A Guide to the Archaeology of Conflict

© T.L.Sutherland 2005

Appendix 4: English Heritage News Release, 7 April 2004

From: "Mike Heyworth" mikeheyworth@BRITARCH.AC.UK
To: BRITARCH@JISCMAIL.AC.UK
Sent: Friday, April 09, 2004 8:20 PM
Subject: English Heritage Pioneers a New Approach to Heritage Protection

The way we protect England's heritage by listing buildings, scheduling ancient monuments and registering historic parks, gardens and battlefields is about to change. Proposals for a new system of heritage protection have been drawn up by the Department for Culture, Media and Sport, and will be put to the test by English Heritage on 15 pilot sites across the country, announced today (Wednesday 7 April).

Centre Point, the landmark London office block and venue for today's launch, is itself to be a pilot. Others include the buildings of the Piccadilly Line of the London Underground, the University of East Anglia, Kenilworth Castle, York's Roman Walls, historic bridges in Cornwall, a couple of Ministry of Defence sites, Hampshire's ancient water meadows and three great historic estates, Holkham in Norfolk, the Weld Estate in Dorset and the Godolphin Estate in Cornwall.

While maintaining the present levels of statutory protection, the aim of the new system is to change the culture of protecting the historic environment from its generally passive, reactive and often adversarial form towards an approach that is positive, collaborative and strategic. The choice of the projects has been designed to focus on the most innovative aspects of the new system:


© 2005 Tim L. Sutherland & Simon H. Sutherland