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Applying augmented reality to preserving industrial heritage

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conference contribution
posted on 2025-05-09, 12:13 authored by Tessa Morrison, Ning Gu, Nicholas FoulcherNicholas Foulcher
Preserving cultural heritage of industrial sites has become a political issue in Australia and elsewhere with the closure of many manufacturing and engineering based industries, the needed modernization of existing industrial sites and the spread of housing development into areas that have traditionally been preserved for industrial use. The size of these sites makes it difficult to preserve them and the preservation of most cultural heritage becomes partial, such as displaying industrial machinery in parks well away from their original position and context. Australia is losing much of its important industrial cultural heritage. Newcastle, Australia, is the sixth largest city in Australia and is the largest coal export port in the world. Its entire history of European settlement, since 1801, was built on industry. Its history is a cycle of booms and busts with a constantly changing industrial landscape. The paper examines an alternative and holistic method of preserving the cultural heritage of industrial sites, which would otherwise has been lost, using augmented reality and mobile technologies. The city of Newcastle is presented as a case study.

History

Source title

EVA London 2012: Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (presented in Electronic Workshops in Computing (eWiC) series)

Name of conference

Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (EVA 2012)

Location

London

Start date

2012-07-10

End date

2012-07-12

Pagination

192-198

Publisher

BCS, The Chartered Institute for IT

Place published

Swindon, UK

Language

  • en, English

College/Research Centre

Faculty of Engineering and Built Environment

School

School of Architecture and Built Environment

Rights statement

Morrison T, Gu N, Foulcher NC, 'Applying augmented reality to preserving industrial heritage', Proceedings. EVA London 2012: Electronic Visualisation and the Arts (2012) – First published in the Electronic Workshops in Computing series at http://ewic.bcs.org/content/ConWebDoc/46126

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