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| Archive > June 2008, Volume 22, Issue 6 > Landscape Issues in Poland |
Landscape Issues in Poland01/06/2008 |
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| Much of Poland’s rural landscape has unique cultural and aesthetic value and should be recognised as a national asset. In economic terms, however, small, scattered parcels demand thorough land consolidation, an activity that also threatens the landscape. How may land consolidation be used not only in reallocation but also to preserve the landscape? The authors propose studies to serve both aims. But, first and foremost, all parties must be made aware of the (economic) benefits of landscape preservation. | |
| By Adrianna Pulecka and Przemyslaw Kupidura, Warsaw University of Technology, Poland | |
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Polish rural landscape, the present farm structure of which has evolved over many centuries, is recognised as a valuable contribution to the European Union (EU). Since children have all inherited a piece of their parents' property, land plots are widely scattered. So that today, the resulting dense network of boundary strips is essential to both eco-systems and landscape. But agricultural production is greatly impeded by small and scattered parcels, resulting in an urgent economic need for land consolidation.
Landscape Architects
The attractiveness of a landscape depends on the presence of spatial dominants and particular spots with special appeal for visitors. Spatial dominants rule the landscape through their dimensions or location. Examples are church and water towers, large, solitary trees, and manor houses with surrounding parks. Particular spots are small artefacts of historical or cultural value, for example chapels, shrines, crucifixes, memorial cemeteries and irregularly shaped boulders. These are usually situated at crossing points, the entrance to villages, on bridges, dykes and so on. After individual identification, their connection to these sites, both functional and visual, should be determined. Functional connection here implies how to get from one place to the other by car, bike or walking. Visual connection relates to the view structure: which spots can be seen from a certain viewpoint, stationary or moving. GIS helps to reveal the view structure and also assists in determining optimal routes, which are not necessarily the shortest, but the most rewarding in terms of appeal. Overlays of aerial images and data from the topographic database and the Land and Buildings Cadastre may provide basic geo-data for such studies. The result will be a map of view connections, view axes, viewpoints, panoramas and so on. This may serve as a reference for landscape protection, including view preservation and landscape development: design of footpaths, bridle paths and cycle tracks. -Adrianna Pulecka, Warsaw University of Technology, Faculty of Geodesy and Cartography, Plac Politechniki 1, 00-661 Warsaw, Poland, email: adrp@go2.pl |
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| Biography of the Author(s) Both authors belong to Warsaw University of Technology Faculty of Geodesy and Cartography. Dr Adrianna Pulecka graduated from the Faculty of Landscape Architecture at the Agricultural University in Warsaw. She completed her doctoral thesis on management and protection of the rural landscape whilst transforming the spatial structure of rural areas in Poland. Dr Przemyslaw Kupidura graduated from Warsaw University of Technology and from the University of Pierre and Marie Curie in Paris. He gained his PhD with a thesis on the application of mathematical morphology in satellite-image processing. |
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Interactive |
3D Scanning of Historic Sugar Factories |
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The Alliance for Integrated Spatial Technologies at the University of South Florida, USA, recently worked with the Florida Park Service on a project to document the remains of several historic sugar-mill sites in the State Parks to create as-builts to be used in preservation and conservation of these resources. The FARO LS 880, along with GPS and total station georeferencing and colour imaging, was used on these projects.
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