrial Heritage at Risk<br />

D9 Industrial Heritage Sites and their History<br />

D10 Industrial Heritage in Museums: Projects and New Approaches of Presentation<br />

W Workshops<br />

W1 DWhG – Workshop: Water History and Preservation of Technical Monuments<br />

W2 Training and Research within the Field of Industrial Heritage<br />

W3 The Industrial Districts of the post World War II Welfare State – Concepts and Approaches<br />

P Poster Sessions<br />

Scientific Programme<br />

Main Congress Topic:<br />

Industrial Heritage, Ecology and Economy<br />

Since its beginning, industrialization has changed urban and rural landscapes all over the<br />

world. The process of its birth, growth and decline is still visible today in the industrial monuments<br />

and landscapes built over centuries by industrial activities. While at the end of the 19th<br />

and in the early 20th centuries, the social impact of industrialization was still positively associated<br />

with “discovery” and “progress”, the ecological influences of global industrialization on<br />

landscape, and especially on environment, have only recently been realized in the late 20th<br />

century.<br />

Heritage-led regeneration concepts and strategies today understand that many of the buildings<br />

on which urban and industrial living had been built a century and more ago can afford<br />

opportunities in themselves when they are recognized as keys to reviving and maintaining the<br />

social fabric of communities. But the economic pressure of globalization and spare public<br />

finances ensure that demolition and the ‘cleaning up’ of sites are still the most common practices.<br />

A further problem is the contamination of industrial monuments and landscapes with<br />

toxic re-mains from former industrial activities.<br />

The congress topic ‘Industrial Heritage, Ecology and Economy’ aims to highlight these close<br />

connections of environmental, economical, technical, social and historical questions linked to<br />

industrial heritage in our modern world. The congress should be a forum for a broad discussion<br />

on these global challenges and on relevant projects and concepts of the past, present<br />

and future.<br />

The Congress is open to people from all professional fields interested in or dealing with ecological,<br />

economical and heritage questions related to industrial monuments and landscapes.<br />

How is the Congress organized?<br />

The congress is organized in three different types of presentations: Sessions, workshops and<br />

poster session.<br />

Internal sessions are organized by the Programme Committee and the TICCIH Special<br />

Sections. External sessions are focussing on a special topic. Free paper sessions are<br />

organized by the Programme Committee according to the topics of the offered papers. A<br />

workshop is a more discussion-orientated form of a session. New research results, industrial<br />

heritage projects, industrial archaeology or industrial heritage institutions and organizations,<br />

teaching courses or companies active in this field may be presented by posters in a special<br />

poster session.<br />

12 13


A Internal Sessions of the Programme Committee<br />

A1 Economical and Ecological Aspects of Industrial World Heritage Sites<br />

Organizer: Helmuth Albrecht (FRG)<br />

Since Ironbridge in Great Britain has been declared the very first industrial World Heritage Site<br />

in 1986, UNESCO included a wide range of other industrial monuments and sites around the<br />

world in its World Heritage list. They strongly differ in size, and focus on different types and time<br />

periods of industrialization (from Roman and mediaeval times up to modern industry).<br />

This session aims to bring together actors from different backgrounds involved in the management<br />

of industrial World Heritage Sites. We ask for papers presenting best practice examples<br />

in order to exchange experiences of various industrial World Heritage Sites and intensify<br />

discussion on: Economical concepts for the cleaning and re-use of industrial buildings; Depollution<br />

of industrial sites, environmental protection and preservation of nature; Contribution<br />

of the world heritage status to the region’s economic regeneration; Reconciliation between<br />

safety restrictions and the wish to assure public access to the sites; Typical conflicts of interests<br />

in the elaboration of a Management Plan for industrial sites; Heritage concepts for cultural<br />

landscapes and the protection of their social fabric.<br />

A 1-1: Stuart B. Smith (UK): TICCIH, ICOMOS and the World Heritage Sites.<br />

A 1-2: Meinrad Maria Grewenig (FRG): Industrial Heritage as a Cultural Platform of the<br />

21st Century: The World Heritage Site Völklinger Hütte<br />

A 1-3: Lorna Davidson (UK): Managing New Lanark as a sustainable Community<br />

A 1-4: Daniels Sven Olsson (Sweden): Meeting the Economical and Ecological Challenges<br />

for a Future Sustainability of the World Heritage Site of the Copper Mine of Falun<br />

and its Environment.<br />

A 1-5: Stephen Hughes (UK): The comparative Regeneration of the Blaenavon World Heritage<br />

Landscape and the proposed World Heritage Canal Corridor at Pontcysyllte.<br />

A 1-6: Maths Isacson (Sweden): Heritage as Risk – who will take care of closed mining<br />

Dams?<br />

A 1-7: Francisco Bustamante Chavez (Chile): Valparaiso from the Industrial to the Knowledge<br />

City.<br />

A 1-8: Andrea Riedel (FRG): Management of the World Heritage Site Rammelsberg in<br />

Germany.<br />

A 1-9: Masami Morita, Shinji Morita (Japan): The Effects of Tourism Promotion in the Industrial<br />

World Heritage Site: A Case Study of the Iwami Ginzan Silver Mine and its<br />

Cultural Landscape.<br />

A 1-10: Rajesh Agrawal (India): Multidisciplinary Management Model for Culture, Community<br />

and Countryside.<br />

A 1-11: Eric DeLony (USA): What is a World Heritage Bridge?<br />

Textile factory under modification<br />

A 1-12: Michael Falser (Austria): Industrial Landscapes and Nature Reserves – An impossible<br />

Marriage? Thoughts on the Austrian Iron Trail as UNESCO World Heritage.<br />

A 1-13: Jane Gradtke (FRG): The World Heritage Project of the Mining Landscape in Postindustrial<br />

Cities and Regions.<br />

A2 Creative Re-use: Industrial Heritage, Building Assessment, Real Estate and<br />

Brownfield Redevelopment<br />

Organizer: Alexander Kierdorf (FRG)<br />

“To adapt and re-use industrial buildings avoids wasting energy and contributes to sustainable<br />

development” (Charta of Nishnii Tagil, § 5.5). Growing public interest in heritage concerns<br />

and the people’s rising affection towards industrial heritage push forward new political<br />

and economical concepts for the preservation of industrial monuments. Conversion and redevelopment<br />

projects all over the world prove that the re-use of monuments - many of them industrial<br />

- can be very profitable on the commercial real estate market. So the re-use of historic<br />

buildings today is a serious and important field of architectural activity. From the “preservation<br />

perspective” though, many conversions “overdo” and cause unnecessary harm to the historic<br />

buildings. In order to open up a broad discussion on creative re-use, papers for this session<br />

should focus on: Traditions of re-use and adaptation; Conventional and surprising re-uses;<br />

Studies on the material value of monuments and economic impact of re-uses; Con flicts of<br />

interest between heritage qualities and function; The dangers of re-use and conver sion; Heritage<br />

management as part of a region’s sustainable economy.<br />

The session invites people from different backgrounds to present and discuss case studies<br />

and conceptual approaches to the assessment and preparation of buildings and complexes<br />

for further uses, the management of contaminated or otherwise restricted sites, and the<br />

inte gration of industrial monuments into programmes of sustainable regional tourism and<br />

redevelop ment schemes.<br />

A 2-1: Alexander Kierdorf (FRG): “The Old Factory” – Traditions, Patterns and Perspectives of<br />

Re-use.<br />

A 2-2: Mark Watson, Miles Oglethorpe (UK): Can the whole-life Carbon Cost of an old Industrial<br />

Building compensate for the Harm it has caused?<br />

A 2-3: Miia Perkkiö (Finland): The Re-use of Industrial Heritage and Functional Integrity.<br />

A 2-4: Emese Lilla Nehéz (Hungary): Cultural Re-use of Industrial Buildings in Hungary.<br />

A 2-5: Christina Valerdi Nochebuena et al. (Mexico): Post-occupational Evaluation of a restored<br />

Industrial Space: A contemporary Art and Design Gallery in Puebla, Mexico.<br />

A 2-6: Yiping Dong, Binchao Hou (China): Industrial Heritage and Creative Industrial Study on<br />

Shanghai Pattern of Industrial Heritage Conservation.<br />

14 15


Underground electrical power station at the former “Drei-Brüder”-Mine in Freiberg (built 1913)<br />

A 2-7: Alexander Marschall (FRG): Centralstation Darmstadt: From Ruins to Role Model – Generating<br />

Economic, Cultural and Social Effects of a Historic Monument.<br />

A 2-8: Vanda Maria Quecini (Brazil): Regeneration through Heritage: Reviving and Maintaining<br />

the Social Fabric of Urban and Rural Communities.<br />

A 2-9: Keith Falconer (UK): Sustainable aspects of Re-Use.<br />

A 2-10: Katja Roeckner (FRG): Beyond Smokestack Nostalgia: Industrial Museums between<br />

Industrial Past and Globalisation.<br />

A 2-11: Anja Borck (Canada): Canada and Germany: The Challenge of Reusing contemporary<br />

Industrial Heritage Architecture – A Comparison.<br />

A 2-12: Meisha Hunter (USA): Stewardship and Sustainability of Historic Waterworks Infrastructure<br />

in Rome and New York.<br />

A 2-13: Marie Nisser (Sweden): Regeneration in Industrial Cities – Rehabilitating vast Industrial<br />

City Spaces: Some Swedish Examples.<br />

A 2-14: Goran Arcabic (Croatia): Industrial Heritage in Croatia: State of Affairs, Management<br />

and Outlook.<br />

A 2-15: Olga Traganou-Deligianni (Greece): Big Scale Historic Industrial Sites in an Urban<br />

Context: Risks and alternative Re-use Approaches – The Case of Thessaloniki/Greece.<br />

A 2-16: Massimo Preite (Italy): From Demolition to Regeneration: The Re-use of the Steel-mill of<br />

Piombino (Tuscany) between Industrial Redevelopment and Heritage Management.<br />

A 2-17: Rasmus Radach, Christoph Winterling (FRG): How much Conservation does a Conservation<br />

Site need?<br />

A 2-18: Claus Stiens (FRG): Industrial Monuments as Real Estate. Problems and Challenges<br />

by the Re-use and Renting: A Report of the Foundation for the Preservation of Industrial<br />

Monuments.<br />

A 2-19: Angela Rösch Rodrigues et al. (Brazil): Industrial Heritage in Brazilian Cities: Requalification<br />

or Segregation in Urban Tissue? The Cases of São Paulo and Sorocaba.<br />

A 2-20: Eloisa Dezen-Kempter (Brazil): Industrial Landscapes: The Power of Reusing. Panorama<br />

of the Preservation and Re-use of Industrial Monuments and Industrial Sites in Brazil.<br />

A 2-21: Nivaldo Viera de Andrade Jr. (Brazil): The Re-use of Industrial Buildings and Sites:<br />

Concepts and Examples, Potentialities and Risks.<br />

A 2-22: Chiara Palumbo (Italy): Uses and Re-uses for Industrial Heritage: Brownfield Conversion<br />

Process in Italy.<br />

A 2-23: Kersten Sitte (Austria): Economically orientated Re-use of the Foundry Oberascher in<br />

Salzburg-Kasern.<br />

A 2-24: Rosella Ruggeri (Italy): A Consensus Building Process for the Future of the old Foundry<br />

A 2-25: Michael Bussell (UK): King’s Cross and St Pancras, London: The Industrial Heritage and<br />

the Regeneration of a large urban Area.<br />

A 2-26: Conclusive Discussion, Summary and Session Statement<br />

Weaving looms in the Saxon Museum of Industry, West-Saxon Textile Museum<br />

A3 Conservation, Restoration and Management of Technical Heritage<br />

Organizer: Norbert Tempel (FRG)<br />

This session undertakes an historical review and analyzes current perspectives of conservation,<br />

restoration and management methods for Technical Heritage. On the one hand, we want<br />

to focus discussion on what kind of strategies for a sustainable maintenance of Industrial<br />

Monu ments we need today. A second aspect is Big Scale Industrial Heritage. Big-sized<br />

technical equipment and industrial monuments (short term: “Big Stuff“) need special methods<br />

of manage ment and conservation, because conditions for their safeguarding are particularly<br />

problematic.<br />

Papers for this section report on the inspection, monitoring, maintenance and sustain able<br />

conservation of Technical Heritage and Big Scale Industrial Heritage.<br />

The session will be followed by a meeting of the international Big-Stuff-network in order to push<br />

forward the forthcoming third Big-Stuff conference which is to be held in 2010 in the UK.<br />

A 3-1: Petr Vorlík (Czech Republic): The Industrial Heritage Register as a Starting Point.<br />

A 3-2: Robert Turner (GB): The Benefits of Conservation Management Planning.<br />

A 3-3: James Douet (Spain): GIS Inventories: Mapping the Industrial Heritage of Barcelona.<br />

A 3-4: Stefan Brüggerhoff (FRG): Action Plan for Industrial Monuments – a best practice<br />

Guide to handle large Sites.<br />

A 3-5: Jens Daube (FRG): Maintenance Programmes – A Management Tool for the longterm<br />

Conservation of major Industrial Heritage Sites.<br />

A 3-6: Martin Gersiek (FRG): Deterioration or Restoration?<br />

A 3-7: Kornelius Götz (FRG): Let‘s Paint a Ruin! Corrosion Protection and Structural Safety of<br />

the Coal Storage Tower at World Heritage Site Völklinger Hütte Germany.<br />

A 3-8: Norbert Tempel: The Preservation of a Milestone of modern Industrial Architecture:<br />

the Zollern II/IV Colliery Engine House in Dortmund.<br />

A 3-9: Marita Pfeiffer (FRG): The Hansa coking Plant in Dortmund – Conservation Problems<br />

and Preservation Strategies.<br />

A 3-10: Kitt Boding-Jensen (Denmark): The virtual Carlsberg.<br />

A 3-11: Sibylle Beck, Ulrich Stahn (FRG): Semi-gantry Cranes 16 und 14 in Berlin West Harbor.<br />

A 3-12: Tino Zagermann (CH): The Crocodile on the Water Tower. The restoration of a<br />

Railway Water Tower in Halle.<br />

A 3-13: Summary and Open Discussion about the proposed “TICCIH Big Stuff Working<br />

Group”<br />

16 17


A4 Telling the whole Story: New Conceptual Approaches to the Understanding of<br />

Landscapes and Community Development<br />

Organizers: Marion Steiner, Karsten Feucht (FRG)<br />

Landscapes – as the German language suggests: Land-schaft (schaffen = create) – are the result<br />

of an ongoing creation process, influenced by both natural and human factors. They are also an<br />

expression of political choices taken over time in the social, economic and environmental fields.<br />

To understand landscapes properly, we have to ask: Who ‘scaped‘ the land? why? and what<br />

was the context in which that ‚scaping‘ process took place? Heritage is an interpretation by past<br />

and present generations on what part of history should be handed on to the next. What we<br />

preserve is a selection, depending on values that change through time, place and culture. It is a<br />

‚story‘ we tell, while others remain untold. Heritage work, therefore, should be a public interpretation<br />

process, (re-)defining the public value of tangible and intangible heritage and highlighting<br />

the active role of communities in the creation, interpretation and valuation processes of their surrounding<br />

landscapes.<br />

The session aims to become a permanent platform to exchange international experiences related<br />

to new approaches of landscape understanding. By bringing together people from different<br />

professions presenting their respective work and projects, during the session on Wednesday we<br />

want to start a controversial debate on new conceptual approaches to a global understanding<br />

of landscapes and on the role heritage work can and should play in tomorrow‘s regional development<br />

strategies in order to contribute to the local community‘s sustainable development.<br />

On Thursday, we invite people from this session on a joint field trip to Welzow. This open cast<br />

mining community currently experiences a dramatic landscape transformation. We would like to<br />

deepen the discussion engaged during the session day on-site and focus on public interpretation<br />

processes of industrial landscapes and the role tourism on active sites can play to raise awareness<br />

for the concerns of an industrial culture. People who submitted a paper proposal for this<br />

session will be contacted directly by e-mail by Marion and Karsten in order to confirm their participation<br />

in the field trip<br />

A 4-1: Marion Steiner/Karsten Feucht (FRG): How Perception constructs Landscape.<br />

A 4-2: Lukas Beran (Czech Republic): The Search for Context.<br />

A 4-3: Anna Storm (Sweden): Industrial Nature.<br />

A 4-4: Marie Patou (France): The Nord-Pas de Calais Coalfield: A global Industrial Landscape<br />

and its Community, France.<br />

A 4-5: Maria Schöne (Chile): Nitrate Offices – Cultural and Social Oasis in the Atacama<br />

Desert.<br />

A 4-6: Janis Dofner (USA): Tourism and the Creation of sustainable Funding for Cultural and<br />

Heritage Resources in Rivers of Steel National Heritage Area, Pennsylvania.<br />

Brick built railway-bridge across the Göltz-Valley (built 1845/51)<br />

A 4-7: Rowan Julie Brown (UK): Nature’s Fuel: Telling the Story of Scotland’s Energy Production.<br />

A 4-8: Charles Fairbank (Canada): Though Dynasties pass: Preserving the oldest commercial Oil<br />

Field in the World – Oil Springs, Canada.<br />

A 4-9: Hsiao-Wei Lin, Bo-Chi Cheng (Taiwan): The Transformation of Chi-Ku Salt Pans in Taiwan<br />

and the Surrounding Landscape.<br />

A 4-10: Anita Anteniske (Latvia): Waterfront Heritage: Industrial and Social Landscapes of Latvian<br />

Coastline in Process of Transition.<br />

A 4-11: Olaf Kühne, Axel Böcker (FRG): Industrial Heritage and Post-industrial Landscape: New<br />

Approaches to urban and regional Planning in dealing with the Historical Industrial Landscape<br />

in the Saar-Lor-Lux Area and its large scale Industrial Heritage Sites.<br />

A 4-12: Markus Schwarzer (FRG): Significance of the Post-mining Landscape in Eastern<br />

Germany – Cultural Analysis of Concepts of Nature Conservation, Recreation, and<br />

the Preservation of Industrial Monuments.<br />

A 4-13: Lars Scharnholz, Markus Otto (FRG): Industrial Sites in the Lausitz Laboratory.<br />

A 4-14: Carolina Rainero (Argentina): Industrial Landmarks in the Rosario Metropolitan Area.<br />

Conservation Management Plan of Gorton Complex<br />

The following paper will be presented at the field trip:<br />

Detlev Dähnert (FRG): Industriepark Schwarze Pumpe – Historical review and future<br />

perspectives.<br />

A5 Power Stations: Technology and Society<br />

Organizer: Friedhelm Henseler (FRG)<br />

Electrical power is the foundation of energy for our global society’s economy. Since the beginning<br />

of the industrial age, power stations have been built to generate energy. Technological<br />

proceedings changed through time; and the plants became largescale. Since the 1960s,<br />

industrial enterprises strive to take into account ecological aspects in the processing of technologies.<br />

Fossil fuels, nuclear energy and renewable energies follow different economic and<br />

ecological logics. The decision about which power generating technology is engineered,<br />

put up and publicly supported is mainly a political one. As such, it depends on values and<br />

ideologies that predominate a society during a specific time period. Power plants of all types<br />

can therefore be interpreted as an expression and monument representing a political culture<br />

of a society that changes through time.<br />

This session aims to discuss power stations in the cultural context of energy and environmental<br />

policies and asks for papers on the technology of power stations and their building<br />

structure, on environmental movements and technologies and on the history of ideas<br />

related to energy policies.<br />

18 19


A 5-1: Elke Mittmann (FRG): Architecture and Electricity – Power Stations between 1885<br />

and 1945. Industrial Construction as an Expression of Culture and Politics.<br />

A 5-2: Hans Achim Grube (FRG): Renaissance of Power Stations.<br />

A 5-3: Jörg Haspel (FRG): Elektropolis. True Heritage of Electrical Energy Supply and Electrical<br />

Industries in Berlin.<br />

A 5-4: Miles Oglethorpe (UK): The Power of Scotland: From Illumination to Enlightenment?<br />

A 5-5: Wolfgang Ebert (FRG): SantralIstanbul – A new Way of Interpretation of the Industrial<br />

Heritage?<br />

A 5-6: František Hrdlička et al. (Czech Republic): Czech Republic: Power Engineering –<br />

how it all started and how it has developed.<br />

A 5-7: Yasumasa Terazawa (Japan): Miyashiro Power Station at the Foot of the Japan Alps.<br />

A 5-8: Gerhard A. Stadler (Austria): Water Power Plants in Austria: Architecture – Building<br />

Types – History.<br />

A 5-9: Anna Ghiberti (Italy): The Water and Energy – Studies and Itineraries on Ecomuseo<br />

del Freidano. Fondazione ECM – Settimo<br />

A 5-10: Anja Nixdorf-Munkwitz (FRG): From Energy Economy to Culture Economy.<br />

A 5-11: Magdalena Tafvelin Heldner, Eva Dahlström-Rittsél (Sweden): Nuclear Plants as<br />

Industrial Heritage.<br />

A 5-12: Frederik Krohn Andersson (Sweden): The Poetics of Nuclear Power – The Nuclear<br />

Power Station conceptualized as Building, Landscape, and Conservation of Cultural<br />

Heritage.<br />

A 5-13: Friedhelm Henseler (FRG): Criteria for Listing and Damage-prevention: Measures for<br />

the Protection of Historical Monuments.<br />

A6 Industrial Heritage Tourism<br />

Organizer: Wolfgang Ebert (FRG)<br />

Industrial Heritage Tourism (IHT) is an international trend: at least in Europe, a lot of projects<br />

have achieved public interest and are working successfully. The time is ripe to discuss this matter<br />

within TICClH more intensively and on a broader inter-national level. In order to be most<br />

efficient, this session calls for papers focusing on the important aspects such as: Experiences<br />

with existing IHT networks and an outlook on the planning of new ones; The perspective<br />

of scientific research on IHT and the role and the knowledge of scientific institutions; Best -<br />

practice examples of sites dealing with IHT and what we can learn from them; Best-practice<br />

examples in the field of marketing linked to the interpretation on site; Marketing, the special<br />

perspective of tourist agencies and their role in site marketing; The contribution of network<br />

marketing between IHT-sites to a more successful marketing and a global interpretation of<br />

industrial landscapes; The role of the local communities and how to involve them more; New<br />

technologies for guiding and interpretation and their impact on the future of IHT.<br />

The session starts with a key note by the chairman Prof. Dr. Wolfgang Ebert and ends with<br />

a discussion on future activities of the new TICClH Industrial Heritage Tourism-section: How<br />

can TICClH intensify discussion on IHT and what projects could be organized together? The<br />

session is followed by the 2009 Annual Assembly of the ERIH-network (European Route of<br />

Industrial Heritage).<br />

A 6-1: Wolfgang Ebert (FRG): Industrial Heritage Tourism – what did we achieve, where do<br />

we go?<br />

A 6-2: Christiane Baum (FRG): ERIH –European Route of Industrial Heritage.<br />

A 6-3: Sharon Ann Holt (USA): Industrial Heritage and Community Involvement.<br />

A 6-4: Karolina Agata Hettchen (Poland): Network Industrial Heritage: The Analysis of the Advantageousness<br />

of the Regional and International Cooperation, based on the Museum of<br />

Industry and Technology in Walbrzych in Poland.<br />

A 6-5: Belem Oviedo Gámez, Marco A. Hernández Bardillo (Mexico): The Silver Route on the<br />

Old Mining District of Real del Monte and Pachuca.<br />

A 6-6: Polyxeni Moira et al. (Greece): Industrial Heritage as a Parameter in Consolidating the<br />

Prefecture of Magnesia in Greece as a Tourist Destination.<br />

A 6-7: Pei-Chun Kuo (Taiwan): The Transformation of an Industrial Heritage Site and its concurrent<br />

Tourism Development.<br />

A 6-8: Alfonso Vargas-Sánchez (Spain): Mining Heritage, Tourism Development and local Community<br />

Perceptions: The Case of Riotinto Mines<br />

A 6-9: Sue Jackson Stepowski (Australia): The “Hill” that refused to break – Renaissance of Industrial<br />

Cultural Tourism in a globalized mining Town of Broken Hill, Australia.<br />

A 6-10: Francesco Calzolaio (Italy/USA): Cathedrals of the Sea: On the Trail of the Industrial<br />

Archaeological Cathedrals along the internal Seas Coast.<br />

A 6-11: Michael Wilson (USA): Hagley-Programs and Marketing at a Gunpowder Museum.<br />

A 6-12: N.N.<br />

A 6-13: N.N.<br />

A 6-14: Wolfgang Ebert (FRG): Do we need a TICCIH tourist section, how could it be organized<br />

and what kind of visions should it follow? Open discussion about the proposed TICCIH<br />

IHT section<br />

20 21


A7 Art and the Industrial Revolution<br />

Organizer: Axel Föhl (FRG)<br />

Since its beginnings, art and architecture reacted in a very creative and imaginative way to<br />

Industrialization. TICClH has not paid sufficient attention to that phenomenon. The section<br />

“Art and the Industrial Revolution - The iconography of Industry” asks for contributions that<br />

research the vast cosmos of art, graphic and applied art as well as architecture in regards to<br />

the representation of technological and industrial processes and developments in paintings,<br />

books, journals, printed matter and the inside and outside of buildings from railway stations to<br />

cathedrals, from factories to town halls.<br />

A 7-1: Axel Föhl (FRG): A Diamond as big as the Ritz: Art as an unearthed Treasure of<br />

Industrial History.<br />

A 7-2: Hanne Abildgaard (Denmark): Pictures of Industry and Industrial Work.<br />

A 7-3: Franziska Bollerey (NL): The Reception of the Industrial World in Film, Fine Art and<br />

Literature.<br />

A 7-4: Anne Thomas-Cumming (UK): After-Images: Public Art and the Heritage of Industrial<br />

Communities.<br />

A 7-5: Katrin Holthaus (FRG): Art Glasswork as Reference for Technology in Bourgeois<br />

Milieu.<br />

A 7-6: Dagmar Kift (FRG): The Language of Architecture or How to read Bricks.<br />

A 7-7: Seija Linnanmäki (Finland): Mechanical and Electrical Systems in Historic Buildings –<br />

Artefacts and Architecture.<br />

A 7-8: Renata Skrebska (Czech Republic): Motifs of Work and Social Conditions in Sculpture<br />

and Reliefs in the Czech Republic.<br />

A 7-9: Marie Nisser (Sweden): The World of Mining and Ironmaking: The Iconography of<br />

early Swedish Industry.<br />

A 7-10: Lenka Popelova (Czech Republic): Artistically elaborated Details of Industrial and<br />

Institutional Architecture.<br />

A 7-11: Aida Stelbiene (Lithuania): Ugliness as Aesthetic Quality of Industrial Milieu.<br />

A 7-12: Louise Trottier (Canada): “Are Trees and Scrubs paintable?” The Representation of<br />

the Forest Industry in Canadian Art.<br />

Hartmann Steam Locomotive (The Chemnitz Museum of Industry)<br />

A8 Railways and Harbours: Economic and Ecological Problems<br />

Organizer: Rolf Höhmann (FRG)<br />

Both railways and harbours see dramatic changes in ownership, organization, administration,<br />

techniques and use. In cities and regions around the world, large areas of the urban fabric<br />

become redundant and create ecological and economic problems. New redevelopment<br />

strategies and revitalization policies try to deal with these special challenges. Many buildings<br />

and structures have already been or will soon be adapted for re-use. Papers in this session<br />

should focus on projects and conservation efforts that proved to or are likely to be economically<br />

successful in the long-term.<br />

A 8-1: Marcela Pizzi, Maria Paz Valenzuela (Chile): Revitalization of the Industrial Harbour<br />

of the Port of Valparaiso: Tensions and Bicentennial Celebration in a World Heritage<br />

Site.<br />

A 8-2: Felipe Alexandre Magalhaes Ozores, Vanda Maria Quecini (Brazil): The Harbour<br />

of Santos: A Future for its Past.<br />

A 8-3: Marco Henrique Zambello (Brazil). The Brazilian Railway Cities: Abandonment and<br />

Potentiality.<br />

A 8-4: Ronaldo André Rodrigues da Silva (Brazil): Roundhouse: Symbol of Cultural and<br />

Railway Landscape.<br />

A 8-5: Dimitra Babalis (Italy): Conception of Creative Urban Transformation through Heritage:<br />

Masterplanning for the former Leopolda Railway Area in Florence.<br />

A 8-6: Roland Tusch (Austria): A Railway through the Alps as a Starting Point for a new<br />

Regional Identity.<br />

A 8-7: Kilian T. Elasser (Switzerland): St. Gotthard Railway Line and its Transport Route<br />

Predecessors – Feasibility Study UNESCO World Heritage Site<br />

A 8-8: Ichiro Tsutsumi et al. (Japan): A Short History of Railway Heritage Designation System<br />

in Japan and a new designated Heritage of O-Series Shinkansen Electric Multiple<br />

Units by West Japan Railway Co. in 2008.<br />

A 8-9: Eduardo Romero de Oliveira (Brazil): Railroad Patrimony of São Paulo State: Conditions<br />

of Preservation and Use of Cultural and Environmental Goods.<br />

22 23


B TICCIH Special Sections<br />

B1 Economy and Cultural Heritage? - The Relevance of Cultural Aspects in Mining<br />

Activities<br />

Organizer: Stefan Brüggerhoff (FRG)<br />

B 1-1: Stefan Brüggerhoff (FRG): Introduction: Economy and Cultural Heritage? The Relevance<br />

of Cultural Aspects in Mining Activities/Business.<br />

B 1-2: Felipe Ravinet de la Fuente (Chile): Sewell, the “City of Staircases“: The Settlement of<br />

the El Teniente/Chile Copper Mine – a Chilean National Monument supported by<br />

CODELCO.<br />

B 1-3: Member of RAG Immobilien (FRG): Development of the coke making Plant Zollverein<br />

(Essen/Germany) – between Brownfield Conversion and World Heritage Aims.<br />

B 1-4: Member of the Centre Historique (France): Centre Historique Minier (Lewarde/<br />

France) – does a Museum help to deal with the structural Change?<br />

B 1-5: Member of the tourism agency of the town La Union (Spain): Mining Remains as a<br />

Tourist Attraction – the Example of La Union (Murcia/Spain).<br />

B 1-6: Belem Oviedo Gámez et al. (Mexico): Project of the Restoration and Use of “La<br />

Dificultad” Mine. The Creation of a Site Museum and Interpretation Center for the<br />

Mining Districts of Real del Monte and Pachuca.<br />

B 1-7: Meinrad Pohl (FRG): “Dark Age”-Industries: Problems in Presenting an Industrial Area<br />

with a continuity of 7000 Years.<br />

B2 Industrial Heritage in Polar Areas<br />

Organizer: Dag Avango (Sweden)<br />

B2-1: Dag Avango (Sweden): Industrial Heritage and Geo-politics in the Polar Areas<br />

B2-2: Seth DePasqual (USA): Shared Heritage at 78˚ North: Americans, Norwegians and<br />

Mining on Svalbard Island.<br />

B2-3: N.N.<br />

B2-4: N.N.<br />

C External organized Sessions<br />

C1 Hydroelectricity Heritage<br />

Organizer: Elisabeth Bjørsvik (Norway)<br />

C 1-1: Helena Nynäs (Norway): The Evaluation of Hydropower Sites in Norway.<br />

C 1-2: Rolf Manne (Norway): Success and Failure. On the History of the Norwegian Electrochemical<br />

Industry<br />

C 1-3: Yngve Nilsen (Norway): The Legacy of the Norwegian Landscape Architect Knut<br />

Ove Hillestad.<br />

C 1-4: Elisabeth Bjørsvik (Norway): The Forgotten Industry? Sites of the early nitrogen fixation<br />

Industry<br />

C2 1/125 of a Second – Photography and the Industrial Heritage<br />

Organizer: Jan af Geijerstam (Sweden)<br />

C 2-1: Howard Bossen (USA): Steel: Hot Metal, Cold Reality.<br />

C 2-2: Ian Beesley (UK): Documentation, Participation and Ownership.<br />

C 2-3: David Lewis (Canada): The Industrial Landscape of Memory: the Infinite Image.<br />

C 2-4: Jan af Geijerstam (Sweden): Industry and Environment – Images as Reflections of<br />

Change.<br />

C3 In or out of the global Box? Industrial Heritage from different Perspectives<br />

Organizer: Györgyi Németh (Hungary)<br />

C 3-1: Moulshri Joshi (India): Industry, Ecology, Community: Preserving the Remains of the<br />

Bhopal Gas Tragedy.<br />

C 3-2: Linda Norris (USA): Memories and Environment: the Chernobyl Exclusion Zone.<br />

C 3-3: Veronika Gyuricza (Belgium): How the Re-definition of Environment would help Industrial<br />

Heritage (on a global Scale).<br />

C 3-4: Erik Nyhof (Netherlands): Industrial Heritage and Regional Identity in an Age of<br />

Globalisation: the Netherlands, 1870-2008.<br />

C 3-5: Anica Tufegdzic (Serbia): Perception of Industrial Heritage Values and Potentials in<br />

the Process of Ownership Transformations: Case Study – Sugar Factories and Breweries<br />

in Vojvodina.<br />

C 3-6: Györgyi Németh (Hungary): Local and global Aspects in the Study and Preservation<br />

of the Industrial Heritage.<br />

C 3-7: Conclusive discussion, summary and session statement<br />

24 25


C4 Economic Improvement and its Impact on Cultural Landscapes in the 18 th and<br />

early 19 th Century – an Issue for Industrial Archaeology?<br />

Organizer: Marcus Popplow (FRG)<br />

C 4-1: Daniel Salzmann (Switzerland): The Landscape Heritage of Agrarian Modernization<br />

in the Swiss Canton of Berne<br />

C 4-2: Tim S. Müller (FRG): The Exploration of Natural Resources on a large Manor in<br />

Lusatia around 1800<br />

C 4-3: Marcus Popplow (FRG): Traces of 18th-century Improvement Schemes in today’s<br />

Palatine Region<br />

C5 Sland Traps: United States Environmentalism and the Opportunities and Challenges<br />

for Industrial Heritage<br />

Organizer: Bode Morin (USA)<br />

C 5-1: Patrick Malone (USA): The River and the City: Interpreting Environmental History in<br />

Lowell, Massachusetts.<br />

C 5-2: Bode Morin (USA): Reflection, Refraction and Rejection: Copper Smelter Heritage<br />

and Environmental Policy.<br />

C 5-3: Gregory Anderson (USA): Preserving Ecological and Industrial Landscapes in Pennsylvania’s<br />

Anthracite Region.<br />

C 5-4: Fred Quivik (USA): A Case for the Preservation of Industrial Waste from the Historic<br />

Copper Industry of Southwest Montana.<br />

C 5-5: Paul White (USA): Archaeological Perspectives on the Split Environment.<br />

C6 Modern Methods of Data Capture and Knowledge Management for a fast and<br />

efficient Documentation of Industrial Heritage Objects<br />

Organizer: Frank Boochs (FRG)<br />

C 6-1: A. Karmacharya (FRG): ArcheaoKM: Managing Data through knowledge in Industrial<br />

Archaeological Sites.<br />

C 6-2: A. Karmacharya (FRG): Enriching and Populating Knowledge base through Spatial<br />

Operations in ArchaeoKM<br />

C 6-3: K. Schilling(FRG): Complementary Fusion of Images and Scans – Benefit for Archaeological<br />

Interpretation<br />

C 6-4: F. Boochs, H.-J. Przybilla (FRG): RiO: Development of Methods for Data Collection,<br />

Data Analysis and Knowledge Generation of Industrial Objects<br />

C 6-5: Chr. Cruz (FRG): Formal Ontology for Knowledge Management in Archaeology<br />

C 6-6: Elke Schneider/Bianca Khil (FRG): Possibilities of Documentation and Analysis using<br />

the Example of the former “Kruppsche Gussstahlfabrik” in Essen<br />

C 6-7: Antje Grünkemeier (FRG): Contactless 3D-Measurement Technologies for Use in<br />

Industrial Archaeological Applications.<br />

D Free Paper Session<br />

D1 Management of Cultural and Environmental Areas<br />

D 1-1: Scott F. See (USA): Celebrating Iron: Heritage Management on the Iron Ranges of<br />

Lake Superior.<br />

D 1-2: Francesco Calzolaio (Italy/USA): Le reti del Parco: The Geo-mining Sardinian Park<br />

Networking.<br />

D 1-3: Charalampos Papageorgiou (Greece): European Geoparks and Industrial Heritage.<br />

D2 Large Scale Industrial Heritage Projects – Concepts and Problems<br />

D 2-1: Sarah Jane Brazil (Australia): Bringing the Past forward (Sustainable Rail Heritage<br />

Strategy for New South Wales)<br />

D 2-2: Fabio Jose Martins de Lima et al. (Brazil): Urbanism in Minas Gerais, Brazil: For the<br />

Memory of Rede Ferroviária Federal S.A. – RFFSA.<br />

D 2-3: Mike Clarke (UK): Conservation Conflicts on the Leeds & Liverpool Canal.<br />

D3 New methodological Aspects of Industrial Heritage Sites<br />

D 3-1: Masaaki Okada (Japan): History of Evaluation for Landscape of Historic Tower Structures.<br />

D 3-2: Mark Watson (UK): Horizontal Mills: Can the Technology available to Communities in<br />

different Locations offer them a shared Message?<br />

D 3-3: Zulaiga Worth (South Africa): The Relationship between the Harvesting and Use of<br />

natural Products from South Africa: The Case of ‘Buchu’<br />

D4 Planning, Evaluating and Presenting Industrial Heritage Projects<br />

D 4-1: Cristina Meneguello (Brazil): Ruins of the Future – A Research on the Industrial Heritage<br />

of São Paulo Hinterlands, Brazil.<br />

D 4-2: David Worth (South Africa): The Heritage of the Agriculture and Food Industries in the<br />

Western Cape, South Africa<br />

D 4-3: Krisprantono (Indonesia): Strategy and Action Plan of Java Sugar Mill Heritage<br />

D 4-4: Martin Straßburger (FRG): Recording and Presenting more than 1000 years of Copper<br />

Ore Mining and Smelting in Marsberg.<br />

D 4-5: Inara Karklina (Latvia): Ligatne Cultural-Historical Heritage Trail<br />

D 4-6: Luca Giordano (Italy): The Valley of Chiarito: Walking around Eco-solutions<br />

D 4-7: Dimopoulou Vassiliki (Greece): Old Water Mills in Lesvos Island<br />

D5 Large Scale Heritage Projects – Mining<br />

D 5-1: Leda Papastefanaki, Nikos Belavilas (Greece): Mines at the Aegean Sea: Exploring<br />

the Industrial Past of the Greek Islands.<br />

D 5-2: Michel Deshaies (France): Remediation of mining and Industrial Heritage and crossborder<br />

Development in the Saar-Lorraine coal basin.<br />

26 27


D 5-3: Rosario Villalobos Velázquez (Mexico): A Proposal to preserve Industrial Heritage at<br />

Risk: The Case of Ore Processing Plants from Real del Monte and Pachuca Mining<br />

District.<br />

D 5-4: Theodore Prigopoulos (Greece): A Monument of Mining Industrial Heritage of<br />

North Greece – in Search of its International Meaning: The Mining Complex of<br />

Kirki.<br />

D6 Conceptual and methodological Aspects of Evaluation and Redevelopment<br />

D 6-1: Mette Slyngborg (Denmark): The Cultural Heritage of Industrial Society – the Selection<br />

of preservation-worthy Industrial Sites in Ribe County based on the Danish CHIPmethod.<br />

D 6-2: Ana Pereira Roders, Irene Curulli (Netherlands): Philips’ Electronics Industrial Heritage:<br />

Monitoring and Evaluating their Rehabilitation.<br />

D 6-3: Svava Riesto (Denmark): Interpretations of the Industrial Parts in urban Transformation<br />

Projects: The Carlsberg Breweries’ Redevelopment in Copenhagen.<br />

D 6-4: Anna Adamek (Canada): Industrial Woodland: The Canadian Forest as Symbiosis<br />

of Ecology, Industrial Heritage and Cultural Perceptions.<br />

D 6-5: Peter Wirth, Gerd Lintz (FRG): The Actors of Regeneration – Good Practice Examples<br />

from small Towns.<br />

D 6-6: Sveinung Krokann Berg (Norway): Industrial Heritage in the Post-industrial City.<br />

D 6-7: Kees Geevers (Netherlands): Zlín, Cradle of the Bat’a Shoe Factories.<br />

D 6-8: Georgia Zacharopoulou (Greece): Sustainable Lime Heritage: Seeking out combined<br />

Conservation Strategies.<br />

D 6-9: Iain Stuart (Australia): The Zinc Corporation and the “Greening of Broken Hill”.<br />

D7 Industrial Heritage and Identity<br />

D 7-1: Claudia Reck (FRG): Monuments of the Iron and Steel Industry as Part of a regional<br />

Identity in Lorraine.<br />

D 7-2: Humberto Morales Moreno (Mexico): Industrial Heritage and Regional Identity. The<br />

Case of the early Family Firms in México: 1830-1910.<br />

D 7-3: Erika Aleixo (Brazil): Identities and Industrial Heritage (Industrial period: Formation of<br />

Cities Identities).<br />

D 7-4: Anders Houltz (Sweden): Motown Europe? Large-scale Automobile Enterprises in<br />

local and national Identity Building – Gothenburg and Turin (Car-manufacturingculture).<br />

D 7-5: Ronaldo André Rodrigues da Silva (Brazil): Cultural Identity: the Key of Industrial<br />

Heritage Preservation.<br />

D 7-6: Bernardo Brasil Bielschowsky (Brazil): Industrial Heritage and Urban Memory of<br />

Blumenau/SC – Brazil.<br />

D8 Industrial Heritage at Risk<br />

D 8-1: Chris Andreae (Canada): Industrial Heritage in the Land Use Planning Process.<br />

D 8-2: Alina Pancewicz (Poland): Preservation of Nature Landscape in Postindustrial Cities<br />

and Regions. Example of Upper Silesian Agglomeration.<br />

D 8-3: Evdokia Olympitou, Nikos Benors-Palmer (Greece): The Light Houses of the Ionian<br />

Islands.<br />

D 8-4: Antonio David Fiore (Italy): The Opera Theatre of Rome Light Regulator.<br />

D 8-5: Helen Beneki, Maria Tsipoura (Greece): From International Trade to Regional Industry:<br />

The Embiricos Mill in Andros, Greece.<br />

D 8-6: Julio Cesar Ribeiro Sampaio (Brazil): Requiem for Fabrica Dos Ingleses in Juiz de<br />

Fora.<br />

D9 Industrial Heritage Sites and their History<br />

D 9-1: Timothy Hubbard (Australia): The Industrial Heritage of a Woolshed.<br />

D 9-2: Burak Asiliskender (Turkey): Kayseri Airplane and Motors Factory, 1926.<br />

D 9-3: Wieland Ramm (FRG): History and Construction of the Old Vistula Bridge in Tczew –<br />

a unique Monument of early Iron Bridge Building in Europe.<br />

D 9-4: Silvia Guideri, Elisa Carli (Italy): The Etruscan Copper Estates Limited: the Company,<br />

the Mine and the Village in the San Silvestro Archaeological Mines Park (Campiglia<br />

Marittima – LI).<br />

D 9-5: Hiroshi Awano (Japan): History of Routes over Mountain Ranges in Japan in the Postmedieval<br />

Centuries: A Story and the Heritage.<br />

D 9-6: Panagiotis Paraskevaidis (Greece): The Industrial Area of Mytilene.<br />

D10 Industrial Heritage in Museums: Projects and New Approaches of Presentation<br />

D 10-1: Michal Pszczolkowski (Poland): The Conversion of a former Explosives Factory into a<br />

Museum of War Technique<br />

D 10-2: Rosaria De Fazio (Italy): The Museum of Post and Communication of Rome<br />

D 10-3: Glenn Murray (Spain): Old Minting Houses: Site Locating and Cataloguing for a<br />

centralized Theme Exposition at the Segovia Mint Museum<br />

D 10-4: Mikkel Thelle (Denmark): Multiplicity as Strategy: A Danish Museum of Industrial<br />

Culture<br />

D 10-5: Lars K. Christensen (Denmark): Bringing the People back in: Recreating Industrial<br />

Heritage by Combining Exhibition and interactive Movies<br />

D 10-6: Amy B. Baldonieri, Judy Linsz Ross (USA): Born of Fire: Promoting the Art, Music and<br />

History of America’s Greatest Steel City<br />

28 29


W Workshops<br />

W1 DWhG - Workshop: Water History and Preservation of Technical Monuments<br />

Organizer: Norman Pohl (FRG)<br />

W 1-1: Manuela Armenat (FRG): The Declaration of Weimar of the German Water Historical<br />

Association.<br />

W 1-2: Kai Wellbrock (FRG): Proof of a very early Pound-Lock on the Northern German<br />

Stecknitz-Canal for the late 14th Century by means of a dynamic Flow Simulation<br />

Model.<br />

W 1-3: Oliver Gunkel, Stephan Reher, Markus Henn (FRG): Restoration of Iranian Historical<br />

Water Supply Systems in Use<br />

W 1-4: Henriette John (with support by Jens Kugler) (FRG): The Water System “Revierwasserlaufanstalt<br />

Freiberg” – A Historic Monument with extreme Importance for the<br />

Preservation of Nature.<br />

W2 Training and Research within the Field of Industrial Heritage<br />

Organizer: Marie Nisser (Sweden)<br />

W 2-1: Introduction<br />

W 2-2: Current Masters’ Programs in work or planned.<br />

W 2-3: Special Courses and E-learning.<br />

W 2-4: The Role of TICCIH in the Field of Training<br />

W 2-5: Tuija Mikkonen (Finland): eLearning as one Method in Industrial Heritage Education<br />

W 2-6: Spyridoula Arathymou (Greece): The social and educational Role of the Historical<br />

Industrial Archives<br />

W3 The Industrial Districts of the post World War II Welfare State – Concepts and<br />

Approaches<br />

Organizers: Caspar Jorgensen, Morten Pedersen (Denmark)<br />

W 3-1: Marilyn Palmer (UK): Moderator and Speaker<br />

W 3-2: Caspar Jorgensen (Denmark)<br />

W 3-3: Mette Ladegaard Thogersen (Denmark)<br />

W 3-4: Morten Pedersen (Denmark)<br />

P Poster Sessions<br />

P 1-1: Denise Geribello (Brazil): Industrial Heritage Tourism versus Local Communities.<br />

P 1-2: Lucas Del Biono, Béranger Theisen (France): The Industrial and Mining Inheritances<br />

at the Heart of Economic Development in the Southern Region of Luxembourg.<br />

P 1-3: Vladislava Valchárová (Czech Republic): Project: Textile Routes through the Northern<br />

Borderlands of the Czech Republic and their Connection to the ERIH Routes.<br />

P 1-4: Kunio Wakamura (Japan): Comparison of Historical Dry Docks built with Soil Bricks<br />

in Japan, Germany and the Netherlands.<br />

P 1-5: Patricia Freitas (Brazil): The Industry Iconography of São Paulo, Brazil (XIX and XX<br />

centuries).<br />

P 1-6: Vincent Courtilat (France): The Valorization of the Industrial Heritage of the Aubois<br />

Valley: A Project of Sustainable Development in a French Rural Area.<br />

P 2-1: Miriam R. McDonald (UK): Work of the Royal Commission on the Ancient & Historical<br />

Monuments of Scotland.<br />

P 2-2: Michela Biancardi, Alessandro Tricoli (Italy): Sulphur Mines from the Past to the<br />

Future: The Case of Formignano Mining Site (Romagna/Italy).<br />

P 2-3: Cristina Iancu, Merciu George (Romania): Industrial Tourism – An Opportunity for the<br />

Economic Development of the Petrosani Depression. Case Study: Aninoasa Mine.<br />

P 2-4: Michael Wilson, Terry Snyder (USA): Industrial Heritage Research at Hagley Library<br />

in Wilmington, Delaware/USA.<br />

P 2-5: Giulia Piscitelli (Italy): An Architectural Contest for the Future of the old Foundry.<br />

P 2-6: Rosella Maspoli (Italy): Knowledge, Inventory, Analysis and Dissemination for the<br />

Re-use of Industrial Heritage.<br />

P 3-1: Ian McGillivray (Canada): Niagara Falls generating Stations<br />

P 3-2: Horst Stopp, Peter Strangfeld (FRG): Wooden Beam Ends – Measurements and<br />

numerical Simulation of their hygrothermic Performance in inside insulated outside<br />

Walls.<br />

P 3-3: Henriette John, Britta Miekley (FRG): An interdisciplinary Approach for a Reconstruction<br />

of the historical Management and Vegetation History of the Mining Pond<br />

“Berthelsdorfer Hüttenteich” (Freiberg Mining Region)<br />

P 3-4: Anja Nixdorf-Munkwitz (FRG): Industrial Monument Power Plant Hirschfelde: From<br />

Energy Economy to Culture Economy<br />

P 3-5: Alaba Simpson (Nigeria): The Artist in Cultural Heritage Economy in Relation to the<br />

Landscape in Lagos, Nigeria: A contemporary Appraisal<br />

P 3-6: Funsho Simon (Nigeria): New Conceptual Approaches to the Understanding of<br />

Landscape and Community Development: A Case Study<br />

During the poster sessions the participants of the congress will have the opportunity to discuss<br />

the posters with their authors.<br />

30 31


Congress Excursions and Tours<br />

In addition to the scientific programme, the congress will offer two excursions during the congress,<br />

as well as two pre- and three post-congress tours.<br />

The two excursions during the congress are included in the congress fee and therefore are<br />

free of charge to all participants. The pre- and post-congress tours have to be booked and<br />

paid extra. On each of the pre- and post-congress tours there is a minimum of 30 and a maximum<br />

of 50 participants.<br />

In order to participate in one of the congress tours you should be physically fit. Please remember<br />

to bring sturdy footwear and appropriate clothing.<br />

The deadline for binding application for the pre- or post-congress tours is May 30th, 2009.<br />

Please use the Final Registration Form at the end of this <strong>Announcement</strong> or register online at<br />

www.ticcih2009.de.<br />

A Congress Excursions<br />

The International Building Exhibition (IBA) Fürst-Pückler-Land:<br />

Landscape in Transformation<br />

(September 1 st , 2009)<br />

Lower Lusatia, where lignite has been extracted for 150 years and which became the centre<br />

of energy of the former GDR, is the largest landscape construction site in Europe today. The<br />

lignite-mining area is transformed into the Lusatian Lake Land, Germany’s most modern water<br />

tourism region and Europe’s largest artificial chain of lakes with about 30 lakes and 14,000<br />

hectares of water surface.<br />

International Building Exhibitions have been organized in Germany for more than 100 years.<br />

Traditionally housing construction and urban development were the main theme. From 1989<br />

to 1999 IBA Emscher Park was the first to deal with restructuring of a whole region – the<br />

Emsch area in the Ruhr region – where a new type of cultural landscape was developed.<br />

This approach was taken by the International Building Exhibition Fürst-Pückler-Land in the<br />

south of Brandenburg where the topic “landscape” is the main theme from 2000 to 2010.<br />

The IBA-Project ENERGY Heritage Route of Lusatian Industrial Culture combines attractions of<br />

the industrial culture in Lusatia in one tourist experience which includes – as well as the IBAprojects:<br />

Visitor Mine F60, Bio-Towers Lauchhammer, Plessa Power Station, Marga Garden<br />

City and IBA-Terraces – the Saxon Museum of Industry, Energy Factory Knappenrode, the<br />

Briquette Factory Louise, the modern Schwarze Pumpe Power Plant, the operative Welzow-<br />

Süd opencast mine and the Art Museum Cottbus Diesel Power Plant. The Energy-Route with<br />

its carefully selected 10 locations is admitted as “Regional Route” of the “European Route of<br />

Industrial Heritage (ERIH)”.<br />

During the Excursion the following sites will be visited:<br />

Visitor Centre IBA-Terraces: In the Centre of the IBA idea. On the IBA Launch Site in<br />

Großräschen you can see the transformation of the landscape from close up. Owing to<br />

closing-down and reconstruction of the Meuro opencast mine and the flooding of the empty<br />

mine the area is changing dynamically. Immediately at the shore of the future lake Ilse-See all<br />

the strings are pulled on the IBA Terraces – the Visitor Centre of the Lusatian Lake Land. They<br />

are also the IBA Information and Exhibition Centre as well as a cultural venue and the starting<br />

point for various tours.<br />

32 33


Event-Power Plant Plessa, Turbines-Table (Jürgen Roloff) Visitor Mine F60 (Detlef Hecht)<br />

Visitor Mine F60: Lying Eiffel Tower in Lusatia. The F60, an overburden conveyor bridge built<br />

in Lichterfeld near Finsterwalde, was the largest mobile technology facility globally which<br />

was ever constructed. This masterpiece of engineering technology had been developed and<br />

built in order to increase the coal mining performance in the Lusatian lignite opencast mines<br />

of the former GDR. The bridge was preserved after its decommissioning and has become a<br />

tourist magnet to visit and climb up, also because of its spectacular light and sound installation.<br />

Lauchhammer Bio-Towers: Castel del Monte of Lusatia. The Lauchhammer Bio-Towers look<br />

like a medieval castle but are in fact a unique industrial memorial. The 50-year-old plant was<br />

used for the biological treatment of the waste water from a coking plant. Here, metallurgical<br />

coke was manufactured, which formed the basis for further expanding the heavy industry in<br />

the GDR. The bio-towers are the only reminder of the large coking plant.<br />

Event-Power Plant Plessa under Modification. Plessa Power Station, built in 1924, is Germany’s<br />

oldest lignite-fired power station which has retained its original structure and machinery<br />

and is now open to visitors. Plans for the time after the basic restoration apart from visits<br />

and cultural events include the start of a new industrial production in the power station in<br />

terms of a “transparent factory”.<br />

The evening reception will be held in the turbines hall of the power plant.<br />

The trip is organized by IBA Fürst-Pückler-Land in co-operation with “Lausitzer- und Mitteldeutsche<br />

Bergbauverwaltungsgesellschaft mbH (LMBV)”<br />

34 35


The Chemnitz Museum of Industry opened in 2003.<br />

Saxon Museum of Industry and the Industrial Townscape of<br />

Chemnitz<br />

(September 4 th , 2009)<br />

A historic steam locomotive will bring you from Freiberg to Chemnitz, formerly known as “Saxon<br />

Manchester”. The 800 year old city developed in the 19th and 20th century into a large<br />

industrial agglomeration with more than 350,000 inhabitants. Textile production and machine<br />

building were the dominating industries.<br />

In the Second World War Chemnitz was highly destroyed. On May 10th, 1953 Chemnitz<br />

was re-named Karl-Marx-Stadt following a decision by the GDR Council of Ministers. In<br />

1990, after the German reunification, the people of this city demanded the old name back.<br />

The Chemnitz Museum of Industry is part of the Saxon Museum of Industry, an association of<br />

four museums of industry located in Chemnitz, Crimmitschau, Ehrenfriedersdorf and Knappenrode.<br />

The Chemnitz Museum of Industry is a living museum in an ancient foundry of about<br />

1900. Machines can be seen alongside products, everyday-items beside luxurious goods,<br />

toys beside works of art. In 2005 the museum received the European Museum of the Year<br />

Award mainly for its conception and its exceptional arrangement.<br />

In the plenary session you will get a first overview of the importance of the industrial heritage<br />

in Saxony. Afterwards we will focus on the general change from industrial cities to modern<br />

cities with modern industries based on the transformation of Chemnitz.<br />

After the visit to the museum we offer a guided tour through Chemnitz. The excursion will<br />

bring you to important industrial monuments, to the old industry “cathedrals” in and close to<br />

the city, including the oldest factory in Saxony, the Bernhard spinning mill, and the first highrise<br />

building in Chemnitz, the Camman weaving mill, built in 1925/26.<br />

And before the steam locomotive will bring you back to Freiberg we will invite you to a pleasant<br />

evening.<br />

A view of the main exhibition in Chemnitz.<br />

Stadtzentrum ...<br />

Bernhardsche Sp ...<br />

36 37


B Pre- and Post-Congress Tours<br />

Pre- and Post-Congress tours can only be booked when participating in the whole TICCIH<br />

Congress. Accompanying persons not participating in the congress can only be considered<br />

if there are spaces available. Please check www.ticcih2009.de for details regarding the<br />

individual trips.<br />

Please note: In order to secure your places at the pre- or post congress tours we ask<br />

you to make a down payment of 200,- EUR for each congress tour you want to participate<br />

in. We then handle registration on a first-come-first-served basis depending<br />

on the date of cash receipt. Please see the payment form for further details.<br />

Pre-Congress Tours<br />

Both tours include a shuttle service by train or bus to Freiberg on Sunday August 30th, 2009<br />

and accommodation from 27th to 30th August.<br />

Industrial Heritage in Berlin<br />

(August 27 th to 30 th , 2009)<br />

Organizer: Axel Föhl<br />

27.08.2009 Arrival of participants in Berlin<br />

Optional reception at “Stadthaus” – seat of the Historic Monuments Commission<br />

of Berlin<br />

28.08.2009 “BERLIN Electropolis”<br />

First Berlin AEG site: Turbine Hall, Peter Behrens: 100 year-anniversary<br />

Loewe Machine Works Wiebestraße/Huttenstraße<br />

Power Station Charlottenburg<br />

AEG Site Wedding – Small motor factory by Peter Behrens<br />

Lunch: “Meilenwerk” – formerly Europe’s largest tram depot, now old-timer<br />

service centre<br />

Second Berlin AEG site Humboldthain<br />

Converter Stations: Wilhelmsruh/Huttenstraße<br />

Evening Meal: “Prater”, the oldest of the few remaining Berlin Beer Halls<br />

Reused former Storehouse, Westport Berlin<br />

29.08.2009 “BERLIN City on the Move”<br />

West Harbour: Conversion of Grain Silo to National Newspaper Archive<br />

Bus depot Helmholtzstraße<br />

Lunch: “Kulturbrauerei”: Berlin – Beer Metropolis: one of the largest former<br />

Berlin breweries, today re-use as cultural centre<br />

Tempelhof Airport: “World’s Biggest Building”: 1936: 3000 rooms<br />

Bus depot Treptow 1930s, converted to music hall<br />

Berlin Water: bus-ride to Friedrichshagen: Berlin’s largest Water Works,<br />

Water Works Museum<br />

Evening Meal: Garden Restaurant in historic brewery in former Intellectuals<br />

Colony “Friedrichshagen”<br />

30.08.2009 Departure by bus or train to Freiberg for opening ceremony<br />

Costs: 380,- EUR<br />

38 39


Pithead of Zollverein Colliery (R. Klenner) Zollverein World Heritage Site (R. Klenner)<br />

Industrial Heritage in the Ruhr-Region<br />

(August 27 th to 29 th , 2009)<br />

Organizers: Markus Krause, Norbert Tempel<br />

Once Germany’s hub of heavy industry, the Ruhr region today offers a wide range of preserved<br />

industrial constructions. Their unique density and quality are discovered by national<br />

and international visitors via the “Route of Industrial Heritage”. Pace makers since 30 years<br />

have been the Industrial Museums of the Rhineland and Westphalia with their carefully restored<br />

monuments. From 1989 to 1999, the ‘International Building Exhibition (IBA) Emscher<br />

Park’ ensured the preservation of further testimonials from the region’s industrial past. By assigning<br />

them an important role in creating a sense of regional identity, IBA placed culture<br />

as one important pillar in the vast revitalization programme put up for the most industrialized<br />

area alongside the river Emscher. In 2001 the colliery and cokery of Zollverein in Essen<br />

have been declared World Heritage site by the UNESCO. Artistic light installations illuminating<br />

industrial sites by night as well as big regional events like the “Long Night of Industrial<br />

Culture” have become international tourist attractions and substantially contribute to a wide<br />

public acceptance of industrial heritage throughout the region. Rich contents and creativity in<br />

managing industrial culture were essential for the Ruhr when winning the title “European Capital<br />

of Culture 2010”.<br />

The TICCIH 2009 pre-congress tour to the Ruhr takes you on a professional trip around some<br />

of the region’s most representative industrial heritage sites: Industrial Museum of the Rhineland<br />

former ‘Altenberg Zink’, worker’s housing estate ‘Eisenheim’ and ‘St. Antony’ works (archaeological<br />

excavation of the birthplace of the ironworks, ‘Gutehoffnungshütte’) in Oberhausen,<br />

colliery and cokery of ‘Zollverein’ (World Heritage site) in Essen, inner harbour of Duisburg<br />

and the Museum of Art ‘Küppersmühle’, iron- and steelworks ‘Meiderich’ in the ‘Landschaftspark<br />

Duisburg-Nord’, Industrial Museum of Westphalia colliery ‘Zollern II/IV’ in Dortmund,<br />

historical shiplift ‘Henrichenburg’, iron- and steelworks ‘Henrichshütte’ in Hattingen, colliery<br />

‘Nachtigall’ in Witten and a visit to its exhibition mine … and many other small sites (worker’s<br />

housing estates, tips, railways, river Emscher and canals) when driving past.<br />

Costs: 400,- EUR. The fee includes accommodation in single rooms for three nights (presumably<br />

in Oberhausen), all visits and transports, lunch on two days, all coffee breaks, the opening<br />

reception at the Industrial Museum of the Rhineland in Oberhausen and the transfer by<br />

train to Freiberg.<br />

Arial View of Zollverein World Heritage Site (Luftbild Blossey / Bilddatenbank Zollverein)<br />

Meeting point for all participants is Oberhausen. Please use the nearby airports of Düsseldorf<br />

or Cologne/Bonn and then take the regional trains or S-Bahn to get to Oberhausen<br />

Main Station.<br />

Henrichenburg Ship Lift<br />

(LWL-Industriemuseum)<br />

Zollern Colliery Engine House<br />

(LWL-Industriemuseum)<br />

Hattingen iron- and steelmill, Westphalian Industrial Museum<br />

(LWL-Industriemuseum)<br />

Gutehoffnungshütte Storehouse, architect Peter Behrens, now houses the<br />

collection of the Industrial Museum of the Rhineland (LVR-Industriemuseum))<br />

40 41


Post-Congress Tours<br />

Industrial Heritage in Saxony<br />

(September 6 th to 10 th , 2009)<br />

Organizers: Helmuth Albrecht, Daniela Walther<br />

Saxony in the south-east of Germany at the boarder to the Czech Republic and to Poland<br />

is one of the oldest industrialized regions of Germany. The wealth of the Saxon State was<br />

founded since the middle ages by the rich silver deposits in the Erz gebirge (Ore Mountains)<br />

at the south-east border of Germany to Bohemia (today the Czech Republic). The silver mining<br />

town of Freiberg (founded 1168) became the centre of the pre-industrial development in<br />

this region, which during the following centuries spread out over the whole Erzgebirge by the<br />

founding of numerous mining settlements and cities. Since the 16th century the Saxon government<br />

took over the economical and technological control for these mining activities to secure<br />

the financial basis of the state. Large water power systems and advanced technologies were<br />

introduced to support and enlarge the pre-industrial and early capitalistic system of mining in<br />

the region. For the education of the necessary mining experts the Mining Academy of Freiberg<br />

was founded in 1765. Thus over several centuries a broad basis of technical know-how<br />

and skilled groups of labourers and technicians were formed by mining activities under state<br />

control.<br />

In the late seventeenth and early nineteenth century the valleys of the Erz gebirge Mountains<br />

became one of the birthplaces of German textile industry. Water powered textile mills spread<br />

along the rivers of the Erzgebirge and the neighbouring region of the Vogtland. Based on<br />

mining and textile industry the nearby city of Chemnitz became the heart of the German<br />

engine building and machine-tool industry during the nineteenth century. Since 1835 the construction<br />

of railways in Saxony and the coal production in the nearby coal fields of Lugau/<br />

Oelsnitz and Zwickau accelerated the process of industrialization. At that time the industrial<br />

city of Chemnitz was called the ‘German Manchester’.<br />

Industrialization took over from the Erzgebirge to other regions of Saxony. The discovery of<br />

rich brown coal deposits south of the old trading and printing city of Leipzig or in the east<br />

Saxon region of Lusatia formed new industries and an energetic basis for further industrialization.<br />

The city of Leipzig became a centre for textile industry, printing industry and food industry.<br />

The Saxon capital Dresden became famous for its tobacco, machine and optical industry.<br />

Comb yarn spinning mill in Leipzig<br />

During the first half of the 20th century new industries like automobile or electrical industry<br />

were established, followed by aviation and electronic industry in the second half of the<br />

century. Since the middle of the 19th century Saxony was one of the heaviest industrialized<br />

regions of Germany and during the time of the German Democratic Republic (1949 – 1990)<br />

the industrial backbone of the East German state.<br />

Around 20,000 listed technical and industrial monuments are giving us today an impression<br />

of the pre-industrial and industrial history of Saxony. In the Erzgebirge, more than eight hundred<br />

years of mining tradition from the middle age times of silver mining to the large scale<br />

uranium mining of the twentieth century have created a unique industrial landscape with<br />

shafts, engine houses, foundries, pits and dumps, large scale water power systems, mining<br />

settlements and mining towns. Hundreds of years of mining not only shaped the landscape, it<br />

also influenced the whole culture (architecture, arts, handicraft, music, literature and customs)<br />

of the region, which is going to be nominated as a UNESCO World Heritage mining landscape<br />

in the near future. Hundreds of important monuments of textile, machine-tool or other<br />

industries, of industrial infrastructure like railway bridges or stations, a large number of technical<br />

and industrial museums as well as several industrial landscapes and townscapes are still<br />

telling the story of industrialization all over Saxony.<br />

During the four days and a half, the post-congress tour will provide an overview on the most<br />

important sites and places of Saxon industrial history. It starts (06.09.) with a tour through the<br />

mining region of the Erzgebirge giving an impression from middle age silver mining to 20th<br />

century uranium mining. The second day (07.09.) will take us to important textile industry sites<br />

in the Vogtland and in the valley of the Erzgebirge. The third day (08.09.) is dedicated to<br />

the industrial monuments in and around the city of Leipzig. On the fourth day (09.09.) we<br />

will visit selected industrial heritage sites in the Saxon capital Dresden and end up east of<br />

Dresden in the brown coal region of Lusatia with a visit to the Industrial Museum and former<br />

briquette factory Knappenrode. In the morning of the fifth day (10.09.) the bus will bring all<br />

participants back to Dresden Airport or Dresden Main Station.<br />

Costs: 450,- EUR per person including all bus transfers, accommodation in a double room for<br />

4 nights, breakfast, lunch and dinner (not in Leipzig, free evening). Single rooms are available<br />

on request, subject to availability, for an extra fee.<br />

42 43


Spinnig Mill at Myslakowice (Erdmansdorf) cast iron construction 1842<br />

Industrial Heritage in Upper and Lower Silesia/Poland<br />

(September 6 th to 9 th , 2009):<br />

Over four days we would like to present the south-west of Poland – Upper and Lower Silesia<br />

– a highly industrialized region for the past two centuries. Participants will not only see the<br />

industrial and post-industrial landscape around Wałbrzych with its monuments to coal mining<br />

and textile production and Upper Silesia with its mining and steel producing region, but<br />

will also have the opportunity to visit an underground gallery dating from the 18th century<br />

(Fox Gallery at the Museum of Industry and mining in Wałbrzych), a coal mining gallery at<br />

Guido Historic Coal Mine in Zabrze and steam winding engines at Ignacy Mining (Hoym<br />

Mining) in Rybnik (Upper Silesia). In addition, we aim to present the development of transport<br />

by steam train through collections of locomotives, carriages and railway infrastructure<br />

(The Silesian Industry and Railway Museum in Jaworzyna S ‘ la˛ska). A key element will be the<br />

visit to the complex of zinc rolling machines driven by steam engines at S ‘ wie˛tochłowice-Lipiny<br />

near Katowice. We will present in the course of the trip both industrial remains and the most<br />

interesting cultural sites in Wrocław and Cracow.<br />

Day 1:<br />

– Departure from Freiberg, with a visit to Orzel Spinning and Weaving company in Kowary<br />

(near Jelenia Góra), an early spinning mill from 1842 retaining a well-decorated cast-iron<br />

construction, the first on such a scale in Silesia<br />

– Lunch on the way<br />

– Wrocław with a visit to ‘Na Grobli’ waterworks from 1871, including the decorative steam<br />

engine complex and a presentation of the Wrocław Centre of Science project<br />

– To our accommodation at Park Hotel (Hans Scharoun Building, 1929)<br />

– Dinner on Wrocław’s Market Square<br />

Day 2:<br />

– A visit to Jahrhunderthalle (an early, large-scale reinforced concrete construction holding a<br />

hall from 1913) and the site of the 1929 WuWa house and flat exhibition<br />

– Departure for the Industry and Mining Museum in Wałbrzych (formerly Julia Mining), with a<br />

visit to the underground Fox Gallery<br />

– Departure for Jaworzyna S ‘ la˛ska’s Industry and Railway Museum, with a guided tour and<br />

presentation of the outcome of the EU-financed scientific project CONSIST<br />

– Lunch at the Museum<br />

– Departure for Upper Silesia<br />

– A visit to Ozimek (Mala Pane) for an early suspended cast-iron bridge from 1828 and a<br />

Fox mining gallery at Industry and Mining Museum in Wałbrzych<br />

19th century blast furnace at Mala Panew Steel Works<br />

– To our hotel accommodation in Rybnik<br />

Day 3:<br />

– A visit to the historic Ignacy Colliery in Rybnik, a presentation of steam winding engines from<br />

1900<br />

– A visit to Guido Historic Coal Mine in Zabrze<br />

– Lunch at the mine workers’ restaurant<br />

– A visit to Królowa Luiza Open Air Museum, with a presentation of a steam operated winding<br />

engine<br />

– A trip to Katowice on the way to the working settlements of Giszowiec and Nikiszowiec,<br />

illustration of the idea of the garden city from the beginning of the 20th century<br />

– The Zinc Rolling Plant (Zakłady Metalowe Silesia) in S ‘ wie˛tochłowice-Lipiny, a complex of<br />

rolling machines driven by steam engines<br />

– To Cracow and hotel accommodation in Kazimierz, a former Jewish district<br />

– Dinner at a Jewish restaurant<br />

Day 4:<br />

– A trip to Cracow-Nowa Huta, a steelworks complex and workers‘ city dating from the<br />

1950s (a large-scale urban planning programme of the communist era), or a trip to the Salt<br />

Mine Museum in Wieliczka (a UNESCO site) near Cracow<br />

– Lunch on the road<br />

– Arrival at Dresden Airport<br />

Costs: 430,- EUR<br />

The cost includes all bus transfers, accommodation 3 nights, 4 breakfasts, 4 lunches and<br />

3 dinners.<br />

44 45


Coal mining in the Ostrau-Karviner district<br />

Industrial Heritage in the Czech Republic<br />

(Ostrava, September 6 th to 9 th , 2009)<br />

1 st day: Transfer from Freiberg to Ostrava<br />

Mining train - historic train trip on a steam engine from Ostrava main station to the ‘Michal’<br />

mine in Ostrava-Michálkovice.<br />

Ostrava-MicháIkovice, ‘Michal/Petr Cingr’ mine<br />

The mine has been created in 1843. The complex was modified in 1914/1915 following<br />

plans by František Fiala (a scholar of Otto Wagner). The then installed new electric machines<br />

from Siemens-Schuckert have been preserved until present. The contemporary design dates<br />

from this reconstruction.<br />

Accommodation: Hotel Atom Ostrava - Zábrěh (www.atom.cz)<br />

2 nd day: Coal mining in the Ostrau-Karviner district Ostrava-Hrušov, air shaft ‘Vrbice’<br />

The Vrbice mine has been constructed by the Emperor-Ferdinand-Northern-Railway in 1911. It<br />

is a fine example of high-class industrial architecture. In the machine hall, a unique asynchronous<br />

electrical winding engine from AEG Union dating from 1916 has been conserved.<br />

Ostrava-Petrˇkovice, ‘Anselm’ mine, Mining Museum<br />

The mine has been created in 1835. The current architectural design dates from the reconstruction<br />

period 1890–1915. At present, ‘Anselm’ mine hosts the Mining Museum containing<br />

arranged exhibitions on extraction, exposition of machines and equipment aboveground, respiration<br />

and resuscitation techniques of the rescuers etc. Situated nearby the museum are an<br />

important archaeological site (reconstruction of a mammoth hunters’ settlement) and a natural<br />

monument (the coal mine cave).<br />

Lunch: in the Mining Museum.<br />

Karvina mines, ‘Čs. Armáda’ mine<br />

“Operating procedure” – underground visit to the mine, visit of the high-class architecture and<br />

the urban development of the mining complex’ objects aboveground dating from the 1950s.<br />

3 rd day: Ostrava-Vítkovice - ironworks Vítkovice, New Vítkovice<br />

‘Hlubina’ mine, cokery and steelworks complex of Vítkovitce<br />

The ‘Hlubina’ mine, cokery and steelworks are places of identity and identification which dominate<br />

the town’s silhouette. The ‘mixed’ company created in 1828 closed down in the 1990s.<br />

On the site remain constructions and machines of high-quality. The old baths have been erected<br />

by Felix Neumann and enlarged in 1925 by Otakar Bém, a scholar of Otto Wagner. Situated<br />

nearby are the compressor hall with an electric turbo compressor (Type Breitfeld-Danek, 1922)<br />

and the machine hall with an electric winding machine (Type Skoda, 1940).<br />

Mine Hlubina<br />

Vítkovice a. s. and the tube plant<br />

“Operating procedure in action”: the forge, the plate pressroom, the steelwork, the roller<br />

plant, the tube plant.<br />

The programme depends on the operation situation on site.<br />

New Vítkovice<br />

In the 1880s a new town named ‘Neu Vitkovice’ has been built at two kilometres east of the<br />

industrial plant. A hospital, orphanages, schools and canteens were elements of a large town<br />

planning programme. The new industrial city’s main square is dominated by a church dating<br />

from 1886 built by the architect Augustin Kirstein, the Town Hall built by the architect Max<br />

von Ferstel in 1901 and a workers hotel from 1887 built by the architect Hans Ulrich.<br />

4 th day: Train station Ostrava-Svinov, workers estate Ostrava-Poruba and transfer back<br />

to Freiberg<br />

Workers estate Ostrava-Poruba<br />

The project of ‘Ostrava-Poruba’ workers estate started early in the 1950s, and construction<br />

began in spring 1952. The settlement’s urban design follows the SORELA form. There is a<br />

well-known residential house named ‘Little Tower’. The Cultural House is another example<br />

which can be interpreted as a mix of Stalinist realism and a return on modernism into Czech<br />

architecture.<br />

Ostrava-Svinov station<br />

The train station of Ostrava-Svinov has been built as a part of the Emperor-Ferdinand- Northern-Railway<br />

in 1847. Its renovation dates from 2003–2006.<br />

Costs: 450,- EUR<br />

46 47


How to get to Freiberg (D - 09599 Freiberg)<br />

173<br />

A 72<br />

Leipzig<br />

Chemnitz<br />

A 14<br />

Chemnitz<br />

Leipziger Straße<br />

Beethovenstraße<br />

101<br />

Chemnitzer Straße<br />

101<br />

Annaberger Straße<br />

BERLIN<br />

Germany<br />

A 13<br />

A 4<br />

Dresden<br />

Freiberg<br />

Wallstraße<br />

Annaberg-<br />

Buchholz<br />

Czech Republic<br />

Schloss<br />

Freudenstein<br />

Wallstraße<br />

P<br />

PRAGUE<br />

Schlossplatz<br />

Nonnengasse<br />

Prüferstr.<br />

Burgstraße<br />

Poland<br />

P BUS<br />

Silbermannstr. Geschw.-Scholl-Str .<br />

Waisenhausstr .<br />

Körnerstraße<br />

Pet ri -<br />

Platz<br />

Petersstr .<br />

MeißnerRing<br />

Akademiestr.<br />

Traffic Connections:<br />

Airport Distance by car by train<br />

Dresden 55 km A 4–B 101 Airport–Dresden–Freiberg<br />

Altenburg 86 km B 5–A 4–B 101 Altenburg–Chemnitz–Freiberg<br />

Leipzig 104 km A 14–A 4–B 101 Leipzig–Chemnitz–Freiberg<br />

Brennhausgasse<br />

Kirchgasse<br />

Obermarkt<br />

Dom<br />

Moritz- straße<br />

Thielestr .<br />

Rathaus<br />

Korngasse<br />

Weingasse<br />

Heubnerstr.<br />

Enge Gasse<br />

Erbische Straße<br />

Borngasse<br />

Kesselgasse<br />

Mönchstraße<br />

Fischerstr . Stollngasse<br />

Schillerstraße<br />

Winkler Str.<br />

Herderstraße<br />

Untermarkt<br />

Kreuzgasse<br />

P<br />

Wernerstraße<br />

Meißner<br />

Bäckergäßchen<br />

Am Mühl-<br />

Färbergasse<br />

Poststraße<br />

Gasse<br />

graben<br />

Nikolai - gasse<br />

gasse<br />

Gerber -<br />

Talstraße<br />

P<br />

Pfarrgasse<br />

Wasserturmstraße<br />

Donatsgasse<br />

Hornstraße<br />

P<br />

Hornstraße<br />

Halsbrücker Str.<br />

P<br />

Donatsring<br />

Terassengasse<br />

Berggasse<br />

Eherne Schlange<br />

Pf arrgasse<br />

TU City Campus:<br />

Congress rooms 3 to 7<br />

Donatsturm<br />

Himmelfahrtsgasse<br />

Dresden<br />

173<br />

TU Congress Center:<br />

Con gress rooms 1 to 2<br />

Freiberg Main Station<br />

View to the historic city of Freiberg<br />

Accommodation in Freiberg<br />

Freiberg is a small university town (around 43,000 inhabitants) with a limited accommodation<br />

capacity in hotels and guest houses. Therefore it would be wise to make your reservation as<br />

soon as possible.<br />

The Organizing Committee has reserved a certain number of hotel rooms with a reduced<br />

price for participants in special congress hotels. Deadline for this special offer is May 30th,<br />

2009. Please contact these special rate hotels directly.<br />

A list of the congress hotels is given below. For further information please contact<br />

www.ticcih2009.de or the Tourist Information Office of Freiberg (www.freiberg.de). Booking<br />

is possible directly at the listed hotels ore at the Tourist Information Office.<br />

List of Congress Hotels<br />

Hotel am Obermarkt<br />

Waisenhausstrasse 2<br />

09599 Freiberg<br />

Tel.: 0049-3731-26370<br />

Fax: 0049-3731-2637330<br />

Mail: info@hotel-am-obermarkt.de<br />

www.hotel-am-obermarkt.de<br />

Hotel Alekto<br />

Am Bahnhof 3<br />

D-09599 Freiberg<br />

Tel.: 0049-3731-7940<br />

Fax: 0049-3731-794100<br />

Mail: info@alekto.de<br />

www.alekto.de<br />

Hotel und Restaurant Silberhof<br />

Silberhofstrasse 1<br />

D-09599 Freiberg<br />

Tel.: 0049-3731-26880<br />

Fax: 0049-3731-268878<br />

Mail: mail@silberhof.de<br />

www.silberhof.de<br />

48 49


Further Information<br />

Social Events<br />

During the congress several social events will take place. There will be a Welcome Party in the<br />

renaissance castle of Freiberg, a Congress Concert in the concert hall St. Nicolai in Freiberg,<br />

an Organ concert in the Cathedral of Freiberg, a ‘movie night’, a reception at the Industrial<br />

Museum of Chemnitz and a reception at the International Building Exhibition Fürst-Pückler-<br />

Land. All these events are included in the congress fee.<br />

The congress will end on Saturday evening (5th September) with the Farewell Events. You will<br />

get the opportunity to visit the historic silver mines ‘Alte Elisabeth’ and ‘Reiche Zeche’. Afterwards<br />

you are invited to join the Garden Party (at extra cost).<br />

Accompanying persons: You are welcome to bring partners who are not participating in the<br />

congress. Please note there is no special partners’ programme organized. However, it is possible<br />

to purchase additional tickets for social events during the congress, subject to availability.<br />

Costs of the Congress<br />

The congress fee will be 300,- EUR for TICCIH members and accepted speakers. Non-<br />

TICCIH members will be charged 350,- EUR. The congress fee for students/PhD-students is<br />

100,- EUR. This fee includes:<br />

• Congress materials<br />

• Congress rooms and equipments<br />

• Congress information services<br />

• Congress tours to IBA and IMC and reception<br />

• Coffee breaks<br />

• Welcome Party in Freiberg<br />

• Congress Concert in Freiberg<br />

• Organ Concert in Freiberg<br />

Not included in the congress fee are the costs for the guided pre- and post-congress tours<br />

and the Farewell Garden Party.<br />

Single Day Tickets: For visitors and speakers of the congress who are not able to attend the<br />

whole congress there will be the opportunity to buy single day tickets for Monday (August 31st),<br />

Wednesday (September 2nd), Thursday (September 4th) and Saturday (September 6th).<br />

Each single day ticket costs 70,- EUR per day and allows participating in all sessions/workshops<br />

of the day (including coffee breaks). The Saturday day ticket also allows access to the<br />

Farewell Events. Social events are not included in the fee for single day tickets. Tickets for the<br />

social events can be bought during the congress.<br />

Grant Programme for Students and Speakers<br />

A special supporting programme for students and speakers with financial problems has been<br />

established in order enable those to attend the congress.<br />

Students as well as PhD-students can apply for a student grant of 200,- EUR/person which<br />

will cover their congress fee and the costs for the accommodation in a special guest house<br />

(two-bed rooms with shower) in Freiberg. This programme is limited to a number of 30 grants<br />

and wants to help students to reduce the costs of their participation at the congress. To apply,<br />

please send us a recommendation letter from a professor of your university. Deadline for<br />

application for a student grant is May 30th, 2009.<br />

Participants (speakers) with low income and no financial support by their home countries or<br />

institutions can apply for a travel grant of 500,- EUR/person given by the Organizing Committee<br />

of the congress. The number of these grants is limited. To apply, please provide us with<br />

background information about your financial problems together with your application. Deadline<br />

for the application for a travel grant is May 30th, 2009.<br />

Please note that if you apply for a grant you first have to send us your final registration and<br />

the payment for the congress. The grants will then be paid in cash in Freiberg at the Congress<br />

Office. Decision about acceptance of applications for grants will be taken until June 30th,<br />

2009.<br />

50 51


Final Registration Form<br />

Surname, Name …………………………………………………………………………...………………………………………<br />

Position/Institution …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………<br />

Address …………………………………………………………………………………….…………………………………………..<br />

……………………………………………………………………………………………….………………………………………….....<br />

E-mail ……………………………………………………………………………………….……………………………………………<br />

TICCIH member yes no<br />

Student (please provide proof) yes no<br />

I would like to participate in the following Congress Tour(s)<br />

First choice Alternative<br />

Pre-Congress Tour to Berlin<br />

Pre-Congress Tour to the Ruhr-Region<br />

Post-Congress Tour to Saxony<br />

Post-Congress Tour to Czech Republic<br />

Post-Congress Tour to Poland<br />

First choice Alternative<br />

Please note: Reservations for pre- and post-congress tours will be dealt with on a first-comefirst-serve<br />

basis on the receipt of down payment of 200,- EUR for each tour you want to participate<br />

in.<br />

I would like to participate in the<br />

Farewell Events (20,- EUR per person) yes no<br />

Payment Details<br />

Please fill in the corresponding fee(s):<br />

Fees To pay<br />

Congress fee TICCIH member/accepted speaker 300,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Congress fee non-TICCIH member 350,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Congress fee (PhD-) student (please provide proof) 100,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Down payment pre-congress tour 200,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Down payment post-congress tour 200,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Farewell Garden Party 20,- EUR EUR ______<br />

Total EUR ______<br />

Payment Details<br />

Please transfer the appropriate amount of money to our bank account:<br />

Banking Instructions for International Payments<br />

Recipient: Freunde und Förderer der TU Bergakademie Freiberg e. V.<br />

Akademiestraße 6, 09599 Freiberg<br />

Bank address: Kreissparkasse Freiberg<br />

Poststraße 1a, 09599 Freiberg<br />

IBAN: DE55870520003115014430<br />

BIC/Swift Code: WELADED1FGX<br />

Reference: TICCIH 2009,<br />

Participant: Name and Surname<br />

Banking Instructions for Payments from German Bank Accounts<br />

Recipient: Freunde und Förderer der TU Bergakademie Freiberg e. V.<br />

Bank Code: 870 520 00<br />

Account: 311 501 44 30<br />

Reference: TICCIH 2009,<br />

Participant: Name and Surname<br />

Please note: Bank charges are the responsibility of the payee and should be paid at source<br />

in addition to the registration fee.<br />

Please return this form as soon as possible, preferably by E-mail, to:<br />

Congress Secretary’s Office TICCIH 2009<br />

IWTG — TU Bergakademie Freiberg<br />

D-09596 Freiberg/Germany<br />

Fax: 0049-3731-392832 | E-mail: info@ticcih2009.de<br />

Deadline for the Final Registration of Participants is May 30 th , 2009<br />

After this deadline, registration and payment are only possible with a special late registration<br />

fee (350,- EUR for TICCIH members and accepted speakers/400,- EUR for regular participants,<br />

150,- EUR for students).<br />

52 53


Who’s TICCIH ?<br />

The ‘International Committee for the Conservation of the Industrial Heritage‘ is an international<br />

organization founded in 1978 in Stockholm. The initiative for an international body was<br />

originally discussed when the Ironbridge Gorge Museum was founded in 1973 under the<br />

direction of Sir Neil Cossons, now Chairman of English Heritage.<br />

Today, TICCIH is the only world organization on Industrial Heritage. The development of<br />

TICCIH has been based on major congresses in Europe and North America organized<br />

either biannually or triennially. These have been supplemented by specialised conferences,<br />

workshops and meetings aimed at developing personal and institutional contacts at an international<br />

level. From the work of a small number of countries, the concept, study and encouragement<br />

of Industrial Heritage has substantially developed in recent years.<br />

This has been possible thanks to the cooperation of universities, public agencies, cultural<br />

institutions, museums and private businesses. The Committee is composed of a group of<br />

specialists interested in enlarging the Cultural Heritage with the history of technology, society<br />

and architecture in the industrial field. The Committee is also a viable tool for communication<br />

in a network that now counts more than 60 countries and 500 members.<br />

Since the early 1980s the Committee has been advising the World Heritage Committee part<br />

of ICOMOS (International Council for Monuments and Sites) – UNESCO on buildings, sites<br />

and industrial landscapes to be included among World Heritage sites. TICCIH publishes a<br />

quarterly Newsletter and supports the publication of the Journal ‘Patrimoine de l‘Industrie/<br />

Industrial Patrimony‘, published twice a year.<br />

For further information please see: www.mnactec.cat/ticcih/<br />

The German Section of TICCIH supports the Journal “IndustrieKultur – monuments preservation,<br />

industrial landscape and social, environmental and technical history”, published quarterly.<br />

The Journal reaches a broad cross-section of the general public, going far beyond the<br />

narrow circles of experts in universities, museums and institutes dealing with industrial heritage<br />

preservation. A large section of each addition is devoted to brief up-to-date reports from<br />

regions all over Europe, around one third is devoted to a special theme. Issue 1/2009 will<br />

introduce into the congress topics “Industrial Heritage, Economy and Ecology”.<br />

For further information and free copies see: www.industrie-kultur.de<br />

Sponsors of the Congress in alphabetical order<br />

Bergsicherung Schneeberg<br />

Deutsche Wasserhistorische Gesellschaft e.V.<br />

Deutsches Bergbau-Museum Bochum<br />

Dr.h.c. Frank-Michael Engel<br />

Förderverein “Montanregion Erzgebirge“ e. V.<br />

Freunde und Förderer der Technischen Universität Bergakademie Freiberg e. V.<br />

industriekultur – Zeitschrift für Denkmalpflege, Landschaft, Sozial-, Umwelt- und<br />

Technikgeschichte<br />

Industrie- und Handelskammer Südwestsachsen<br />

Internationale Bauausstellung (IBA) Fürst-Pückler-Land GmbH<br />

Kreissparkasse Freiberg<br />

Landschatsverband Rheinland<br />

Landschaftsverband Westfalen-Lippe<br />

Lausitzer und Mitteldeutsche Bergbau-Verwaltungsgesellschaft mbH<br />

Ministerium für Bauen und Verkehr des Landes Nordrhein-Westfalen<br />

MITGAS Mitteldeutsche Gasversorgung GmbH<br />

Sächsisches Staatsministerium für Wissenschaft und Kunst<br />

SAXONIA Standortentwicklungs- und -verwaltungsgesellschaft mbH<br />

Stadt Chemnitz<br />

Stadt Freiberg<br />

Technische Universität Bergakademie Freiberg<br />

Vattenfall Europe Mining AG<br />

Zweckverband Sächsisches Industriemuseum<br />

last update: March 2009<br />

54 55


56<br />

Mail: info@ticcih2009.de<br />

www.ticcih2009.de<br />

SÄCHSISCHES<br />

INDUSTRIEMUSEUM

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