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Copyright of Firzan Aziz |
Saturday, 9 September 2017
PhD Thesis Abstract
Adaptive reuse of
historic buildings is a prominent and sustainable approach in the realm of built
heritage conservation. The prevalent trend of converting historic buildings to
museums is testified when nearly half of the museums population (44%) in the
historic cities Melaka and George Town, the UNESCO World Heritage of Malaysia
are found to be converted buildings. Adaptive reuse however has not always
brought in positive conservation impacts as some historic
buildings turned dysfunctional and out of operation after their conversion to
museums. This scenario hence calls upon the current research aim to establish
an evaluation framework focusing on the post-conservation impacts of historic
buildings converted to museums (adaptive reuse museums) within the UNESCO World
Heritage of Malaysia context. Criteria of physical appropriateness, functional
effectiveness and financial efficiency were scrutinised through literature
review to conceptually form the Post-Conservation Evaluation (PCE). Case
studies involving two monumental and three shop house buildings in the historic
city of George Town obtained through purposive sampling were then used to test
the operational and empirical capabilities of the conceptual PCE. Field work
conducted at the case studies found that the post-conservation impacts of
adaptive reuse museums are positive in terms of physical appropriateness yet negative
in terms of functional effectiveness. Validated by eight experts and
stakeholders from the field of built heritage conservation, this evaluative
research finally contributed the PCE framework focusing on the impacts of
adaptive reuse museums in the context of UNESCO World Heritage of Malaysia.
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Adaptive reuse of historic buildings is a prominent and sustainable approach in the realm of built heritage conservation. The prevalent tre...