1. Conservation Heating 24 Years On.
- Author
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Blades, Nigel, Lithgow, Katy, Staniforth, Sarah, and Hayes, Bob
- Subjects
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HISTORIC preservation , *HEATING & ventilation in museum buildings , *COLLECTION management (Museums) , *HUMIDITY control , *PRESERVATION of historic buildings - Abstract
Control of relative humidity (RH) for collections care is challenging in U.K. historic houses because they are often highly ventilated with poor heat retention, a porous building fabric and naturally tend to high (60-80%) RH if unheated. The significance of the building means that large-scale modifications and installation of air handling systems may be unfeasible and undesirable for the conservation of the building. In the late 1980s the National Trust, for English, Wales and Northern Ireland, investigated conservation heating as an RH control method that works with the natural environment of historic buildings, mimicking historic heating and requiring only modification of existing heating services or a light touch installation of new heating systems. The National Trust adopted conservation heating as its preferred method for environmental control in historic buildings from the 1990s. This method was presented at the IIC 1994 Ottawa congress on preventive conservation. Conservation heating has since been adopted by many historic house management organisations, particularly across north-west Europe, where it is well suited to the climate. This paper reviews conservation heating developments implemented by the National Trust since 1994, in response to a changing external context, new knowledge and developments in operational practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
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