The member States of the Council of Europe, signatory hereto,
Considering that the aim of the Council of Europe is to achieve a greater unity between
its members for the purpose, inter alia, of safeguarding and realising the ideals
and principles which are their common heritage;
Recognising that the architectural heritage constitutes an irreplaceable expression of the
richness and diversity of Europe's cultural
heritage, bears inestimable witness to our
past and is a common heritage of all Europeans;
Having regard to the European Cultural Convention signed in Paris on 19 December 1954 and
in particular to Article 1 thereof;
Having regard to the European Charter of the Architectural Heritage adopted by the
Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe
on 26 September 1975 and to Resolution
(76) 28, adopted on 14 April 1976, concerning the adaptation of laws and regulations to
the requirements of integrated conservation of the architectural heritage;
Having regard to Recommendation 880 (1979) of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of
Europe on the conservation of the European
architectural heritage;
Having regard to Recommendation No. R (80) 16 of the Committee of Ministers to member
States on the specialised training of architects,
town planners, civil engineers and
landscape designers, and to Recommendation No. R (81) 13 of the Committee of Ministers,
adopted
on 1 July 1981, on action in aid of certain declining craft trades in the context
of the craft activity;
Recalling the importance of handing down to future generations a system of cultural
references, improving the urban and rural environment
and thereby fostering the economic,
social and cultural development of States and regions;
Acknowledging the importance of reaching agreement on the main thrust of a common policy
for the conservation and enhancement of
the architectural heritage,
Have agreed as follows:
Definition of the architectural heritage
Article 1
For the purposes of this Convention, the expression "architectural heritage"
shall be considered to comprise the following
permanent properties:
- monuments: all buildings and structures of conspicuous historical, archaeological,
artistic, scientific, social or technical interest,
including their fixtures and fittings;
- groups of buildings: homogeneous groups of urban or rural buildings conspicuous for
their historical, archaeological, artistic,
scientific, social or technical interest which
are sufficiently coherent to form topographically definable units;
- sites: the combined works of man and nature, being areas which are partially built upon
and sufficiently distinctive and homogeneous
to be topographically definable and are of
conspicuous historical, archaeological, artistic, scientific, social or technical
interest.
Identification of properties to be protected
Article 2
For the purpose of precise identification of the monuments, groups of buildings and
sites to be protected, each Party undertakes
to maintain inventories and in the event of
threats to the properties concerned, to prepare appropriate documentation at the earliest
opportunity.
Statutory protection procedures
Article 3
Each Party undertakes:
- to take statutory measures to protect the architectural heritage;
- within the framework of such measures and by means specific to each State or region, to
make provision for the protection of monuments,
groups of buildings and sites.
Article 4
Each Party undertakes:
- to implement appropriate supervision and authorisation procedures as required by the
legal protection of the properties in question;
- to prevent the disfigurement, dilapidation or demolition of protected properties. To
this end, each Party undertakes to introduce,
if it has not already done so, legislation
which:
- requires the submission to a competent authority of any scheme for the demolition or
alteration of monuments which are already
protected, or in respect of which protection
proceedings have been instituted, as well as any scheme affecting their surroundings;
- requires the submission to a competent authority of any scheme affecting a group of
buildings or a part thereof or a site which
involves:
- demolition of buildings,
- the erection of new buildings,
- substantial alterations which impair the character of the buildings or the site;
- permits public authorities to require the owner of a protected property to carry out
work or to carry out such work itself if
the owner fails to do so;
- allows compulsory purchase of a protected property.
Article 5
Each Party undertakes to prohibit the removal, in whole or in part, of any protected
monument, except where the material safeguarding
of such monuments makes removal
imperative. In these circumstances the competent authority shall take the necessary
precautions
for its dismantling, transfer and reinstatement at a suitable location.
Ancillary measures
Article 6
Each Party undertakes:
- to provide financial support by the public authorities for maintaining and restoring the
architectural heritage on its territory,
in accordance with the national, regional and
local competence and within the limitations of the budgets available;
- to resort, if necessary, to fiscal measures to facilitate the conservation of this
heritage;
- to encourage private initiatives for maintaining and restoring the architectural
heritage.
Article 7
In the surroundings of monuments, within groups of buildings and within sites, each
Party undertakes to promote measures for the
general enhancement of the environment.
Article 8
With a view to limiting the risks of the physical deterioration of the architectural
heritage, each Party undertakes:
- to support scientific research for identifying and analysing the harmful effects of
pollution and for defining ways and means
to reduce or eradicate these effects;
- to take into consideration the special problems of conservation of the architectural
heritage in anti-pollution policies.
Sanctions
Article 9
Each Party undertakes to ensure within the power available to it that infringements of
the law protecting the architectural heritage
are met with a relevant and adequate
response by the competent authority. This response may in appropriate circumstances entail
an obligation on the offender to demolish a newly erected building which fails to comply
with the requirements or to restore
a protected property to its former condition.
Conservation policies
Article 10
Each Party undertakes to adopt integrated conservation policies which:
- include the protection of the architectural heritage as an essential town and country
planning objective and ensure that this
requirement is taken into account at all stages
both in the drawing up of development plans and in the procedures for authorising
work;
- promote programmes for the restoration and maintenance of the architectural heritage;
- make the conservation, promotion and enhancement of the architectural heritage a major
feature of cultural, environmental and
planning policies;
- facilitate whenever possible in the town and country planning process the conservation
and use of certain buildings whose intrinsic
importance would not warrant protection
within the meaning of Article 3, paragraph 1, of this Convention but which are of interest
from the point of view of their setting in the urban or rural environment and of the
quality of life;
- foster, as being essential to the future of the architectural heritage, the application
and development of traditional skills
and materials.
Article 11
Due regard being had to the architectural and historical character of the heritage,
each Party undertakes to foster:
- the use of protected properties in the light of the needs of contemporary life;
- the adaptation when appropriate of old buildings for new uses.
Article 12
While recognising the value of permitting public access to protected properties, each
Party undertakes to take such action as may
be necessary to ensure that the consequences
of permitting this access, especially any structural development, do not adversely
affect
the architectural and historical character of such properties and their surroundings.
Article 13
In order to facilitiate the implementation of these policies, each Party undertakes to
foster, within its own political and administrative
structure, effective co-operation at
all levels between conservation, cultural, environmental and planning activities.
Participation and associations
Article 14
With a view to widening the impact of public authority measures for the identification,
protection, restoration, maintenance, management
and promotion of the architectural
heritage, each Party undertakes:
- to establish in the various stages of the decision-making process, appropriate machinery
for the supply of information, consultation
and co-operation between the State, the
regional and local authorities, cultural institutions and associations, and the public;
- to foster the development of sponsorship and of non-profit-making associations working
in this field.
Information and training
Article 15
Each Party undertakes:
- to develop public awareness of the value of conserving the architectural heritage, both
as an element of cultural identity and
as a source of inspiration and creativity for
present and future generations;
- to this end, to promote policies for disseminating information and fostering increased
awareness, especially by the use of modern
communication and promotion techniques, aimed
in particular:
- at awakening or increasing public interest, as from school-age, in the protection of the
heritage, the quality of the built
environment and architecture;
- at demonstrating the unity of the cultural heritage and the links that exist between
architecture, the arts, popular traditions
and ways of life at European, national and
regional levels alike.
Article 16
Each Party undertakes to promote training in the various occupations and craft trades
involved in the conservation of the architectural
heritage.
European co-ordination of conservation policies
Article 17
The Parties undertake to exchange information on their conservation policies concerning
such matters as:
- the methods to be adopted for the survey, protection and conservation of properties
having regard to historic developments and
to any increase in the number of properties
concerned;
- the ways in which the need to protect the architectural heritage can best be reconciled
with the needs of contemporary economic,
social and cultural activities;
- the possibilities afforded by new technologies for identifying and recording the
architectural heritage and combating the deterioration
of materials as well as in the
fields of scientific research, restoration work and methods of managing and promoting the
heritage;
- ways of promoting architectural creation as our age's contribution to the European
heritage.
Article 18>
The Parties undertake to afford, whenever necessary, mutual technical assistance in the
form of exchanges of experience and of experts
in the conservation of the architectural
heritage.
Article 19
The Parties undertake, within the framework of the relevant national legislation, or
the international agreements, to encourage
European exchanges of specialists in the
conservation of the architectural heritage, including those responsible for further
training.
Article 20
For the purposes of this Convention, a Committee of Experts set up by the Committee of
Ministers of the Council of Europe pursuant
to Article 17 of the Statute of the Council of
Europe shall monitor the application of the Convention and in particular:
- report periodically to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on the
situation of architectural heritage conservation
policies in the States Parties to the
Convention, on the implementation of the principles embodied in the Convention and on its
own activities;
- propose to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe measures for the
implementation of the Convention's provisions,
such measures being deemed to include
multilateral activities, revision or amendment of the Convention and public information
about the purpose of the Convention;
- make recommendations to the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe regarding
invitations to States which are not members
of the Council of Europe to accede to this
Convention.
Article 21
The provisions of this Convention shall not prejudice the application of such specific
more favourable provisions concerning the
protection of the properties described in
Article 1 as are embodied in:
- the Convention for the Protection of World Cultural and Natural Heritage of 16 November
1972;
- the European Convention on the Protection of the Archaeological Heritage of 6 May 1969.
Final clauses
Article 22
- This Convention shall be open for signature by the member States of the Council of
Europe. It is subject to ratification, acceptance
or approval. Instruments of
ratification, acceptance or approval shall be deposited with the Secretary General of the
Council
of Europe.
- This Convention shall enter into force on the first day of the month following the
expiration of a period of three months after
the date on which three member States of the
Council of Europe have expressed their consent to be bound by the Convention in
accordance
with the provisions of the preceding paragraph.
- In respect of any member State which subsequently expresses its consent to be bound by
it, the Convention shall enter into force
on the first day of the month following the
expiration of a period of three months after the date of the deposit of the instrument
of
ratification, acceptance or approval.
Article 23
- After the entry into force of this Convention, the Committee of Ministers of the Council
of Europe may invite any State not a
member of the Council and the European Economic
Community to accede to this Convention by a decision taken by the majority provided
for in
Article 20.d of the Statute of the Council of Europe and by the unanimous vote of the
representatives of the Contracting
States entitled to sit on the Committee.
- In respect of any acceding State or, should it accede, the European Economic Community,
the Convention shall enter into force
on the first day of the month following the
expiration of a period of three months after the date of deposit of the instrument
of
accession with the Secretary General of the Council of Europe.
Article 24
- Any State may, at the time of signature or when depositing its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession,
specify the territory or territories to
which this Convention shall apply.
- Any State may at any later date, by a declaration addressed to the Secretary General of
the Council of Europe, extend the application
of this Convention to any other territory
specified in the declaration. In respect of such territory the Convention shall enter
into
force on the first day of the month following the expiration of a period of three months
after the date of receipt of
such declaration by the Secretary General.
- Any declaration made under the two preceding paragraphs may, in respect of any territory
specified in such declaration, be withdrawn
by a notification addressed to the Secretary
General. The withdrawal shall become effective on the first day of the month following
the
expiration of a period of six months after the date of receipt of such notification by the
Secretary General.
Article 25
- Any State may, at the time of signature or when depositing its instrument of
ratification, acceptance, approval or accession,
declare that it reserves the right not to
comply, in whole or in part, with the provisions of Article 4, paragraphs c and d.
No
other reservations may be made.
- Any Contracting State which has made a reservation under the preceding paragraph may
wholly or partly withdraw it by means of
a notification addressed to the Secretary General
of the Council of Europe. The withdrawal shall take effect on the date of receipt
of such
notification by the Secretary General.
- A Party which has made a reservation in respect of the provisions mentioned in paragraph
1 above may not claim the application
of that provision by any other Party; it may,
however, if its reservation is partial or conditional, claim the application of
that
provision in so far as it has itself accepted it.
Article 26
- Any Party may at any time denounce this Convention by means of a notification addressed
to the Secretary General of the Council
of Europe.
- Such denunication shall become effective on the first day of the month following the
expiration of a period of six months after
the date of receipt of such notification by the
Secretary General.
Article 27
The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall notify the member States of the
Council of Europe, any State which has acceded
to this Convention and the European
Economic Community if it has acceded, of:
- any signature;
- the deposit of any instrument of ratification, acceptance, approval or accession;
- any date of entry into force of this Convention in accordance with Articles 22, 23 and
24;
- any other act, notification or communication relating to this Convention.
In witness whereof the undersigned, being duly authorised thereto, have signed this
Convention.
Done at Granada, this 3rd day of October 1985, in English and French, both texts being
equally authentic, in a single copy which
shall be deposited in the archives of the
Council of Europe. The Secretary General of the Council of Europe shall transmit certified
copies to each member State of the Council of Europe and to any State or to the European
Economic Community invited to accede
to this Convention.