Egilea
Hitz-gakoak
Abstract

Much of the effort in virtual heritage (VH) is directed towards accurate representation of historic structures, objects or artefacts. There is little attention paid, however, to the human aspects of city life, the intangible heritage to which people can actually relate. Digital models of historic buildings and spaces only give a sense of precision. Yet, rituals, human attitude and cultural traditions remain a gap in current research and advanced technology in heritage visualisation. Virtual Heritage Environments (VHE) suffer from the lack of thematic interactivity due to the limited cultural content and engaging modules largely used in photorealistic video gaming systems. In order to approach virtual fidelity and accurate reproductions of historic environments, this paper reports on a research process to investigate and incorporate a Cultural-feed into digital platforms of Virtual Heritage. In doing so, the paper focuses on the Middle East in general and Medieval Cairo in particular. It discusses a conceptual and practical framework for the development of virtual heritage platforms as a research, educational and engagement tool that brings historic spaces and buildings back to the recognition of the public eye; the ordinary user. It analyses current practices and projects of virtual heritage technologies and reports on field work that took place in Islamic Cairo with five Start-Up entrepreneurs.

Year of Publication
2017
Revista académica
Archnet-Ijar International Journal of Architectural Research
Volume
11
Zenbakia
3
Number of Pages
28-41
Publisher: ArchNet
Date Published
nov
Publication Language
English
ISSN Number
19387806 (ISSN)
URL
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85034766550&doi=10.26687%2farchnet-ijar.v11i3.1404&partnerID=40&md5=0c73dee338d05578ff362bf5475efd60
DOI
10.26687/archnet-ijar.v11i3.1404
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