02276nas a2200229 4500000000100000000000100001008004100002260005700043653002000100653001800120653002400138653001800162653002200180100001700202700002600219245007500245856015200320300001000472490000600482520153800488020002002026 2017 d bSpringer Science and Business Media Deutschland GmbH10aBuilding memory10aHidden wisdom10aintangible heritage10aSmart reading10aTangible heritage1 aGehan Radwan1 aSanaa Abdel-El-Maksud00aBetween the Tangible \& Intangible Smart Reading of Heritage Buildings uhttps://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85106854272&doi=10.1007%2f978-3-319-48725-0_7&partnerID=40&md5=8f1a7f80ed3f132691f3454e54a0f53c a63-680 v43 aInformation era have brought out several technologies that have added a lot into heritage buildings, starting from documentation technologies, virtual presentation technologies, in addition to various dissemination techniques and technologies that connect the public with heritage buildings and spaces. Never the less, HBIM technologies have provided more depth in dealing with heritage buildings in the scope of efficiency, retrofitting in addition to management. All the previous smart technologies have dealt with tangible aspect of heritage providing a physical reading for buildings and spaces. This paper deals with the results of the use of technology in recording and documenting archaeological heritage buildings and the extent of its success in its goals, including the reading of history through the building to check the logic of the argument of Ebn Rushed in his book ‘The Incoherence of the Incoherence’, where he argues that: “ If one looks into a made of any manufactures without perceiving the wisdom behind such made and the purpose intended, and if it does not stand originally with such wisdom one might think it is possible that there are so made, which agreed in any form and any quantity agreed and put any agreed-volume and in whatever order.” Such argument will be investigated through the analysis of a case study with a proposed methodology to assess the results of retrofitting heritage buildings with the consideration of intangible historical aspects rather than tangible physical aspects alone. a23673370 (ISSN)