The result D6 “Resilience-enabling interventions in cultural heritage buildings, urban and rural context” addresses the need of planning effective interventions to enhance the resilience of cultural heritage (CH) buildings and their surrounding environments. While many resilience frameworks for infrastructures exist, targeted methodologies for designing interventions in CH assets are needed for preserving their authenticity and historical value. 

Towards this aim, a multi-scale methodology has been developed to guide the evaluation and selection of interventions in CH assets, combining social, economic, environmental, and technical inputs to quantify the impact of interventions on resilience. The methodology builds upon a risk analysis of CH assets, measures their resilience through key performance indicators (KPIs), namely reliability, robustness, resourcefulness, and recovery, and integrates key aspects of governance, preparedness and response capacity through the assessment of the United Nations (UN) Disaster Resilience Scorecard for Cities, specifically tailored for CH contexts.

In addition, the methodology includes supply chain considerations to ensure that the necessary materials, labor, and logistical support are available to implement the interventions effectively.

The primary tool is a refined set of recommendations that takes the format of practical guidelines and advice for architects, engineers, occupants, and policymakers. Its functions include providing effective design strategies to promote human resilience; structuring recommendations across three key well-being dimensions (Physical, Mental, and Social) and offering a robust evaluation mechanism. 

A detailed description of the tool is available on the project deliverables D2.6 and D8.6., as well as in an open-source publication from a conference article (https://doi.org/10.1201/9781003595120). The publication is also available on MULTICLIMACT’s Zenodo repository. The tool is planned to be operationalized through an interactive dashboard that enables stakeholders to explore different intervention strategies and compare their effects on resilience.  

The primary user group includes heritage authorities, conservation professionals (architects, engineers), and local administration units responsible for urban planning, city architecture, spatial development, investment and tourism, and cultural heritage.

The implementation of the tool will strengthen the users’ ability to design intervention measures that enhance the resilience of CH assets while maintaining their cultural integrity.

The tool is being tested in the Latvian demo site, where the methodology has been used to analyze and compare distinct intervention measures for the Riga Central Market building, a UNESCO World Heritage site, including strengthening of structural elements and health monitoring systems. Feedback from stakeholders will validate the usability of the tool and will provide further refinement for its successful implementation in the MULTICLIMACT toolkit.  

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