GHF News
GHF Press Releases
GHF in the News
Conservation News

GHF Events
GHF Publications
GHF Videos
For Information on GHF click here to email us at info@globalheritagefund.org
Return to Conservation News main page

Raiders of Lost Art Loot Temples in Cambodia

Tourism Saves a Laotian City but Saps Its Buddhist Spirit

Iraqi extremists find funding in antiquity smuggling networks

Heritage site in peril: Angkor Wat is falling down

Hampi Cries for Conservation

Kabul's Old City Getting Face Lift

Revolt in russia

In Tikal, Temples in the Mist

We’re doing well in protecting our heritag e

Beyond Mesopotamia: A New View Of The Dawn Of Civilization

Large Ancient Settlement Unearthed in Puerto Rico

Mecca's hallowed skyline transformed

Naqsh-e Rostam to Fall Victim of Isfahan-Shiraz Railway

Tourists flock to endangered sites: Great Barrier Reef, Galapagos, Tibet all on the list

Development imperils Vietnam’s World Heritage sites: UNESCO

Preservation: Under Siege - Tourism and incompetence threaten one of China's best-preserved historical sites, the unique walled city of Pingyao

Laser mapping tool traces ancient sites: Device made for contractors helps archaeologists create first-ever digital blueprint

Time to protect our heritage: Only we humans can preserve the many wonders of the world for the benefit of future generations

New UNESCO World Heritage sites

Save the Casbah: In Algiers, preservationists race to rescue the storied quarter. But is it too late?

City of Ruins revisited: Hampi is all set to rise from its ashes. Manjula Sen explores the finer details of an ambitious blueprint integrating town planning, tourism and heritage

Bleak future for Beijing's heritage

China - Beijing's Heritage

Beijing loses soul to wrecking ball

Beijing's heritage status to be questioned

Re-established Happiness: In China, a heritage site rises from the ashes

Developers in China accused of destroying rich heritage

Love of heritage too little, too late to save hutongs from the developers

Report: China growth hurts heritage

Maya let off but Taj in shambles

Battle of the Hutong

The Other Machu Picchu

Locals, not invaders, destroy Great Wall

Quake-hit temples need years of repairs

World's Most Endangered Destinations

China selected for first heritage training institute

Vietnam's Ancient Son

Taliban-destroyed Buddhas may never be restored

New life for a famous garden

Cooling U.S. Market Sends Tomb Raiders Elsewhere

Tourist crowds threaten heritage

Raising Alexandria: More than 2,000 years after Alexander the Great founded the city, archaeologists are discovering its fabled remains, from the likely site of Cleopatra's palace to pieces of an astonishing lighthouse that was one of the Seven Wonders of the World

Ancient Temples Face Modern Assault: Rapid Rise in Tourism Is Overwhelming Cambodia's Ability to Protect Fragile Sites

Can the Earth's Wonders Be Saved? - The World Heritage program aims for nothing less than the protection of humanity's cultural and natural legacy. A progress report on a global effort

Heaps of History

Danger in the Ruins

Rescuing Angkor: An unprecedented effort to reclaim the ancient temples from the Cambodian jungle is racing against a tourist onslaught

Lijiang Fears Naxi Heritage Is Threatened : In China, City's Fame Brings Tourists and Hassles

Ignorance to Ruin Bisotun's Inscription. Lack of funding and general ignorance by cultural heritage authorities is to destroy the inscription of Bisotun

Severe flood waters threaten Thai World Heritage temples

Lebanon World Heritage sites need repair

Cairo bids joyous farewell to giant Ramses statue

Countries seek world heritage for Silk Road

Are the Angkor Wat temples doomed?

Tourism Suffers in Indonesian City Caught Between Quake and Volcano.

A liberated Lion City is roaring.

New finds rewriting the history of Mayans - Experts try to decipher brightly painted murals.

Machu Picchu Shows Wear of Being on Must-See List - Despite their bad reputation, tourists can also be one of the world's greatest forces for preservation.

Damage Control - Despite their bad reputation, tourists can also be one of the world's greatest forces for preservation.

Vanishing Acts - The world's treasures are under siege as never before. So get out and see as many as possible—before they disappear.

Hu Wants You - As China's president tours America, the government in Beijing is on a campaign to get tourists beyond the country's big cities and into its vast interior.

A Visionary Act. Born of concerns about the looting of archaeological sites and of the American Progressive Movement's belief in the betterment of society through active governmental involvement, the Antiquities Act of 1906 defined the study of archaeology as a scientific endeavor and resulted in the protection of 167 million acres of cultural and natural environments.

Ancient Sun Temple Uncovered in Cairo

Bombing Shatters Mosque In Iraq - Attack on Shiite Shrine Sets Off Protests, Violence

Italy and U.S. Sign Antiquities Accord

The embroidered-headdress economy

Looting of ancient sites threatens Iraqi heritage

Two decades later, no action on monument protection report

Hampi Disappearing

The Lost Palaces of Iraq

Are We Loving Our Heritage To Death?

My Son. City of the Cham.

Rescuing Angkor. An unprecedented effort to reclaim the ancient temples from the Cambodian jungle is racing against a tourist onslaught.

Mexico Struggles to Preserve Ancient Ruins

The Massacre of Mesopotamian Archaeology
Looting in Iraq is out of control

Days of Plunder: Coalition forces are doing little to prevent the widespread looting and destruction of Iraq's world-famous historical sites

Arsonists Threaten Maya City, National Park in Guatemala

UNESCO urges countries to balance tourism with heritage protection

China cashes in on World Heritage sites

New Money Needed For World's Ancient Monuments

Race To Save Cambodia's Heritage. The ancient temple complex at Angkor is Cambodia's pride and joy, even being depicted on the national flag

What These Ancient Places Can Teach Us Now

Archaeological sites in disarray. The Daily Star, Bangladesh

Mayan city played politics with neighbours

ASI 'Care' Can't Save Rahim Khan-i-Khanan's tomb from death

El Mirador, an ecotourism hotspot

Secret within the jungle: Troubling situation in the Mirador basin, the oldest Mayan region

Urgent need to protect the Mirador Basin: Previous governments irresponsibly approved forestry contracts

Appetite for Destruction - A historic neighborhood—and architect I.M. Pei's family home fall victim to Shanghai's building boom

"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
"Saving Our Global Heritage" - the book
 
Return to Conservation News main page

Hampi cries for conservation

business standard

Gouri Satya / Chennai/ Mysore
February 04, 2008

A distance of just 32-km, from Toranagallu to Hampi, takes an hour and a half. This is testimony enough to the infrastructure in this part of the country.

Scholars from India and abroad voiced their concerns at a seminar held there recently, calling for better infrastructure at the UNESCO Heritage Site, apart from conserving the monuments and the artifact, integrating it with the people living in the area.

With over 2,000-listed monuments and many more unlisted ones, scattered over 26 sq km, Hampi and its environs attract a large number of tourists, pilgrims and enthusiasts of archaeology, either to see and study the monuments and stones or to pray at the 15th century Virupaksha Temple.

This ‘largest open-air museum in the world’, however, offers them few facilities. With not even the basic facilities like toilets, drinking water and accommodation, the large number of visitors to this city of yore of grandeur and wealth of the Vijayanagar kings who ruled during 1336 and 1565, cries for attention today. The roads are in such state, it can takes six to eight hours to traverse the 133 km. The only consolation is water tanks are used to water these mud and potholed roads to save the visitors a dust-bath.

There are other issues too afflicting the heritage site. There is unfounded fear among the locals of being evicted from Hampi to save its monuments as it is a Heritage Site. They apprehend that this city, would be turned into a dead city of deserted monuments. The officials dub it a bogey of those who have encroached the monuments and the stone pavilions.

These and other issues figured at an international seminar on ‘Taking Vijayanagar’s Past Into the Future’, sponsored by the Hampi Foundation of the Vidyanagar (Toranagallu)-based JSW Steel Ltd. The foundation has taken up the task of formulating a master plan for the management of the Hampi region.

Cornell University (US) Professor Michael Tomlan said at the very outset, “There is growing concern across the world about this heritage site. With its World Heritage designation, it has translated into an important heritage site of the world. However, the problem is of the access to the centre. You have to have infrastructure to tackle the wide range of issues like sanitation, water and such others,” Tomlan said.

He was not for relocating people living here, but wanted the economic advantages of it to be seen.

Director of the Vijayanagara Research Project John M Fritz of US spoke on the human association with the place. “Whether there has to be a continued destruction of the archaeological record or conservation, it is ultimately India’s choice,” he said.

London-based architect and historian George Michell explained through an illustrated presentation how the damages to the heritage sites have continued over the years. “The early photographs of Vijayanagar compared with the subsequent years reveal there are many lessons to be learnt,” he said.

There was a general opinion that the controversial bridge should be built five km from the present place across the Tungabhadra.

top