Relic preservation urged
27/10/2004 17:12
The city government held a meeting about cultural relics preservation
yesterday to urge related departments at all levels to carry out and improve
protection efforts. Speaking at the meeting, Vice Mayor Yang Xiaodu said a
great number of preserved historical and revolutionary relics display the city's
rich culture. He re-emphasized the importance of the protection work, which
has been included in the economic and social development plan, urban
construction plan and the financial budget at all levels according to state
requirements. "The inclusion will surely improve the economy of the city and
promote cultural relics protection work," Yang said. As for the economic and
social development plan, all departments should focus on maintenance work of
national- and city-level relics and finish building 100 museums on different
subjects in Shanghai by 2005. As for the urban construction plan, Yang
pointed out that efforts should be made to resolve the contradiction between
cultural relics protection and infrastructure construction. Li Yuan, the vice
director of Baoshan District where a number of revolutionary relics exist, said
that the district is always working on the protection of cultural items. In
the past several years, several memorial halls had been built to memorialize war
heroes and several historic sites had been well protected while urban
construction work was underway nearby, Li said. Also yesterday, about 40
international architecture conservation experts attended the Shanghai
International Symposium on Conservation of Historical Architecture. Richard
Engelhardt, a UNESCO regional adviser for Culture in Asia and the Pacific,
suggested the municipal government not only protect the structure of old homes
but restore their functions. "The purpose of conserving historic buildings
does not refer to keeping their 'skeletons.' Instead, it is the provision of
housing to serve people, rich and poor," Engelhardt said. He suggested the
government improve the living conditions in the city's old houses - including
ventilation, wiring and Internet access. He also suggested the government
preserve entire historic communities instead of just isolated houses. Zheng
Shiling, a renowned expert of architecture at Tongji University, said: "The
government needs to put a strict control on the number of highrises built in the
city." "The most urgent thing for the government is to establish a reasonable
social system of conserving the beautiful old houses," he added.
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