13 Additions to the UNESCO World Heritage List (and One Deletion)

07/11/09  Print This Post Print This Post    7 Comments   Popular   Written by Carlo Alcos
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Dolomites, Italy

The Dolomites in Italy / Photo: **Maurice**

World Heritage Site chasers rejoice: you now have 13 more destinations to add to your list. And one to remove.

Fresh off the World Heritage Committee’s press, 13 new places around the world have been granted the status of UNESCO World Heritage Site. There was also one subtraction from the list, and a few were shifted over to the List of World Heritage in Danger.

13 additions to keep your eye out for

Two natural sites and 11 cultural sites make up the newbies. Here they are:

1. The Wadden Sea (natural) – Spanning Germany and The Netherlands, this intertidal ecosystem is one of the largest remaining where natural processes continue undisturbed.

2. The Dolomites (natural) – I was a bit surprised this dramatic mountain range in the Italian Alps wasn’t already on the list…but there you have it.

3. Stoclet House – A “total work of art” in Belgium.

4. The Ruins of Loropéni – This old stone fortress, found to be at least 1000 years old, is the first World Heritage Site listed in Burkina Faso.

5. Cidade Velha, Historic Centre of Ribeira Grande – This Cape Verde town was the first European colonial outpost in the tropics.

6. Mount Wutai, China – 5 peaks. 53 monasteries. 500+ statues. One spot on the UNESCO World Heritage List.

7. Shushtar, Historical Hydraulic System – A water-channeling “masterpiece of creative genius” in Iran, which dates back to the 5th century BC.

8. Sulamain-Too Sacred Mountain – Too sacred for you? Maybe. This mountain sits at the crossroads of important routes on the Silk Road in Kyrgyzstan.

9. The Sacred City of Caral-Supe – A 5000-year-old archaeological site in Peru. It’s the oldest centre of civilization in the Americas.

Tower of Hercules lighthouse, Spain

Photo: J.C. Rojas

10. The Royal Tombs of the Joseon Dynasty – South Korea is home to these 40 tombs, built between 1408 and 1966 to honour the memory of their ancestors.

11. The Tower of Hercules – This Spanish lighthouse has guarded the entrance of La Coruña Harbour since the late 1st century.

12. La Chaux-de-Fonds / Le Locle – Two Swiss towns well-known for…what else, watchmaking.

13. Pontcysyllte Aqueduct and Canal – An 18km innovative aqueduct in northeast Wales, completed in the early 1800s.

And one subtraction

In addition, there was a subtraction. The Dresden Elbe Valley in Germany lost its UNESCO World Heritage status as a result of a 4-lane bridge being constructed in the middle of the landscape.

For more details on the above places, and for other modifications to the list, visit the UNESCO World Heritage Centre website.

COMMUNITY CONNECTION

UNESCO World Heritage Sites feature in many articles at Matador Trips. For sites in Asia, have a read of 13 of Asia’s Most Spectacular UNESCO World Heritage Sites and Tai Shan: A Sacred Climb.


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About the Author

Matador ID: vagabonderz

Carlo (not Carlos) is a contributing editor of Matador Trips. An ex-Vancouverite who calls the world his home, he is currently living in Melbourne, trying to crack the code to sustain the vagabonding lifestyle with the least amount of work possible. Follow him at his blog here...I mean, here.

7 Comments... join the discussion!

  • Julie replied on July 11, 2009

    Very interesting, Carlo!

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  • Turner replied on July 11, 2009

    I wish they’d delete the 88-temple walk in Shikoku. Getting a UNESCO endorsement is a death sentence, IMHO…

    http://www.keepingpaceinjapan.com/2009/06/flaw-in-unesco.html

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    • Hal Amen replied to Turner on July 11, 2009

      Excellent point, Turner, and thanks for sharing your blog post. While many of the places on this list probably won’t change much under UNESCO, others certainly have.

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  • Julie replied on July 11, 2009

    Interesting, Turner, but I have to say that the UNESCO WHS designation actually does benefit some places. Old San Juan, Puerto Rico is one of them. It was really only after UNESCO WHS designation that people who lived there truly began to take a pride in their community that led to action with respect to historical preservation. Not to say that spirit didn’t exist before, but the WHS status amplified it considerably (kind of like what’s happening in PR now regarding the possible selection of El Yunque as one of the next wonders of the natural world). It also raised real estate prices. Now, on the one hand, you can see that as a bad thing. On the other, it tended to attract people who could afford to live there–and invest significant sums of money in restoring historically important old homes. Guess it all depends on the location and local issues.

    I know Mompox, Colombia is a UNESCO site as well, and I don’t see that it’s helped or harmed the community much at all, though ricardo_emp would be a much better authority on that subject.

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  • dfinepa replied on July 12, 2009

    I’ve experienced this recently too. Cesky Krumlov in the Czech Republic is an incredibly beautiful town, rightly recognized by UNESCO. But is there any need for a wax museum or a torture museum?!

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  • Christine replied on July 13, 2009

    4-lane bridges will make you lose the UNESCO EVERY time.

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