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EN
On the basis of Art. 96, par. 1 of the Law of 23 July 2003 on the protection and care of monuments, the Minister of Culture and National Heritage entrusted the performance of the public task of the construction of the spatial information infrastructure to the director of the National Heritage Board of Poland (NHBP). The creation of the geospatial database of historical monuments was designated as a statutory duty of the Board. Since 2010 NHBP has also functioned as the Competence Centre in the field of digitalisation of historical monuments and museum exhibits. The task of NHBP’s Centre of Competence is to set and promote standards in terms of the digitalisation of historical monuments and museum exhibits and tasks relating to the implementation of the INSPIRE directive. The performance of these tasks began very late. In the middle of 2010, a new department – the Department of Digitalisation of Historical Monuments and Museum Exhibits – was established, its team consisting of specialists in cartography, photogrammetry and IT. Its organisation was completed in November 2010. The first task of the team was to identify and diagnose the nature of data collected by NHBP. In accordance with the schedule of implementation of the INSPIRE directive, metadata designed for particular data sets were published on NHBP’s website on 3 December 2010. Irrespective of work on metadata of data sets and services, work aimed at creating a model of data concerning non-movable and archaeological monuments was completed. Access to data will be provided via central geoportal and in the future it will be profiled due to the function of the user in the system. According to the plan, the central geoportal of NHBP was launched on 9 November 2011. At the beginning of the second quarter of 2012, the launching of a website integrating geoportal map services with the presentation of multimedia contents is planned as a part of the CARARE project. In the first year of existence of the department (from October 2010 till December 2011) all intended goals were achieved and the deadlines set in the INSPIRE calendar were met. Many tenders supporting the work of the department were concluded, and a series of training courses was organised, which contributed significantly to the raising of awareness of specialists in the protection of historical monuments with regard to GIS, operation of GPS devices and the INSPIRE directive. Employees of the digitalisation department were trained in the field of IT. It must be stressed that the most difficult stage of works, i.e. the processing of the register to the digital and geospatial form, is still in its initial phase. The deadline for those works is the first quarter of 2013.
EN
The Conservation Analyses Department was established by the order of the Director of the National Centre for Research and Documentation of Monuments dated 6 June 2010. The Department comprised the Team of Experts and the Conservation Policy Formation Workshop. The Department co-ordinates and supervises work connected with the preparation of opinions and expertises regarding the protection of non-movable and movable monuments for public administration authorities – the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage, Voivodeship Offices for Monument Protection and their branches and local government conservators. It carries out its tasks with the help of local divisions representing the National Heritage Board of Poland. The definite majority of issued opinions concerns the evaluation of the level of preservation of the value of historic objects or areas during administrative procedures being conducted by the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage with regard to deletions from the register of monuments. The Conservation Analyses Department co-ordinates the implementation of the procedure for acknowledgement of a historic object as a history monument and participates in work regarding the creation and dissemination of standards of documentation, research and conservation of historic objects. The activity of the Department in the field of protection of historic parks and gardens is particularly worth mentioning. It includes, among others, study and design works carried out in Branicki’s Garden in Białystok from 2006 till 2009 and the preparation of conservation requests and the resulting projects of regeneration of the palace park in Białowieża and the park in Trzebiny. The palace & park layout in Trzebiny is currently administered by the National Heritage Board of Poland – the Local Workshop in Trzebiny. An important task ordered by the Minister of Culture and National Heritage is the management of the regeneration of Muskau Park. Over 20 years’ period of regeneration works is a significant yet still fragmentary process of restoration of the full historical value of the park. The Institute is also responsible for the creation and putting into common use of standards of documentation, elaborations and manuals regarding the protection of cultural heritage that are addressed to a wide group of recipients, an example of which is the Methodological guide to the elaboration of communal monument care programmes. The international co-operation with Eastern states has been carried out by NHBP and its predecessors for many years, including the „Nieśwież Academy” Postgraduate Summer School and cooperation with the Trakai Historical National Park in Lithuania. All activities being handled by the Conservation Analyses Department of the National Heritage Board of Poland are subject and may become subject to modifications, depending on the orders of the Ministry of Culture and National Heritage, the needs of voivodeship monument conservators and other institutions and the emerging topics that must be solved urgently. Currently the Conservation Analyses Department employs 14 persons. They build an interdisciplinary team consisting of a group of historians of art, monument experts – conservators, landscape architects, an architect and a lawyer – persons with a large professional experience and significant achievements.
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