TY - JOUR
T1 - Community-led initiatives for the rehabilitation and management of vernacular settlements in Oman
T2 - a phenomenon in the making
AU - Naima, Benkari
N1 - Funding Information:
The author would like to extend her sincere thanks to: H.E. Sayed Ibrahim b. Said al-Boussaidi Minister-Governor of Musandam MM. Malik b. Hilal b. Mohamed al-Abri and Jaber b. Mubarak al-Abri, from al-Hamra inistiative; MM. Zahir b. Sulaiman b. Issa al-Zakwani and Sulaiman b. Mohamed b. Sulaiman al-Sulaimani, from Bawareq Nizwa International, and Mr. Nayef al-Abri From ‘Misfah Old House’ company, for the precious time and attention given to answer the questions and inquiries during or after the on-site interviews. The author acknowledges also the contribution of Mr. Hedili-Haidar Boudidah for assisting in collecting and categorizing the data from Booking.com website, and Mr. Riadh Ashoor Keskes, CEO and Co-Founder Greenbird 3D for providing high resolution aerial views of the studied settlements. Finally, she expresses here deepest gratitude for the anonymous reviewers and Journal editors whose comments and suggestions have highly improved the first draft of this paper.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021, The Author(s).
PY - 2021/12
Y1 - 2021/12
N2 - Once abandoned for more than three decades, vernacular settlements in Oman are now being progressively reinvested in to foster the country’s heritage tourism sector. The present research focuses on the emerging phenomenon of community-led initiatives for vernacular heritage rehabilitation and adaptive reuse in Oman. Through an examination of three case studies, its aim is to describe this process and its modes of action and discuss its effects on vernacular settlement transformations. A mixed research methodology was designed to include (A) analyses of relevant primary and secondary data, (B) documented onsite observations, (C) interviews with local community representatives and key players in the operations of rehabilitation, and (D) extractions and analyses of quantitative data from a hotel booking website. The research sheds light on unsuspected interrelations within and between the projects being implemented in these settlements and their operating modes. It reveals the focal role of a local community in a kind of ‘bottom-up’ management of its built heritage, coupled with a ‘horizontal cooperation’ between the three initiatives studied in this research. Moreover, it shows that a heavily centralised and top-down policy for the field of heritage conservation and management is among the main obstacles that hinder such initiatives. Furthermore, community-led operations of vernacular heritage rehabilitation are being undertaken under insufficient regulations in terms of land use, building restoration and adaptive reuse. In this context, the paper discusses some of the serious threats and concerns faced by such initiatives and proposes actionable solutions to mitigate these hindrances.
AB - Once abandoned for more than three decades, vernacular settlements in Oman are now being progressively reinvested in to foster the country’s heritage tourism sector. The present research focuses on the emerging phenomenon of community-led initiatives for vernacular heritage rehabilitation and adaptive reuse in Oman. Through an examination of three case studies, its aim is to describe this process and its modes of action and discuss its effects on vernacular settlement transformations. A mixed research methodology was designed to include (A) analyses of relevant primary and secondary data, (B) documented onsite observations, (C) interviews with local community representatives and key players in the operations of rehabilitation, and (D) extractions and analyses of quantitative data from a hotel booking website. The research sheds light on unsuspected interrelations within and between the projects being implemented in these settlements and their operating modes. It reveals the focal role of a local community in a kind of ‘bottom-up’ management of its built heritage, coupled with a ‘horizontal cooperation’ between the three initiatives studied in this research. Moreover, it shows that a heavily centralised and top-down policy for the field of heritage conservation and management is among the main obstacles that hinder such initiatives. Furthermore, community-led operations of vernacular heritage rehabilitation are being undertaken under insufficient regulations in terms of land use, building restoration and adaptive reuse. In this context, the paper discusses some of the serious threats and concerns faced by such initiatives and proposes actionable solutions to mitigate these hindrances.
KW - Adaptive reuse
KW - Community involvement in heritage management
KW - Gulf cooperation council (GCC) states
KW - Heritage houses
KW - Heritage tourism
KW - Post-oil economy
KW - Sustainable development
KW - Vernacular settlements
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U2 - 10.1186/s43238-021-00039-5
DO - 10.1186/s43238-021-00039-5
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85121145396
SN - 2096-3041
VL - 5
JO - Built Heritage
JF - Built Heritage
IS - 1
M1 - 21
ER -