86 GROUP 4 Heritage Identity at Risk: Three case studies in Trondheim C. Aguiar Botello, I. Barakat, G. Boccacci, M. Panahifar [INTRODUCTION] Nowadays, culture and Cultural Heritage represent the most important foundation for creating and maintaining identity, belonging and citizenship values. Heritage and culture, indeed, influence and are affected by the daily life of every community and its people. The value and potential of Cultural Heritage, if well managed, is a key aspect of community development and a factor of increased quality of life in societies that are in a constant state of evolution (Di Pietro, 2017: 1). Warehouses, Nidarosdomen and Dora bunkers are the main cultural and industrial heritages in Trondheim which influence the character of the city. In this overview we are trying to look at three heritages in Trondheim, to see why they are part of the character of the city, what risks are treating them and what are the possible solutions for reprograming these buildings. This overview has been separated in three chapters below, where their identity and potential risks have been analyzed: 1. Identity 2. Risk Overview 3. Conclusion We think it is important to distinguish between environment and landscape. The environment is what we observe, the purely physical elements, the biotope. The set of natural elements living and inert that make up the environment that surrounds us. This environment is observed by us and filtered by our own consciousness and experience, which generates a personal image of what we are observing. Therefore, the landscape is a subjective image, a perception that varies depending on the person who is in front of this panorama. Gilles Clement, in his book “Gardens, Landscape and Natural Genius”, defines the landscape as what you keep in your mind when closing the eyes in front of a sight. In other words, it is a perception, almost an imagination of what really exists and that has been modified by our consciousness, our experiences and our culture. The cultural landscape could be considered as an entropized landscape, that is, a landscape in which are present elements of the culture and society of a territory and therefore speak of human activity, of a way of inhabiting, to build, to live and etc. about a culture. In this sense, the historical complex of Bakklandet has a great value, which goes beyond its mere form or aesthetics. It is a cultural and anthropological heritage, and that is where much of its value lies. Thanks to the presence of this together, we can be aware of a way of living, of a constructive
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