2010 World Monuments Watch

The World Monuments Watch is a flagship advocacy program of the New York–based private non-profit organization World Monuments Fund (WMF) that calls international attention to cultural heritage around the world that is threatened by neglect, vandalism, conflict, or disaster.[1]

Interior of the church in San Javier, Bolivia. With the expulsion of the Jesuit order in the mid-18th century most reductions were abandoned. The Jesuit Missions of the Chiquitos are unique in that the settlements have survived largely intact.
The Norman tower in Craco, Italy was erected in 1000 AD. The village was severely damaged by earthquakes between 1959 and 1972 and rendered uninhabitable by a series of landslides. It has been uninhabited since 1963.
Tham Ting in Laos contains approximately 2,500 mostly wooden Buddha laid out over the floors and wall shelves. They take many different positions, including meditation, teaching, peace, rain, and reclining (nirvana).
Machu Picchu is one of the eight sites from Peru to be included on the 2010 Watch List.
San Sebastian Church in Manila, the Philippines is claimed as the only prefabricated steel church in the world. Completed in 1891 in recent years it has been beset by rust and corrosion. It was listed in the 1998 World Monuments Watch List of Most Endangered Sites.
Biertan, Romania. 13th Century Saxon villages in Transylvania were constantly under the threat of Ottoman and Tatar invasions and built fortifications centred around their churches.
The Old City of Toledo, Spain is surrounded on three sides by the Tagus River and contains many historical sites, including the Alcázar (castle), Primate Cathedral, and the Zocodover, a central market place. It is one of six sites in Spain listed on the 2010 Watch List.
The Sagrada Família is a massive Roman Catholic church that has been under construction in Barcelona, Catalonia, Spain since 1882 and is not expected to be complete until at least 2026. It is considered the master-work of renowned Catalan architect Antoni Gaudí (1852–1926).
Pangani, Tanzania came to prominence in the 19th century, when under Zanzibari rule it was a major terminus of caravan routes to the deep interior. After the Sultan of Zanzibar signed treaties with Great Britain outlawing the ocean-going trade in slaves in 1873, it became a centre for smuggling slaves across the narrow channel to Pemba.
The newest site on the list, completed in 1980, the Atlanta Central Library was designed by Marcel Breuer in a modernist and brutalist style. The building is considered a masterpiece by architectural experts, such as Barry Bergdoll, the Chief Architectural Curator of the Museum of Modern Art.

Selection process edit

Every two years, it publishes a select list known as the Watch List of Endangered Sites that are in urgent need of preservation funding and protection. The sites are nominated by governments, conservation professionals, site caretakers, non-government organizations (NGOs), concerned individuals, and others working in the field.[1] An independent panel of international experts then select 100 candidates from these entries to be part of the Watch List, based on the significance of the sites, the urgency of the threat, and the viability of both advocacy and conservation solutions.[1]

For the succeeding two-year period until a new Watch List is published, these 100 sites can qualify for grants and funds from the WMF, as well as from other foundations, private donors, and corporations by capitalizing on the publicity and attention gained from the inclusion on the Watch List.[2]

2010 Watch List edit

The 2010 World Monuments Watch List of Endangered Sites was announced on October 6, 2009 by WMF President Bonnie Burnham.[1] The 2010 Watch List highlights the need to create a balance between heritage concerns and the social, economic, and environmental interests of communities around the world.[1]

The sites on the 2010 Watch list make a dramatic case for the need to bring together a variety of sectors—economic, environmental, heritage preservation, and social—when we are making plans that will affect us all. Greater cooperation among these sectors would benefit humanity today, while ensuring our place as stewards of the Earth for the next generation.

— launch of 2010 Watch List[1], Bonnie Burnham, WMF president

List by country/territory edit

Number[A]Country/TerritorySite[B]Location[C]Period[C]
1AfghanistanHerat Old CityHeratca. BC 5000–Present
2ArgentinaBuenos Aires Historic CenterBuenos Aires1750–1830
3ArgentinaTeatro ColónBuenos Aires1885–1908
4ArmeniaAghjots VankGarni13th Century
5AustriaWiener WerkbundsiedlungVienna1920s–1930s
6BahrainSuq al-QaysariyaMuharraqca. 1800
7BelgiumSanatorium Joseph LemaireOverijse1937–1987
8BhutanPhajoding Temple ComplexThimphu1224
9BoliviaConvento-Museo Santa TeresaCochabamba1760
10BoliviaJesuit Missions of the ChiquitosSanta Cruz17th–18th Centuries
11ChileChurches of Arica ParinacotaArica and Parinacota Region16th Century
12ColombiaSan Fernando and San José FortressesCartagena de Indias18th Century
13ColombiaSanta Fe de Antioquia Old CityAntioquia Department16th–18th Centuries
14ComorosUjumbe PalaceMutsamudu1786
15EcuadorTodos Santos complexCuenca13th Century
16EgyptNew GournaKurna1945
17EgyptOld Mosque of Shali FortressSiwa Oasis1203
18FranceSaint-Martin-des-Puits ChurchSaint-Martin-des-Puits9th–17th Centuries
19FranceHôtel de MonnaiesVillemagne-l'Argentière13th Century
20GreeceChurches of LesvosLesbos3rd–16th Centuries
21GuatemalaKaminaljuyuGuatemala City8th Century BC
22HaitiGingerbread HousesPort-au-Prince1749–1925
23IndiaChiktan CastleKargil16th century
24IndiaDechen Namgyal MonasteryNyoma17th century
25IndiaHistoric Civic Centre of ShimlaShimla1830s
26IndiaKothi, Qila MahmudabadMahmudabad1677
27IraqAl-Hadba’ MinaretMosul1172
28IrelandRussborough HouseBlessington1740s
29IsraelCathedral of St. JamesOld City of Jerusalem12th century
30IsraelOld City of LodLod1260–1917
31ItalyHistoric Center of CracoCraco1000
32ItalyPonte LucanoItaly1st Century BC
33ItalyVilla of San GilioOppido Lucano1st Century BC
34JapanMachiya TownhousesKyoto1603–1867
35JordanDamiya Dolmen FieldDamiya, Jordan ValleyBC 3600–3000
36KazakhstanVernacular Architecrure of the Kazakh Steppe Sary-ArkaZhezkazgan18th–20th Centuries
37LaosHintang Archaeological LandscapeHouaphanh ProvinceBronze Age
38LaosTham TingNam Kong River at Ban Pak Ou15th Century
39MexicoAqueduct of Padre TemblequeZempoala to Otumba1543–1560
40MexicoLas PozasXilitla1944
41MexicoChurch of San Bartolo SoyaltepecOaxaca1723
42MexicoChurch of San Felipe TindacoTlaxiacoca. 1800
43MexicoSantos Reyes Church and Monastery and La Comunidad ConventMetztitlán1570
44MoldovaAssumption of Our Lady ChurchCauseni17th Century
45MoroccoLixusLarache12th century BC–7th Century AD
46PakistanPetroglyphs in the Diamer-Bhasha Dam AreaNorthern Areasca. 10000–1000 BC
47PakistanShikarpoor Historic City CenterShikarpoor1617-1947
48PanamaCorozal CemeteryPanama City1914
49PanamaHistoric Center of ColónColón19th Century
50PanamaMount Hope CemeteryColón1850
51ParaguaySantísima Trinidad del ParanáTrinidad1706
52PeruChankilloCasma Valley4th century BC
53PeruJesuit Churches of San José and San JavierChanguillo and El Ingenio1740s
54PeruPachacamac SanctuaryLurín5th Century
55PeruPikillaqta Archaeological ParkCuzco500–1200
56PeruSan Francisco de AsisMarcapataca. 1700
57PeruMachu PicchuUrubamba Valley15th Century
58PeruTambo ColoradoHumay1470–1532
59PeruChurch of Santa Cruz of JerusalemJuli16th Century
60PhilippinesNuestra Señora de la AsunciónSanta Maria1765
61PhilippinesRice Terraces of the Philippine CordillerasIfugao16th Century
62PhilippinesSan Sebastian BasilicaManila1891
63RomaniaFortified Churches of Southern TransylvaniaAround Sibiu12th–14th Centuries
64RussiaChurch of the Icon of the Mother of God of the SignPodolsk1704
65SlovakiaLietava CastleLietava13th Century
66South AfricaWonderwerk CaveKurumanStone Age
67SpainHistoric Landscape of SevillaSeville8th–18th Centuries
68SpainHistoric Landscape of Toledo (Upper and Lower Valleys of the River Tagus)ToledoPaleolithic Era–Present
69SpainNumantiaSoria2nd Century BC
70SpainOld Town of ÁvilaÁvila1090
71SpainRoute of Santiago de CompostelaAragon, Navarre, La Rioja, Castile-Leon and GaliciaMiddle Ages
72SpainTemple Expiatori de la Sagrada FamíliaBarcelona1882–Present
73Sri LankaDutch Fort of BatticaloaBatticaloa1628
74TanzaniaPangani Historic TownPanganica. 1800
75UgandaWamala King's TombsNansana
76United KingdomCarlisle Memorial Methodist ChurchBelfast1875
77United KingdomEdinburgh Historic GraveyardsEdinburgh17th–19th Centuries
78United KingdomSheerness DockyardSheerness1815
79United KingdomSt John the Evangelist Parish ChurchShobdon12th Century; Extended 1755–58
80United KingdomTecton BuildingsDudley Zoological Gardens1937
81United StatesAtlanta-Fulton Central Public LibraryAtlanta1980
82United StatesCommodore Ralph Middleton Munroe Miami Marine StadiumMiami1963
83United StatesCultural Landscape of Hadley, MassachusettsHadley1660s-present
84United StatesPhillis Wheatley Elementary SchoolNew Orleans1954
85United StatesSt. Louis Cemetery No. 2New Orleans1823
86United StatesTaliesinSpring Green1911
87United StatesTaliesin WestScottsdale1937
88United StatesTaos PuebloNew Mexicoca. 1000–1450
89United StatesBridges of the Merritt ParkwayFairfield County, Connecticut1940
90UzbekistanDesert Castles of Ancient KhorezmKarakalpakstan, Elli-Kala District & Beruni District, Uzbekistan7th Century BC
91VenezuelaFaculty of Architecture and Urbanism, Central University of VenezuelaCaracas1950s
92VenezuelaParque del EsteCaracas1958

Statistics by country/territory edit

The following countries/territories have multiple sites entered on the 2010 Watch List, listed by the number of sites:

Number of sitesCountry/Territory
9United States of America
8Peru
6Spain
5Mexico and United Kingdom
4India
3Italy, Panama and the Philippines
2Argentina, Bolivia, Colombia, Egypt, France, Israel, Laos, Pakistan and Venezuela

Notes edit

^ A. Numbers list only meant as a guide on this article. No official reference numbers have been designated for the sites on the Watch List.
^ B. Names and spellings used for the sites were based on the official 2010 Watch List as published.
^ C. The references to the sites' locations and periods of construction were based on the official 2010 Watch List as published.

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f Holly Evarts (6 October 2009). "WORLD MONUMENTS FUND ANNOUNCES 2010 WORLD MONUMENTS WATCH LIST OF 100 MOST ENDANGERED SITES" (PDF). World Monuments Fund. Retrieved 8 October 2009.
  2. ^ Holly Evarts (6 October 2009). "WORLD MONUMENTS FUND ANNOUNCES 2006 WORLD MONUMENTS WATCH LIST OF 100 MOST ENDANGERED SITES" (PDF). World Monuments Fund. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 16, 2008. Retrieved 8 October 2009.

External links edit