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The Cultural Resource Management Program at the University of Victoria is pleased to offer the following on-campus six-day immersion and distance education building conservation courses for professionals in museums, heritage planning and related organizations.
Studies in Building Conservation: Masonry
The brick, mortar, tile, and other masonry materials, which shape both modest and monumental structures, are subject to the ravages of time, climate, inherent vice, vandalism, and pollution. This on-campus immersion course develops your ability to manage the preservation and conservation of historic masonry materials and structures through both lectures and field studies, with special emphasis on:
* characteristics of masonry materials
* structural characteristics of historic masonry buildings
* environmental impacts and inherent vice
* inspecting masonry structures and analyzing materials
* approaches to stabilization and preservation
* identifying treatment requirements
* preventive maintenance
Instructor: Martin Weaver is Director of the Center for Preservation Research at Columbia University and has extensive international consulting experience in building conservation. He is the author of Conserving Buildings: A Guide to Techniques and Materials.
Dates: September 30 to October 5, 2002, plus a preparatory assignment
Please register by: September 6, 2002
Fee: $643 Canadian funds, credit and non-credit options available
AIBC Core Learning Units: 36
Conserving Historic Structures
While historic structures range from modest to monumental, and encompass a remarkable variety of materials and uses, approaches to their conservation are governed by core principles and determined by well-developed standards of practice. This innovative distance education course enhances your understanding of the complex characteristics of heritage structures, systems, and materials, and provides frameworks for planning and managing appropriate conservation processes. Using a combination of print and text materials, CD Rom and web resources, you interact with the instructor and participants from across North America and beyond, to develop your ability to:
* identify the building materials and systems commonly encountered in heritage structures
* analyze the nature and extent of deterioration in building materials and systems' and identify its causes
* analyze the environmental factors which contribute to deterioration
* investigate and document the physical condition and history of a structure and its materials
* select conservation strategies for a range of materials, based on the condition and intended use of the structure
* plan and manage the conservation process
Throughout the course you are encouraged to work with a local historic building or structure as focus for learning activities and assignments. Due to its limited length and broad scope, the course is not intended to provide participants with the skills to conduct specific conservation treatments.
Instructor: Elizabeth Bede, Ph.D. is the Environmental & Materials Research Fellow at the National Center for Preservation Technology and Training. NCPTT is located in Natchitoches, Louisiana and is a federal institution under the jurisdiction of the United States National Park Service. She is also an affiliate professor of History at Northwestern State University of Louisiana. Her current research entails assessing the effects of outdoor environments and pollutants on building materials and on conservation treatments such as waterproofing agents and consolidants.
Dates: October 7, 2002 to January 26, 2003
Please register by: September 21, 2002
Fee: $643; additional shipping fee of $60 for participants outside Canada and the United States
AIBC Core Learning Units: 36
These courses are open to all museum professionals involved in heritage conservation. Enrolment options allow you to choose to take courses either to enhance professional development or to build academic credit. Individual course descriptions and registration forms are available by contacting us at [log in to unmask] or by visiting our web site at <http://www.uvcs.uvic.ca/crmp>
The Cultural Resource Management Program is a registered provider for the Architectural Institute of British Columbia's Continuing Education System, offering AIBC-accredited activities for education learning units.
Lisa Mort-Putland, Program Coordinator
Cultural Resource Management Program
Continuing Studies, University of Victoria
PO Box 3030 STN CSC Victoria BC Canada V8W 3N6
Tel: 250 721-6119 Fax: 250 721-8774
Email: [log in to unmask]
Visit our Web site! http://www.uvcs.uvic.ca/crmp
To receive monthly email updates, contact [log in to unmask]
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