A Planning History of the Han Chang-an Relics
Date Issued
2007
Date
2007
Author(s)
Chen, Rou-Zih
DOI
zh-TW
Abstract
The site of Han Dynasty Chang-an Relics is located in northwestern part of Xi-an, a major regional center in western China. It is a highly significant archaeological place as well as a community for some 50,000 peasant villagers. Even though it has been under a construction moratorium for more than four decades, the place is faced with the threat of rapid urbanization in recent years.
This thesis explores how different agencies interact in the prosess of making a preservation plan for the Han Chang-an Site. The process was launched by Xian Administration of Cultural Heritage in 1995 and still hasn’t been finished. The investigation focuses on the period from 1995 to 2006. First, we introduce the context of the plan-making in the 1990s. Then we exam the planning process from 1995 to 2006 and look into several versions of the plan in order to explain how the plan was altered by various agencies. Lastly we conclude the planning process , and further analyze the planning process from three perspectives: the integration of archaeology and planning, the interactions among administrative institutions, the contradictions between historical preservation and local economic development.
Subjects
都市化
遺址
歷史保存
保存規劃
歷史復原
urbanization
Han Chang-an Relics
historical reservation
planning history
planning discourse
Type
thesis
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