01636nas a2200277 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002653002300043653001200066653001700078653002800095653001300123653002300136653001000159653002600169653002800195653001300223100001800236700001400254245010400268856011800372300001200490490000700502520082900509022002001338 2016 d10aDigital technology10aFinland10aDigitisation10aCommunity participation10aArchives10aEnergy consumption10aEspoo10aGallen-Kallela Museum10aHakaniemi Market Square10aHelsinki1 aSamir Bhowmik1 aLily Diaz00aHot Stones and Cool Digitals: Sustainable Contact Zones for Intangible Cultural Heritage in Finland uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-84994810190&partnerID=40&md5=80b564a514e96ef1c3e2841ac3777a59 a161-1710 v113 aA combination of community participation and ICT (Information and Communications Technology) could be an effective way of promoting communities as on-site contexts for intangible cultural heritage (ICH). James Clifford’s Museums as Contact Zones (1997) serves as a theoretical and practical basis for this approach. Two community-based museum projects were conducted in Finland between 2012 and 2014: a community-based digitisation project with the Gallen-Kallela Museum in Espoo, and a museum installation in the Hakaniemi Market Square in Helsinki to which members of the local community were the major contributors. Both projects demonstrated that it is possible for a community to foster ICH through participation, collaboration, borrowing from museum practices and by the application of emerging digital technologies. a19753586 (ISSN)