(1) The perspective of architectural design and visualisation

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About the authors:

Dominik Lengyel and Catherine Toulouse studied Architecture at the Universities of Stuttgart, Paris-Tolbiac and ETH Zürich. After working as architect at Prof. O. M. Ungers they founded an office for architectural visualisation. Lengyel began teaching as substitute and full professor at the University of Applied Sciences in Cologne. He now holds the Chair for Architecture and Visualisation as full professor at the BTU University in Cottbus, where Toulouse works as assistant professor. Their major research area is the visualisation of archaeological hypotheses. Members of the Excellence Cluster TOPOI funded by the German Research Foundation (DFG). Their research is funded by the DFG, the Gerda Henkel Foundation for the preservation of cultural heritage, the German Federal Ministries of Education and Research BMBF, of Economic Affairs and Energy BMWI and of the Interior, Building and Community BMI. Since 2018 Lengyel is member of the European Academy of Sciences and Arts in Salzburg.

 

(2) Assessment of Student Awareness on the Heritage Significance of Winand Klassen’s Buildings in the University of San Carlos – Talamban Campus

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Emmanuel Montalban, Christian Ray Ong and Charlotte Anne Tan are third-year architecture students at the University of San Carlos-Technological Center in Cebu City, Philippines. Their stay at the university has given them opportunities to learn both technical and creative skills from accomplished architects and other professionals. They have gained their interest on Heritage Conservation after Emmanuel and Charlotte took a course on Architectural Conservation, thus leading them to write a paper that assesses the student’s awareness on the heritage significance of Winand Klassen’s buildings in the University of San Carlos-Talamban Campus. As future architects of the country, they envision to practice architecture that embraces heritage conservation, especially in the case of Cebu City where heritage and culture are highly celebrated but only a limited number of architects practice conservation.

 

(3) From Over- to Under-tourism: Rethinking Sustainable Cultural Heritage Tourism in a Post-pandemic World

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About the author:

Luk Ying Xian (Cassandra) was an undergraduate research fellow who graduated from the Division of Architectural Conservation Programmes (ACP), Faculty of Architecture, University of Hong Kong (HKU), in 2021. She has received more than eight accolades and research grants at the undergraduate level and pursued a total of four academic research projects over the last two years. An avid writer, she contributed to two volumes of UNESCO Bangkok’s publications, namely Asia Conserved Volume III (2010-2014) and IV (2015-2019): Lessons Learned from the UNESCO Asia-Pacific Heritage Awards for Cultural Heritage Conservation. She is currently a research assistant at the Department of Architecture, National University of Singapore. An endeavouring academic, she seeks to further her postgraduate studies in the coming year. Her research interests include architectural conservation, industrial heritage, heritage tourism, memory politics, as well as sustainable and regenerative development.