By Rey Anthony Chiu/PIA
Tagbilaran Diocese brings in
heritage conservation talks
TAGBILARAN CITY, Bohol, October 25 (PIA)—Learning from the lessons of the 2013 earthquake, the Diocese of Tagbilaran brings to Bohol the Architectural Planning for the Churches of the Diocese of Tagbilaran Beyond 2022, in a bid to engage parishioners to properly document its heritage structures to better preserve and conserve them for the future generations.
Set at the Bishop Manuel Mascariñas Hall of the Elijah Spirituality Center of the Immaculate Heart of Mary Seminary Complex, the half-a-day lecture forum gathered parish priests, caretakers, and church maintenance teams members of the parish pastoral council to give the communities a hint on architectural and development planning to attain a shared vision to conserve the cultural heritage of these age-old structures in churches.
“Cultural heritage is the entire body of the tangible and non-tangible marks or signs of human experience handed down by preceding generations to each culture,” speaker and Cebuana Architect Melva Rodrigiez Java shared.
Citing the Venice Charter of 1964, Archt. Java emphasized that built or architectural heritage remarkably embodies the material and non-material values of the past, stressing that these structures in churches, plazas and even monuments are all imbued with the messages from the past, these historic monuments of generations of people [must] remain to the present day as living witnesses of their age-old traditions.
Along these arguments too, the Diocese of Tagbilaran led by Bishop Alberto Uy and the Diocesan Commission for the Cultural Patrimony of the Church, intends to engage the communities to be conservation practitioners who will have the duty to safeguard the architectural heritage and hand them to the future generations.
Recent efforts by newer parish curators and parish priests is to refurbish the heritage structures in the form of masonry work, repainting or simply destroying the old historic structures for newer facades.
In still several areas in Bohol, parishes venture into projects that alter the general form or part of the heritage structure, damaging the priceless edifices or built heritage by putting in concrete, cement, mortar, or other aesthetic enhancements that do more harm than good in these heritage structures.
On this, Architect Java, who talked about the Catholic Churches: Handing on Splendor said, “Cultural conservation practitioners see it as their duty to safeguard architectural heritage whether in materials and methods, in form or in its function, location, setting, spirit, and feeling and to hand them on, in full richness of their authenticity where their true cultural value is truthfully expressed,”
“The material cultural heritage of the church always reflects and should communicate the essential immaterial heritage, in other words, the traditions of spirituality, the religious and devotional customs and practices of worship characterizing the Catholic faith,” she added.
A popular figure in the built-heritage conservation circles, Architect Java then pushes on with a pitch on urging communities to do a thorough planning process consisting of survey and documentation, historical assessment and scientific analysis of the heritage resource, coupled with policy recommendations for proper interventions and implementation.
As a segue to the famous heritage conservator, Architect Dominic Galicia, whose works have been published in the prestigious architectural periodicals, then talked about Management Conservation Plans, using his work on the conservation management plan of the St Joseph Cathedral in Tagbilaran.
“A Conservation management plan of a site is a framework that helps us to understand the site, using its past and present to help us prepare for the future,” he told the forum participants.
At the core of all this understanding is the assessment of the site’s significance as a benchmark for all actions and interventions that may affect the site, Archt. Galicia, the principal architect of the Dominic Galicia Architects intoned.
Another speaker, a priest architect: Fr. Alex Ona Bautista pitched about master development planning for an integrated approach to conservation.
By putting up these architectural plans, future generations of the faithful would not only have a fair idea and appreciation of the past that influences their personalities, but would tend to allow them to make decisions based on these factors. (rahc/PIA-7/Bohol)
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