Wired.com posted a note about Hypercities, an ambitious project at UCLA funded by a Macarthur grant. Hypercities has digitized and scaled a large number of historic and current maps of several cities around the world. Maps can be overlayed in multiple layers on Google Earth, allowing the user to make their own combinations of data. I want to learn more and see how the SIA might be more engaged in the project.
http://hypercities.com/
jay
Sunday, June 21, 2009
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
SIANS Web Site
Nope, not THAT SIA, but Survey of Industrial Archeology in Nova Scotia, an ambitious, community driven site that seeks to document the industrial heritage of the Province of Nova Scotia. I'm trying to learn more about it, but a quick visit looks to be very interesting. I really like the community aspects of it, but am curious about workflow and quality assurance. Cloudy vision about this sort of thing for the SIA...
Hmmm,
jay
Hmmm,
jay
Labels:
industrial archeology,
industrial heritage,
SIA
2009 NTHP 11 Most Endangered Historic Sites
In April, the National Trust for Historic for Historic Preservation issued its annual list of the Eleven Most Endangered Historic Sites. The SIA had previously been asked to support two of these sites, the Memorial Bridge btw Portsmouth, NH and Kittery, ME, and the Ames Shovel Shops in North Easton, MA, which we did through the Historic Preservation Committee reviewing the requests and having our President, Mary Habstritt, draft a letter in support. The process, created in 2007, allows a timely, considered response in which the SIA can review and endorse significant industrial heritage preservation activities. I'm pleased that these sites made the list, though that's a dubious honor, as they are still very much in danger, and worthy of continuing efforts to preserve them. I'm also happy that the SIA was able to respond to the requests of the organizations supporting the preservation of these sites in a timely way, but with careful review and internal comment. Can't win 'em all, but this is an important role for the SIA.
Labels:
industrial heritage,
industrial preservation,
SIA
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