Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity

The legacy of built heritage is one of the most critical questions of our time—the objective of preserving its immaterial values and exploiting its original vocation brings about challenges related to the history, the identity, and the quality of life of the concerned territory. This especially appl...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Alessandro Lo Faro, Alessia Miceli
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2019-09-01
Series:Buildings
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/10/211
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spelling doaj-3948e5bd6850401ca217c9a59d8c59742020-11-25T01:46:29ZengMDPI AGBuildings2075-53092019-09-0191021110.3390/buildings9100211buildings9100211Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social OpportunityAlessandro Lo Faro0Alessia Miceli1Department of Civil Engineer and Architecture, University of Catania, Catania 95125, ItalyIndependent Researcher, Lincoln LN25AQ, UKThe legacy of built heritage is one of the most critical questions of our time—the objective of preserving its immaterial values and exploiting its original vocation brings about challenges related to the history, the identity, and the quality of life of the concerned territory. This especially applies to religious buildings given their strong bond with collective memory. The aim of this research is to determine whether allocating new uses that pursuit social benefits for the community is a possible implementation of the aforementioned purposes and whether it better addresses a broader view of sustainable development, which encompasses equity and well-being. The methodology combines careful knowledge of the building, comparing residual performances of the fabric with new functions. We present a case study, with focus on healthcare-related accommodation facilities and the issue of healthcare migration, which aims to convert a dismissed capuchin convent, located in Villagonia (Taormina, Italy), into a shelter house to host families whose relatives are being treated at the neighbourhood medical centre. This proposal shows that heritage buildings, especially religious ones, have outstanding material and immaterial potential and, through good reuse practices, they provide a valuable opportunity to address the overarching objective of social sustainability.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/10/211built heritagesocial sustainabilityhealthcare migrationhospitalitytaormina
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Alessandro Lo Faro
Alessia Miceli
spellingShingle Alessandro Lo Faro
Alessia Miceli
Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
Buildings
built heritage
social sustainability
healthcare migration
hospitality
taormina
author_facet Alessandro Lo Faro
Alessia Miceli
author_sort Alessandro Lo Faro
title Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
title_short Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
title_full Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
title_fullStr Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
title_full_unstemmed Sustainable Strategies for the Adaptive Reuse of Religious Heritage: A Social Opportunity
title_sort sustainable strategies for the adaptive reuse of religious heritage: a social opportunity
publisher MDPI AG
series Buildings
issn 2075-5309
publishDate 2019-09-01
description The legacy of built heritage is one of the most critical questions of our time—the objective of preserving its immaterial values and exploiting its original vocation brings about challenges related to the history, the identity, and the quality of life of the concerned territory. This especially applies to religious buildings given their strong bond with collective memory. The aim of this research is to determine whether allocating new uses that pursuit social benefits for the community is a possible implementation of the aforementioned purposes and whether it better addresses a broader view of sustainable development, which encompasses equity and well-being. The methodology combines careful knowledge of the building, comparing residual performances of the fabric with new functions. We present a case study, with focus on healthcare-related accommodation facilities and the issue of healthcare migration, which aims to convert a dismissed capuchin convent, located in Villagonia (Taormina, Italy), into a shelter house to host families whose relatives are being treated at the neighbourhood medical centre. This proposal shows that heritage buildings, especially religious ones, have outstanding material and immaterial potential and, through good reuse practices, they provide a valuable opportunity to address the overarching objective of social sustainability.
topic built heritage
social sustainability
healthcare migration
hospitality
taormina
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-5309/9/10/211
work_keys_str_mv AT alessandrolofaro sustainablestrategiesfortheadaptivereuseofreligiousheritageasocialopportunity
AT alessiamiceli sustainablestrategiesfortheadaptivereuseofreligiousheritageasocialopportunity
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