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Search Results (278)

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26 pages, 7211 KB  
Article
Identification of Obstacles to Culture–Tourism Integration and Revitalization Strategies for Traditional Villages from the Perspective of Cultural Landscape Genes: A Case Study of Dayuwan Village
by Xuesong Yang, Xudong Li and Kailing Deng
Land 2026, 15(4), 681; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040681 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 202
Abstract
Traditional villages embody regional culture and local knowledge, yet culture–tourism integration often suffers from a mismatch between resource value and effective transformation. To address this problem, this study proposes a two-dimensional “benefit–obstacle” diagnostic and strategy-matching framework and tests its case-based applicability in Dayuwan [...] Read more.
Traditional villages embody regional culture and local knowledge, yet culture–tourism integration often suffers from a mismatch between resource value and effective transformation. To address this problem, this study proposes a two-dimensional “benefit–obstacle” diagnostic and strategy-matching framework and tests its case-based applicability in Dayuwan Village. First, a cultural landscape gene (CLG) atlas was constructed for the village based on a geo-information coding scheme, covering both tangible and intangible CLGs. Second, a four-dimensional evaluation system was operationalized through five expert judgments and 106 valid on-site questionnaires collected from tourists (n = 67) and residents (n = 39). Criterion weights were determined using an AHP–entropy combination approach, and the comprehensive benefit closeness coefficient was calculated via TOPSIS. Third, an obstacle degree identification model was employed to pinpoint key constraints and derive composite obstacle degrees. Results within the Dayuwan case show that the TOPSIS closeness coefficients of the 17 genes ranged from 0.653 to 0.782 (mean = 0.714), with 4, 6, and 7 genes classified as excellent, good, and medium, respectively; composite obstacle degrees ranged from 0.0228 to 0.1975. In Dayuwan Village, higher obstacle degrees clustered mainly in intangible CLGs, whereas Ming–Qing architecture and frequently practiced folk-cultural genes showed comparatively lower obstacle degrees. The transformation process is constrained by four mechanisms—landscape character protection, economic transformation, social identity, and market demand—with economic transformation constraints being the most prominent. Based on the benefit–obstacle matrix, 17 CLGs were classified into five activation scenarios and matched with corresponding revitalization strategies. This framework links benefit ranking, obstacle diagnosis, and strategy matching, and provides a case-based diagnostic reference for the conservation and culture–tourism integration of villages with comparable heritage conditions, subject to local recalibration of indicators, weights, and thresholds. Full article
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15 pages, 258 KB  
Article
Powers for the People: Social Complexity, Luke Cage, and Civil Discourse
by Justin F. Martin
Humanities 2026, 15(4), 59; https://doi.org/10.3390/h15040059 - 20 Apr 2026
Viewed by 375
Abstract
Since his inception, Luke Cage’s superhero mission has explored themes related to justice, interpersonal relations, and institutional integrity. This paper draws on examples from comics and his television series to explicate these themes through the lens of social and moral development. In doing [...] Read more.
Since his inception, Luke Cage’s superhero mission has explored themes related to justice, interpersonal relations, and institutional integrity. This paper draws on examples from comics and his television series to explicate these themes through the lens of social and moral development. In doing so, it suggests lessons for improving the recent landscape of American civil discourse. The Overview introduces the character against the backdrop of the social role of superheroes, moral development scholarship, and recent polling data related to civil discourse. The Heroic Journey examines his superhero mission further, highlighting his attempts to promote a sense of mutual trust and shared obligations across varied social interactions. Lastly, the Super Takeaway discusses the potential of Luke Cage narratives to keep disagreeing persons “at the table” long enough to come to some (civil) agreement. Full article
27 pages, 3544 KB  
Article
A Three-Dimensional Landscape Framework for Stakeholder Identification in Coal Mining Heritage Conservation
by Qi Liu, Nor Arbina Zainal Abidin, Nor Zarifah Maliki and Wanbao Ge
Land 2026, 15(4), 622; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040622 - 10 Apr 2026
Viewed by 408
Abstract
With the transformation of resource-based cities and the restructuring of industrial sectors, the sustainable conservation of coal mining heritage has become a global focus. In China, coal mining heritage faces challenges such as degradation and inadequate management, highlighting the urgent need for more [...] Read more.
With the transformation of resource-based cities and the restructuring of industrial sectors, the sustainable conservation of coal mining heritage has become a global focus. In China, coal mining heritage faces challenges such as degradation and inadequate management, highlighting the urgent need for more context-sensitive and systematic conservation approaches. This study develops an integrated, landscape-oriented analytical framework for stakeholder identification to address these challenges and to better understand stakeholder differentiation in coal mining heritage conservation. The research objectives are as follows: (1) to bring together a three-dimensional framework based on material-technical, socio-cultural, and experiential dimensions; (2) to analyse the roles and interactions of stakeholders; and (3) to explore how technical knowledge, socio-cultural memory, and daily experiences influence the protection and reuse of coal mining heritage sites. The study integrates the theoretical frameworks of landscape character assessment, historic urban landscape, and experiential landscape, using data from field observations and interviews analysed via ATLAS.ti. The findings show that the proposed framework offers a more systematic understanding of the dynamic relationships between stakeholders and heritage landscapes, thereby providing practical guidance for local governments and relevant institutions in developing inclusive and context-sensitive conservation strategies. Full article
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26 pages, 17608 KB  
Article
Towards Character-Based Zoning: Managing Historic Urban Landscapes and Integrating a Dynamic Integrity Framework in Jingdezhen, China
by Ding He, Yameng Zhang and Liqiong Wu
Land 2026, 15(4), 615; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15040615 - 9 Apr 2026
Viewed by 320
Abstract
The Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) approach provides a vital and extensive framework for heritage conservation. However, local practices often struggle to spatially translate qualitative assessments into quantitative controls at the urban block level, the most effective basic scale for administrative implementation, thereby limiting [...] Read more.
The Historic Urban Landscape (HUL) approach provides a vital and extensive framework for heritage conservation. However, local practices often struggle to spatially translate qualitative assessments into quantitative controls at the urban block level, the most effective basic scale for administrative implementation, thereby limiting effective responses to the Management of Change. By integrating HUL with the theory of Dynamic Integrity, this study constructs a multi-dimensional evaluation index system and proposes a HUL evaluation method based on Character-Based Zoning. Taking the 125 urban block units of the historic urban area of Jingdezhen as a case study, this research integrates historical mapping, GIS spatial analysis, and Co-occurrence Network Analysis to reveal the internal structural logic of the heritage system. The study finds that the HUL of Jingdezhen is a multi-nodal dynamic system driven by four core elements: ritual beliefs, administrative management, production activities, and commercial guilds. Critically, modern visual intrusions severely impact the core heritage components within this system, specifically the Dubang and ritual culture. Based on the three dimensions of Heritage Richness, Landscape Sensitivity and Value Centrality, the study systematically identifies a total of 11 types of urban block units within the plots that characterize distinct historic landscape features and transformation patterns. This research not only deepens the localized application of HUL theory but also provides a scientific basis and methodological support for the Management of Change and periodic assessment in dynamic heritage environments. Full article
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38 pages, 9459 KB  
Article
A Multi-Level Street-View Recognition Framework for Quantifying Spatial Interface Characteristics in Historic Commercial Districts
by Yiyuan Yuan, Zhen Yu and Junming Chen
Buildings 2026, 16(8), 1474; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16081474 - 8 Apr 2026
Viewed by 399
Abstract
In the context of urban renewal, the spatial interface of historic commercial districts functions as both a carrier of historical character and a key setting for commercial activity, public life, and local cultural expression. To address the limitations of conventional studies that rely [...] Read more.
In the context of urban renewal, the spatial interface of historic commercial districts functions as both a carrier of historical character and a key setting for commercial activity, public life, and local cultural expression. To address the limitations of conventional studies that rely heavily on field observation and qualitative description, this study takes Xiaohe Zhijie in Hangzhou as a case and develops a multi-level street-view recognition framework for the quantitative analysis of spatial interface characteristics. Based on street-view image collection and standardized preprocessing, a sample database was established at the sampling-point scale. Semantic segmentation, automated commercial object detection, and manual interpretation were combined to identify interface elements, including buildings, sky, greenery, pavement, vehicles, pedestrians, and commercial objects, while commercial content was assessed in terms of locality and homogenization. The results show that Xiaohe Zhijie exhibits a building-dominated and relatively enclosed interface pattern, with greenery and pavement forming the basic environmental ground, weak vehicle interference, and localized enhancement of vitality through commercial objects and pedestrian activities. Significant differences were found among street segments in openness, commercial coverage, and local expression. Three interface types were identified: commercial–cultural composite, local life-oriented, and waterfront landscape–cultural composite. The main challenge lies not in commercialization itself, but in stronger visual locality than content locality and increasing homogenization, resulting in a pattern of “localized form but homogenized content.” Full article
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23 pages, 6225 KB  
Article
Experiencing Coordination with Non-Humans Through Role-Playing: The “Ubuntu” Game for Engaging with Non-Human Agency
by Nicolas Gaidet
Sustainability 2026, 18(7), 3602; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18073602 - 7 Apr 2026
Viewed by 292
Abstract
Scholars across disciplines are urging a rethinking of human–nature relationships beyond anthropocentrism, but these ideas remain difficult to convey to broader audiences and to implement in environmental management practices. This study analyses the design and performance of a serious game (used in 12 [...] Read more.
Scholars across disciplines are urging a rethinking of human–nature relationships beyond anthropocentrism, but these ideas remain difficult to convey to broader audiences and to implement in environmental management practices. This study analyses the design and performance of a serious game (used in 12 sessions with 99 participants in total) developed to encourage participants to reflect on modes of attention and relationships with non-humans in an everyday environment. The game draws on storytelling and art-based approaches to guide players through a thought experiment in which humans and non-humans can gradually communicate and coordinate. A series of game features have been designed to challenge players’ perception of ownership, stakeholders and agency beyond humans. In the sessions played, players initially competed against each other. The revelation, throughout the game, of non-humans’ presence in the landscape, and among the game’s characters themselves, led players to cooperate. Yet they mostly cooperated among human characters to address the needs of non-humans, but they rarely engaged directly with the non-human characters themselves through voluntary interactions. Engaging participants to act as, and interact with, non-humans through role-play allows questioning established interpretations and power dynamics in land or resource management. It offers an imaginative yet embodied experience for exploring what happens if non-humans are treated as active partners with whom we can directly communicate and coordinate to address environmental challenges. Full article
(This article belongs to the Section Sustainability, Biodiversity and Conservation)
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33 pages, 23645 KB  
Article
Multi-Scaled Landscape Character Assessment of the Longchuan River Basin, China: Integrating Ecological Units and Administrative Hierarchies
by Congjin Wang, Beichen Ge, Xi Yuan, Pinjie Luo and Yuhong Song
Sustainability 2026, 18(6), 3106; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18063106 - 21 Mar 2026
Viewed by 423
Abstract
The mountainous regions of southwest China represent one of the world’s most distinctive and sensitive areas. Against the backdrop of rapid urbanization and water conservancy construction, rural landscapes in these regions face challenges such as fragmentation, homogenization, and loss of local distinctiveness. Responding [...] Read more.
The mountainous regions of southwest China represent one of the world’s most distinctive and sensitive areas. Against the backdrop of rapid urbanization and water conservancy construction, rural landscapes in these regions face challenges such as fragmentation, homogenization, and loss of local distinctiveness. Responding to the initiative of the European Landscape Convention (ELC), this study takes the Longchuan River Basin in Southwest China as a case study, and constructs a rural Landscape Character Assessment (LCA) framework adapted to the multi-level governance system. We established a multi-scale evaluation system covering large scale (county-level), medium scale (township-level), and detailed scale (reservoir area-level). The large scale integrated 6 categories of natural variables, while the medium scale involved 4 categories of natural variables and 4 categories of cultural variables. Using a Principal Component Analysis–Two-Step Clustering coupled method and eCognition software, landscape character types and areas were identified respectively. The results show that 11 landscape character types and 41 landscape character areas were identified at the large scale, and 6 landscape character types and 73 landscape character areas at the medium scale. At the detailed scale, 4 typical reservoir areas were selected for field surveys, which verified the in-depth impact of hydropower construction on landscape characteristics. The study provides a transferable technical pathway and policy recommendations for monitoring and managing rural landscapes in mountainous regions. Supports the long-term sustainability and resilience of rural landscapes in China. Full article
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24 pages, 5391 KB  
Article
How Can Crowd Perception Methodologies Be Employed to Understand the Locality Characteristics of Small Towns Within the Jiangnan Water Network? From the Perspective of Urban–Rural–Wildland Integration
by Lin Zhang, Yankai Miao and Bianchi Alessandro
Buildings 2026, 16(6), 1214; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16061214 - 19 Mar 2026
Viewed by 288
Abstract
Serving as a link between cities and villages, small towns play a crucial role in reducing the disparity between urban and rural areas. The spaces of small towns in Southern Jiangsu Province not only showcase the landscape style of production–living–ecological but also embody [...] Read more.
Serving as a link between cities and villages, small towns play a crucial role in reducing the disparity between urban and rural areas. The spaces of small towns in Southern Jiangsu Province not only showcase the landscape style of production–living–ecological but also embody local cultural characteristics, acting as a unique “container” for preserving the memory of Jiangnan water towns. However, during the urbanization process, these spaces often fail to respect the principles of landscape locality, instead favoring standardization and efficient designs that overlook human perspectives on landscape perception and understanding. This results in the “homogenization” and “heterogenization” of Jiangnan small towns landscape spaces. As county urbanization shifts toward improving human environments, human-scale spatial perception has become key to localized planning. By combining street view photos with deep learning, the ‘2bulu’ dataset supports large-scale analysis of crowd perception and precise detection of spatial and landscape features. This study investigated the proportions of landscape elements in the small towns’ town–rural–wilderness of Wujiang District that play a direct role in shaping people’s perceived visual identity and sense of cultural resonance, assessed the spatial distribution of perceived landscape locality scores, and revealed the positive or negative correlations between the proportions of visual landscape elements and the sense of place. This study analyzed perceived landscape locality in Wujiang small towns based on crowd perception, exploring which town–rural–wilderness landscape elements are perceived as having local character, and highlighted the importance of preserving locality through integrated town–rural–wilderness landscape elements. The findings offer insights for quantitative measuring landscape locality perception and support planning of appropriate local landscapes in Jiangnan small towns. Full article
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21 pages, 2017 KB  
Article
CNN-Based Classification of Façade Motifs in Market-Developed Housing: A Computational Approach to Tel Aviv’s 1980s–1990s Urban Fabric
by Yiftach Ashkenazi, Dana Silverstein-Duani, Yasha Jacob Grobman and Yael Allweil
Land 2026, 15(3), 460; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15030460 - 13 Mar 2026
Viewed by 372
Abstract
This study applies deep learning to classify façade features in Tel Aviv’s market-developed apartment housing (1980s–1990s), a vast landscape typically excluded from architectural history due to its non-iconic character. We constructed a curated corpus of 877 expert-labeled high-resolution façade images and evaluated whether [...] Read more.
This study applies deep learning to classify façade features in Tel Aviv’s market-developed apartment housing (1980s–1990s), a vast landscape typically excluded from architectural history due to its non-iconic character. We constructed a curated corpus of 877 expert-labeled high-resolution façade images and evaluated whether convolutional neural networks can detect historically meaningful patterns at urban scale. Focusing on the “staggered balcony” motif—linked to national regulation 5442/1992—we show that a ConvNeXt-Tiny model achieved robust classification performance (96.6% accuracy, 90.3% F1) after rigorous dataset curation and expert relabeling. Initial experiments on noisier data produced inconsistent results, underscoring the importance of domain expertise in operationalizing historical categories. Rather than treating machine learning as definitive classification, we present an iterative workflow where architectural historians use model outputs to refine categories, test morphological hypotheses, and identify overlooked variations. The findings demonstrate how CNN-based analysis can advance empirical research on non-iconic built environments and open methodological pathways for cultural heritage studies and digital architectural humanities. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Landscape Governance in the Age of Social Media, 3rd Edition)
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29 pages, 10558 KB  
Article
AI-Powered Interpretation of Traditional Village Landscape Language: An Analysis of Xinye Village in Zhejiang, China
by Yanying Liang, Tao Chen and Zizhen Hong
Sustainability 2026, 18(5), 2183; https://doi.org/10.3390/su18052183 - 24 Feb 2026
Viewed by 511
Abstract
Amidst rapid urbanization and modernization, numerous traditional villages in China face severe challenges, including landscape homogenization and the erosion of their distinctive characteristics. Addressing this issue requires a method capable of systematically identifying, analyzing, and reconstructing both the landscape and its underlying cultural [...] Read more.
Amidst rapid urbanization and modernization, numerous traditional villages in China face severe challenges, including landscape homogenization and the erosion of their distinctive characteristics. Addressing this issue requires a method capable of systematically identifying, analyzing, and reconstructing both the landscape and its underlying cultural features. This study proposes a digital analytical approach that integrates multimodal artificial intelligence with landscape language theory to address the homogenization of cultural landscapes in traditional Chinese villages. Taking Xinye Village in Zhejiang Province as a case study, the research systematically decodes its landscape spatial narratives and underlying cultural genes. This framework systematically deconstructs village landscapes across four levels: “vocabulary, context, grammar, and semantics”. The village image database is first automatically recognized and statistically analyzed by computer vision technology, which extracts 31 core landscape vocabulary items from three main categories and nine subcategories. Second, Retrieval-augmented Generation technology is employed to synthesize from the constructed domain-specific corpus, a natural context structured around Yuhua Mountain and Daofeng Mountain, as well as a cultural context based on ancestral hall order, connected through folk activities, and idealized by farming and reading passed down through generations. Building on this framework, a multimodal model was used to examine the spatial composition and combinatorial laws of landscape features. Six essential dimensions—spatial layout, visual order, element combination, functional relationships, circulation layout, and scale correlations—revealed the spatial grammar of shuikou landscape. Lastly, the semantic values conveyed by the landscape vocabulary were thoroughly analyzed across three dimensions—form, function, and culture—by integrating a knowledge base. This work creates a landscape language atlas of Xinye Village by combining these studies and using a linguistic model of “character-word-sentence-paragraph”. By methodically deciphering the clan’s cultural code of “farming and reading passed down through generations”, this clearly reconstructs the spatial narrative logic from micro-elements to macro-patterns. This research not only advances the study of landscape language in traditional villages from qualitative description toward a systematic, digital, and interpretable paradigm but also provides an operational theoretical and methodological foundation for the in-depth interpretation, conservation, and transmission of traditional village cultural landscapes. Full article
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37 pages, 19473 KB  
Article
Landscape Character and Quality Assessment Through Map-Based Visibility Indicators: A Case Study in Western Crete, Greece
by Georgios Lampropoulos, Evangelia G. Drakou and Dimitrios D. Alexakis
Land 2026, 15(2), 327; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15020327 - 14 Feb 2026
Viewed by 567
Abstract
Landscape Character Assessment (LCA) is increasingly used to support landscape-sensitive planning; however, existing approaches often lack an operational integration of visual perception and map-based indicators, particularly in complex Mediterranean island contexts. This study demonstrates a methodology for integrated landscape character and quality assessment, [...] Read more.
Landscape Character Assessment (LCA) is increasingly used to support landscape-sensitive planning; however, existing approaches often lack an operational integration of visual perception and map-based indicators, particularly in complex Mediterranean island contexts. This study demonstrates a methodology for integrated landscape character and quality assessment, combining landform and landcover mapping with map-based visibility indicators derived from the local road network. The approach was applied to the Platanos community in western Crete, a representative Mediterranean landscape of contrasting coastal resort zones, agricultural lowlands, and cultural heritage sites. The methodology followed three stages: desk-based mapping of Land Description Units (LDUs) using landform and landcover data, field surveys to define Landscape Character Types (LCTs) and assess socio-cultural and perceptual attributes, and GIS-based visibility analysis from 18 road observation points. Six visual indicators (connectivity, complexity, naturalness, disturbance, historicity, and visual scale) were calculated to quantify spatial and perceptual characteristics. Results revealed a spatial division between a core northern area of high visual scale, cultural importance, but also disturbance, and a southern area of greater naturalness but lower visual openness and cultural visibility. These results highlight that high landscape quality is not solely associated with naturalness, but emerges from the interaction between physical structure, cultural elements, and visual perception. The findings underscore the complementary value of combining physical, cultural, and perception-based metrics in LCA. The proposed framework offers a reproducible tool for evidence-based landscape planning and heritage-sensitive development in accordance with the principles of the European Landscape Convention (ELC). Full article
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18 pages, 1374 KB  
Article
Extraction and Conservation of Urban Architectural Style Features in Qinghai–Tibet Plateau Towns Based on Principal Component Analysis and Cluster Analysis
by Jianguo Liu, Benteng Liu and Lisha Ye
Buildings 2026, 16(4), 787; https://doi.org/10.3390/buildings16040787 - 14 Feb 2026
Viewed by 401
Abstract
Amid accelerating global urbanization, the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, as a repository of multi-ethnic architectural heritage, plays a crucial role in preserving plateau cultural diversity and sustaining harmonious human–environment relationships. A critical research gap persists, however, in the systematic, comparable, and quantitative assessment of urban [...] Read more.
Amid accelerating global urbanization, the Qinghai–Tibet Plateau, as a repository of multi-ethnic architectural heritage, plays a crucial role in preserving plateau cultural diversity and sustaining harmonious human–environment relationships. A critical research gap persists, however, in the systematic, comparable, and quantitative assessment of urban architectural character across plateau towns, particularly in high-altitude, ecologically sensitive, and multi-ethnic regions such as Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture. This study takes the Haixi Mongol and Tibetan Autonomous Prefecture as a case to address the specific paradox between the homogenization of urban architectural styles and the erosion of cultural authenticity in plateau towns. We develop and apply an innovative three-dimensional evaluation model—encompassing natural substrate, built environment, and cultural context—to 22 towns. For the first time in research on this region, a chained methodological approach integrating descriptive statistics, principal component analysis (PCA), and cluster analysis is employed to systematically examine the spatial differentiation of architectural character. The analysis reveals three key findings. First, it delineates a regional composite landscape characterized by mountain-basin enclosures, seasonal arid rivers and lakes, small-scale towns with expansive layouts, and multi-ethnic cultural fusion. Second, it identifies a clear ternary differentiation in urban style dominance: nine towns are nature-dominated, nine are human-made (built environment) dominated, and only four are culture-dominated, quantitatively highlighting a significant weakness in the cultural dimension. Third, cluster analysis objectively classifies the towns into eight distinct character groups—for instance, Category I towns exhibit strong architectural regionalism and traditional continuity, whereas Category V towns integrate modern relics with adjacent mountain-water features. Methodologically, this study contributes by providing a replicable, chained quantitative framework that addresses a critical gap in comparative urban studies of high-altitude, underdeveloped regions. Empirically, it reveals the specific “nature > human-made > culture” dominance pattern in Haixi and offers a scientific foundation for formulating differentiated conservation and development strategies tailored to distinct town types in the ecologically fragile areas of western China. Full article
(This article belongs to the Topic Sustainable Building Development and Promotion)
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30 pages, 20917 KB  
Article
Protection of Immovable Cultural Heritage: The Urban Structure of Vlasotince, Southern Serbia
by Ana Momčilović Petronijević, Ivana Cvetković, Đorđe Stošić, Mirko Stanimirovic and Ivan Ćirić
Urban Sci. 2026, 10(2), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/urbansci10020106 - 10 Feb 2026
Viewed by 619
Abstract
This study examines the architectural heritage of Vlasotince, a small town in southern Serbia affected by long-term depopulation, economic stagnation, and insufficient institutional mechanisms for heritage care. The research provides a comprehensive and systematically documented basis for protecting the historic urban core—Stara čaršija—using [...] Read more.
This study examines the architectural heritage of Vlasotince, a small town in southern Serbia affected by long-term depopulation, economic stagnation, and insufficient institutional mechanisms for heritage care. The research provides a comprehensive and systematically documented basis for protecting the historic urban core—Stara čaršija—using an integrated methodology that combines archival analysis, urban and architectural surveying, interviews, and extensive 3D photogrammetric documentation. The collected dataset enabled the evaluation of cultural, architectural, and urban values, the identification of a coherent spatial cultural-historical unit, and the development of a typology of degradation affecting the historic fabric. Results show that 52% of buildings within the core possess exceptional or notable value, yet degradation is widespread: 40% of buildings exhibit altered openings or portals, 29% have lost decorative plasterwork, and 23% represent new constructions incompatible with the ambient character. Mapping values and vulnerabilities at the building level allow for the definition of priority interventions. The study demonstrates that combining digital documentation, spatial analysis, and value-based assessment offers an effective framework for heritage management in small towns with limited resources. The proposed methodological model is replicable and contributes to data-driven conservation planning, supporting the sustainable revitalization of historic urban landscapes in similar regional contexts. Full article
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24 pages, 8109 KB  
Article
Geodiversity of Skyros Island (Aegean Sea, Greece): Linking Geological Heritage, Cultural Landscapes, and Sustainable Development
by Evangelia Ioannidi Galani, Marianna Kati, Hara Drinia and Panagiotis Voudouris
Land 2026, 15(1), 199; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010199 - 22 Jan 2026
Cited by 1 | Viewed by 648
Abstract
Skyros Island, the largest island of the Sporades Complex (NW Aegean Sea, Greece), preserves a geologically diverse record spanning from the Upper Permian to the Quaternary, including crystalline and non-metamorphosed carbonate rocks, ophiolitic rocks and mélanges, medium-grade metamorphic units, rare Miocene volcanic rocks, [...] Read more.
Skyros Island, the largest island of the Sporades Complex (NW Aegean Sea, Greece), preserves a geologically diverse record spanning from the Upper Permian to the Quaternary, including crystalline and non-metamorphosed carbonate rocks, ophiolitic rocks and mélanges, medium-grade metamorphic units, rare Miocene volcanic rocks, and impressive fossil-bearing sediments and tufa deposits, together with historically significant quarry and mining landscapes. Through a comprehensive evaluation of the geological heritage of Skyros, this study proposes a transferable, results-based framework for geoconservation, geoeducation, and tourism space management within a geopark context. A systematic inventory of twenty (20) geosites, including six (6) flagship case studies, was established based on scientific value, dominant geodiversity type, risk of degradation, accessibility, educational and tourism potential. The assessment integrates the Scientific Value and Risk of Degradation criteria with complementary management and sustainability indicators. The results demonstrate consistently high scientific value across the selected geosites, with several reaching maximum or near-maximum scores due to their rarity, integrity, and reference character at a regional to international scale. Although some geosites exhibit elevated degradation risk, overall vulnerability is considered manageable through targeted conservation measures and spatially explicit visitor management. Based on the assessment results, a network of thematic georoutes was developed and evaluated using route-level indicators, including number of geosites, route length, educational potential, tourism suitability, accessibility, and contribution to responsible geotourism. The study demonstrates how integrated geosite and georoute assessment can support sustainable land management and confirms that Skyros Island meets key criteria for inclusion in the Hellenic Geoparks Network, providing a robust scientific basis for future UNESCO Global Geopark designation. Full article
(This article belongs to the Special Issue Geoparks as a Form of Tourism Space Management (Third Edition))
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30 pages, 10261 KB  
Article
Traditional Cultivation and Land-Use Change Under the Balaton Law: Impacts on Vineyards and Garden Landscapes
by Krisztina Filepné Kovács, Virág Kutnyánszky, Zhen Shi, Zsolt Miklós Szilvácsku, László Kollányi and Edina Klára Dancsokné Fóris
Land 2026, 15(1), 106; https://doi.org/10.3390/land15010106 - 6 Jan 2026
Viewed by 550
Abstract
The Balaton region is Hungary’s most important recreational area, known for Central Europe’s largest freshwater lake and its traditional vineyard and horticultural landscapes. Since 1990, vineyard and orchard abandonment and intensified shoreline urbanization have increasingly threatened both landscape character and ecological balance. This [...] Read more.
The Balaton region is Hungary’s most important recreational area, known for Central Europe’s largest freshwater lake and its traditional vineyard and horticultural landscapes. Since 1990, vineyard and orchard abandonment and intensified shoreline urbanization have increasingly threatened both landscape character and ecological balance. This study analyses land-use changes in the Balaton hinterland and evaluates the effectiveness of regional land-use regulation between 1990 and 2018, with a focus on the 2000 Balaton Law (BKÜRT), which sought to preserve traditional land uses by permitting construction only where at least 80% of vineyard parcels remained cultivated. Spatial–temporal analysis was based on CORINE Land Cover (CLC) data from 1990 to 2018, supplemented by change layers from the Copernicus Land Monitoring Service. The CORINE Land Cover classification is a three-level hierarchical system (5 Level-1 groups, 15 Level-2 classes, and 44 Level-3 classes) developed by the EEA to provide standardized, satellite-based land cover information across Europe. Land cover was aggregated into major categories (using Level-1 and Level-2 classes) relevant to the Hungarian landscape. To address CLC limitations related to representing vineyards as relatively homogeneous units despite substantial differences in the density and scale of built structures, detailed case studies were conducted in three C1 vineyard zones—Alsóörs, Paloznak, and Szentantalfa—using historical aerial photographs, Google Earth imagery, and the Hungarian Ecosystem Map (NÖSZTÉP). Despite the restrictive regulatory framework, the CLC database showed that the share of vineyards in the vineyard regulation zone (C-1, C-2) decreased between 1990 and 2018 from 45.4% to 35.8% (the share of gardens and fruit plantations had changed from 9.7% to 15.5%). In the whole Balaton region, there was an approximately 18% decline in vineyard areas. Considering the M-2 horticultural zone, the garden coverage increased from 18.9% in 1990 (17.7% in 2000) to 30.5% (share of vineyards changed from 54.3% (54.6% in 2000) to 38.8%). At the regional level, gardens and fruit plantations had a smaller decrease (3.2%). Although overall trends were more favorable than at the national level, regulatory measures proved insufficient to prevent the conversion of vineyards and orchards in sensitive areas, particularly on slopes overlooking the lake, in proximity to tourist hubs, and in areas exposed to strong development pressure. By 2018, the C1 zone had expanded spatially but became less targeted, as the proportion of vineyards within it decreased. Boundary refinements failed to substantially improve regulatory precision or effectiveness. The case studies reveal a gradient of regulatory strictness reflecting differing landscape protection priorities and stages of vineyard transformation, with Alsóörs responding to long-standing, partly irreversible changes while attempting to slow further landscape alteration. To counter ongoing negative trends, more targeted and enforceable regulations are required, including a clearer separation of cultivated and recreational land uses, a maximum building size of 80 m2 for recreational properties, and a reassessment of vineyard zone boundaries to better reflect active cultivation and protect sensitive landscapes. Full article
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