Kraków Conference “New European Bauhaus: Heritage & Transformation” brings together ACE, Europa Nostra and ICOMOS

The Architects’ Council of Europe (ACE) and Europa Nostra co-hosted the Conference “New European Bauhaus: Heritage & Transformation” on 28 November 2024 in Kraków, Poland. High-level representatives from Poland and the EU Institutions, as well as experts from across Europe, shared their perspectives on the EU initiative New European Bauhaus (NEB) and its implications for the heritage sector in terms of innovation, sustainability, inclusion and funding.

The full-day conference concluded with a preview of the Kraków Declaration, jointly issued by ACE, Europa Nostra and ICOMOS. The Kraków Declaration puts forward 7 key recommendations for the future of Europe’s built environment and calls upon the EU Institutions and Member States to adopt an holistic, quality-driven and cultural approach in all EU policies and funding programmes which impact upon the built heritage.

The conference, organised in the framework of the EU-funded European Heritage Hub pilot project, attracted some 250 participants both onsite and online.

Opening session

After welcoming the participants, moderators Agata Wąsowska-Pawlik, Director of the International Cultural Centre (ICC) and Board Member of Europa Nostra, and Borys Czarakcziew, Board Member of the Architects’ Council of Europe, invited the representatives of the host organisations to make the introductory remarks. Ruth Schagemann, President of the Architects’ Council of Europe, and Sneška Quaedvlieg-Mihailović, Secretary General of Europa Nostra and Project Leader of the European Heritage Hub, set the tone for the conference by underlining the importance of partnerships within civil society and with other stakeholders.

2025 will mark the 50th anniversary of the very first European Architectural Heritage Year. We need to renew this mobilisation and energy to go further together,” stated Sneška Quaedvlieg-Mihailović.

Senator Jerzy Fedorowicz, Chairman of the Committee on Culture and the Media of the Polish Senate, Janusz Sepioł, Chief Architect of the City of Kraków, and Bogdan Andrzej Zdrojewski, Member of the European Parliament, Vice-Chair of the Committee on Culture and Education, addressed the audience. “The New European Bauhaus shows that the European Green Deal cannot be created in a fragmented way. It is a platform for unleashing creativity and cooperation between culture and science”, stated Bogdan Andrzej Zdrojewski in a video message broadcast from the conference.

Prof. Jacek Purchla, Vice-President of Europa Nostra and Chair of the European Heritage Awards / Europa Nostra Awards Jury, delivered a keynote on the history and significance of the inscription of the Historic Centre of Kraków on UNESCO’s World Heritage List, highlighting the city’s experience in terms of heritage and development. “Kraków belongs to those cities where heritage is decisive,” he said, also mentioning the urban heritage keystones of liveability: quality, identity, environment, management, participation and economy.

The New European Bauhaus and cultural heritage

The first panel discussion focused on the New European Bauhaus and cultural heritage, featuring Pia Maier Schriever, Member of the NEB High Level Round Table, Ștefan Bâlici, President of the Romanian Order of Architects, and Marcos Ros Sempere, Member of the European Parliament.

Exchanges revolved around the importance of co-creating our built environment, making housing more sustainable and affordable, and recognising heritage as a resource of knowledge and innovation. Stefan Balici highlighted that to achieve its ambitious objectives for Europe’s built environment, the New European Bauhaus ought to be mainstreamed as a quality framework, as advocated in the Bucharest Manifesto “For Quality-Driven Cultural Heritage Practice in Europe” recently published by Europa Nostra.

Innovation for cultural heritage

The second panel conversation on Innovation for cultural heritage included presentations by Diego Zoppi, ACE Board Member, Coordinator of the thematic Area ‘Practice of the Profession’, and Prof. Jerzy Hausner, Founder and Chairman of the Open Eyes Economy Summit, who focused on the regenerative power of culture to move from a conventional to a regenerative economy.

Cultural regeneration takes place through multigenerational local cultural practices. In this case regeneration means forming new imaginaries. If we don’t treat people as curators but as users, we are creating non-places in which to live,” said Prof. Jerzy Hausner.

Sustainability in the context of heritage

The afternoon session continued with a roundtable on Sustainability in the context of heritage, reflecting on the impacts of climate change on our built environment and solutions for protection, retrofit, re-use and risk preparedness. Panellists Carl Bäckstrand, partner and deputy CEO of White Arkitekter and Vice-President of ACE, Prof. Stefano Musso, Chair of the ACE Heritage Working Group, Riin Alatalu, ICOMOS Vice-President for Europe, and Graham Bell, Board Member of Europa Nostra, highlighted the shift in policies from demolition to retrofitting of existing buildings, but noted that traditional skills and knowledge are still overlooked.

We use the word sustainability so much that we forget what it is. We need to think of what we can do to influence and shape what happens next. All of our actions can have profound effects across our sector, communities and the world,” said Graham Bell.

Education and public participation

The following panel on education and public participation featured presentations by two winners of the European Heritage Awards / Europa Nostra Awards 2024: Saxon Church in Alma Vii, Romania, Grand Prix in the Category ‘Conservation and Adaptive Reuse’, and Public Choice Award (by Stefan Balici, President of the Romanian Order of Architects), and Boulouki – Travelling Workshop on Traditional Building, Greece, laureate in the Category ‘Education, Training and Skills’ (by Ionas Sklavounos, Co-founder and Project Manager), who both emphasised the value of public participation, cultural heritage not being an end but a tool for the community.

Saxon Church in Alma Vii, ROMANIA

Piotr Lewicki from Łatak-Lewicki Architectural offices talked about the redevelopment of the Cracovia Hotel, demolition of which was prevented thanks to a citizens’ movement. It will now be transformed into an architecture and design museum. Olaf Grawert, Campaign Manager at HouseEurope!, explained this European citizens’ initiative for renovation combining practice, research and policy.

Heritage and recovery

The last panel discussion delved into the topic of heritage and recovery, drawing from the lessons of the war in Ukraine.

Prof. Bohdan Cherkes, Director of the Institute of Architecture at Lviv Polytechnic University, argued that European cities should be prepared for shelling in today’s aggressive context and that specialists should be trained to save cultural heritage in the extreme conditions of wartime.

Ruta Leitanaite, Board member of the Architects Association of Lithuania, and Coordinator of the Creative Europe project “UREHERIT”, announced the just published Recommendations from the European Commission-led expert group on the safeguarding of cultural heritage in Ukraine, recognising heritage as a key resource for recovery.

Finally, Akrivi-Athina Vlachou, Urban Specialist at the European Investment Bank (EIB), presented the NEB Investment Guidelines, a tool providing practical and procedural aspects of investment and project preparation in the built environment aligned with NEB values.

 

Closing session and Kraków Declaration

The conference concluded with a preview of the Kraków Declaration “New European Bauhaus: Heritage & Transformation”, jointly issued by ACE, Europa Nostra and ICOMOS, which puts forward  7 key recommendations for the future of Europe’s built environment, from favouring renovation and adaptive reuse, embracing innovation and traditional knowledge, upskilling and citizens’ participations, to quality criteria, peer-learning and risk management and preparedness.

With the Kraków Declaration, we want to provide a purpose to policy frameworks. Architecture and urban planning are the reflection of our societies. It’s about creating value, putting the right questions in place. It’s about the people, the quality, and freedom to choose where to live, in urban or rural areas,” said Ruth Schagemann, President of the Architects’ Council of Europe.

The Declaration also proposes a Call to Action to the incoming European Commission, recently elected Members of the European Parliament and Member States. “The EU ought to adopt an holistic, quality-driven and cultural approach in all EU policies and funding programmes which impact upon the built heritage. We shall reach out to relevant members of the new College of Commissioners responsible for Cohesion, Housing and Skills, among others,” stated Sneška Quaedvlieg-Mihailovic, Secretary General of Europa Nostra and Project Leader of the European Heritage Hub.

This hybrid event was organised in collaboration with and the support of the International Cultural Centre and the Europa Nostra Heritage Hub in Kraków in the framework of the EU-funded European Heritage Hub pilot project. It was co-funded by the Creative Europe programme of the European Union. The conference was held under the Honorary Patronage of the Mayor of Kraków, Aleksander Miszalski.

 

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