Thesis title: Value Landscapes: Conservation and Update
Historic gardens and parks, as well as twentieth-century landscapes whose enduring qualities have been widely recognized, share the common characteristics of aesthetic distinction and cultural symbolism. Within culture, they carry the imagination of “paradise”, landscapes of meaning, closely interwoven with the societies of different periods and cultural contexts.
This study is grounded in an understanding of heritage landscape as both a material environment and an intangible symbolic construct, while also recognizing its ecological role as part of a spatial mosaic rather than as an isolated museum-like artifact.
Methodologically, this research does not intend to supplant mainstream conservation and maintenance approaches—typically aligned with linear conceptions of time—nor does it seek to merely inherit traditional cyclical perspectives, often characterized by the reconstruction of an original state.
Rather, it proposes a shift toward a new attitude that, while understanding and acknowledging the linear perception of time, promotes the contemporary evolution of traditional cyclical expressions. The study explores layers of superimposition, evocative of a palimpsest, intended to stimulate a “bouncing forward”, onto established conservation practices.