Emerging urban landmarks as vulnerable heritage

Authors

  • Valentina Russo

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.6092/2499-1422/7005

Abstract

This issue of Eikonocity aims at bringing to the attention of scholars themes concerning the history and consequent vulnerability – mainly structural and aesthetic – of the ‘emerging’ elements of the historical buildings, conceived as tangible signs of the urban landscape identity in European historic centres. As recent Italian earthquakes have evidenced (L’Aquila, 2009; Emilia Romagna, 2012; Abruzzo and Umbria, 2016-2017), many historical buildings or parts of them, although having a significant role in the formation and expression of urban image, are highly at risk not only for physical safety but also for the collective memory they preserve. Visual poles as domes and towers, as authentic topoi of the city skyline, aggregate social values shared over the centuries and translated into landscape signs from different cultures during the history of local communities: they are important key-elements in the urban formation process intended as a long life collective project in which, as Michel Jacob pointed, citizens continually define their relationship with nature and territory. By the response these symbols of urban history are able to offer to natural or human hazards it largely descends the preservation of urban landscape image in the frame of identity and community cultural values.

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Published

2020-06-30

How to Cite

Russo, V. (2020). Emerging urban landmarks as vulnerable heritage. Eikonocity. History and Iconography of European Cities and Sities, 5(1), 7–8. https://doi.org/10.6092/2499-1422/7005

Issue

Section

Articles