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Winners of 2015 EU Prize for Cultural Heritage

PRESS RELEASE Winners of 2015 EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards announced
Winners of 2015 EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards announced 
 
Brussels / The Hague, 14 April 2015 – The European Commission and Europa Nostra have revealed today the winners of the 2015 European Union Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards, considered Europe’s most prestigious prize in the heritage field. The 28 award winners, selected from 263 applications submitted by organisations and individuals from 29 countries, are honoured for outstanding achievements in four categories: 1) conservation, 2) research and digitization, 3) dedicated service to heritage, and 4) education, training and awareness-raising.
The European Heritage Awards Ceremony will take place on 11 June at the Oslo City Hall and will be co-hosted by Fabian Stang, Mayor of Oslo, Tibor Navracsics, European Commissioner for Education, Culture, Youth and Sport, and Plácido Domingo, the renowned opera singer and President of Europa Nostra. At the ceremony, seven of the selected winners will be named as Grand Prix laureates, receiving €10,000 each, and one will receive the Public Choice Award, chosen in an online poll conducted by Europa Nostra.
“Cultural heritage is one of Europe’s biggest assets. It brings countless cultural, economic, social and environmental benefits to all of us. I would like to congratulate the winners of the 2015 EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards, who are the perfect example of what dedicated and competent Europeans can do for heritage – but also for our European identity, contributing to a sense of belonging. We all need to keep working together to help communities and citizens take ownership of our heritage, make it part of our daily lives and preserve it for the generations to come,” said Commissioner Navracsics.
 
„This year’s winners are powerful examples of creativity and innovation at work for Europe’s cultural heritage. They also demonstrate that heritage matters to Europe and its citizens. We trust that, under the leadership of President Juncker and Commissioner Navracsics, the European Union’s strategy for an integrated approach to cultural heritage will be further developed and implemented,added Plácido Domingo.
 
 
 
CONTACTS
 
For Europa Nostra
Elena Bianchi +31 70 302 40 58
Joana Pinheiro +31 70 302 40 55
Twitter: @europanostra
 
For the European Commission
Lucia Caudet +32 2 29 56182
Mirna Bratoz +32 2 29 87278
TO FIND OUT MORE
About each winning project:
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
2015 Award Winners
(listed alphabetically by country) 
 
Category Conservation
Category Research and Digitization
Research Projects:
Digitization Projects:
Category Dedicated Service
Category Education, Training and Awareness-Raising
Education Projects:
Training Projects:
Awareness-Raising Projects:
 
Background
 
The EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards was launched in 2002 by the European Commission in partnership with Europa Nostra. The Prize celebrates and promotes best practices related to heritage conservation, management, research, education and communication. In this way, it brings cultural heritage closer to European citizens and contributes to a stronger public recognition of cultural heritage as a strategic resource for Europe’s society and economy. A total of 415 outstanding heritage accomplishments have been recognised in the past 13 years.
Every year, organisations and individuals from all over Europe submit their applications to this awards scheme. Specialist juries made up of independent experts assess the nominations and select up to 30 winners in four categories: 1) conservation, 2) research and digitization, 3) dedicated service to heritage, and 4) education, training and awareness-raising. All the winners receive a plaque or trophy. The seven Grand Prix winners also receive €10,000 each.
The Awards are presented to the winners at a major public event, which is hosted each year in a different European city. The 2015 Awards Ceremony is to take place in Oslo and is part of Europa Nostra’s European Heritage Congress held in the Norwegian capital (10-14 June). The Congress is supported by the European Union’s Creative Europe programme, Riksantikvaren – the Directorate for Cultural Heritage and the Arts Council of Norway, and the City of Oslo, among many other public and private bodies from Norway.
The Prize received the support of the EU Culture programme (2007-2013) and is now supported by the new Creative Europe programme (2014-2020).
Europa Nostra is the European federation of heritage NGO’s. Covering 40 countries in Europe, the organisation is the voice of civil society committed to safeguarding and promoting Europe’s cultural and natural heritage. Europa Nostra campaigns to save Europe’s endangered monuments, sites and landscapes, in particular through ‘The 7 Most Endangered’ programme, run in partnership with the European Investment Bank Institute. It celebrates excellence through the EU Prize for Cultural Heritage / Europa Nostra Awards. It also seeks to contribute to European strategies and policies related to heritage. Founded in 1963, Europa Nostra is today recognised as the most representative and influential heritage network in Europe. In 2014, the organisation received an EU grant from the Creative Europe programme to support its network’s activity on ‘Mainstreaming Heritage’ in Europe.

Working visit to England to find viable future for the stage machinery of the Bourla Theatre

Neues aus Europa Nostra

The Flemish Government, the City of Antwerp, Toneelhuis, Europa Nostra and the European Investment Bank Institute will jointly investigate what adjustments will be required and may be realised, and on what conditions, so as in due course to achieve the compatibility and potential synergies between the protected historic stage machinery of the Bourla Theater in Antwerp in Belgium, dating from 1834, and the current day needs of the resident stage company Toneelhuis.

 

After obtaining the results of the feasibility study, made on instruction of the Antwerp Municipality last year in order to investigate under which conditions the requirements of Toneelhuis could be met in the Bourla building, PERSPECTIV – the Association of Historic Theatres in Europe, took the initiative to submit the Bourla as a candidate for Europa Nostra’s ‘The 7 Most Endangered’ programme. It had become evident that apart from some radical changes to the theatre itself, the complete dismantling of the – largely intact – original 1834 stage-machinery, had been championed.

 

During the past weeks two clarifying discussions could take place with Toneelhuis, as the directly involved artistically and technically responsible partner, and the Antwerp Municipality, as the owner.

 

All partners have accepted that, in order to reach a responsible policy choice, it will be necessary to assess what may be possible within the confines of a combination of the present infrastructure, the desired modern equipment and the contemporary programming. All were convinced that it will be essential to engage relevant external expertise, and analyse and calculate together withthem the various possibilities.

 

All partners have accepted the invitation of the review group to pay a working visit – together with David Wilmore, expert in the usage of historic and modern theatre infrastructure and how to manage it – to a number of theatres where diverse combinations of historic infrastructure and contemporary theatre are effective in England on 12-13 March 2015.

Vier Schlösser – eine Rallye

Servus TV Donnerstag, 18.12., 20:15 Uhr: „Vier Schlösser – eine Rallye“ >>

Schloss Birstein, nahe Frankfurt. Die glanzvolle Residenz der Fürstenfamilie
von Isenburg.
Schloss Dennenlohe Robert Freiherr von Süsskind
Schloss Langenburg seit 23 Generationen im Besitz der Fürstenfamilie
Hohenlohe-Langenburg. Zeit genug, um in fast alle europäischen Adelshäuser
einzuheiraten und die adeligen Familienbande zu stärken. So überrascht es
nicht, dass auch einmal Cousin Charles, besser bekannt als Prinz of Wales, zu
Besuch kommt.
Schloss Altenhof im Mühlviertel. Dort lebt Norbert Salburg-Falkenstein
gemeinsam mit seiner Frau, einer quirligen Schwedin, die die ehemalige
Schlossruine mit 45 Zimmern in ein bezauberndes Schmuckkästchen
verwandelt hat.

European Parliament public hearing

The Committee on Culture and Education of the European Parliament held a public hearing on ‚An integrated approach to cultural heritage in Europe: state of play and perspectives‚ in Brussels on the morning of 2 December 2014. Parliamentarians, members of other European institutions, and experts and representatives from the cultural and heritage fields, including delegates from Europa Nostra and Future for Religious Heritage, attended the event.

 

Key topics:

– Thematic presentations made by experts

– European Year of Cultural Heritage

– ENtopia: Our Places in Europe

– Conclusions on participatory governance of cultural heritage & new Work Plan for Culture (2015-2018)

– European project Cultural Heritage Counts for Europe

 

Read more: www.europanostra.org/news/542