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Introduction: Connecting Water and Heritage for the Future.- PART I: Drinking Water.- Silent and Unseen: Stewardship of Water Infrastructural Heritage.- The Qanat System: A Reflection on the Heritage of the Extraction of Hidden Waters.- Studying Ancient Water Management in Monte Albán, Mexico, to Solve Water Issues, Improve Urban Living, and Protect Heritage in the Present.- Thirsty Cities: Learning from Dutch Water Supply Heritage.- PART II: Agricultural Water.- Water Meadows as European Agricultural Heritage.- Holler Colonies and the Altes Land: A vivid example of the importance of European intangible and tangible heritage.- Archaic Water: the role of a legend in constructing the water management heritage of Sanbonkihara, Japan.- How Citizens Reshaped a Plan for an Aerotropolis and Preserved the Water Heritage System of the Taoyuan Tableland.- PART III: Land Reclamation and Defense.- Reassessing Heritage: Contradiction and Discrepancy between Fishery and Agriculture in planning the Hachirogata Polder and its Surrounding Lagoon in Mid-20th Century Japan.- The Noordoostpolder: A landscape planning perspective on the preservation and development of 20th century polder landscapes in the Netherlands.- Europolders A European program on polder landscape, heritage, and innovation.- Hold the Line: The transformation of the New Dutch Waterline and the Future Possibilities of Heritage River and Coastal Planning.- PART IV: River and Coastal Planning.- 'Absent-present' heritage: the cultural heritage of dwelling on the Changjian (Yangtze) River.- Neglected and undervalued cultural heritage: Waterfronts and riverbanks of Alblasserwaard, the Netherlands.- Room for the River: Trend, Break, or Tradition? The Case of the Noordwaard.- Heritage in European Coastal Landscapes
Four Reasons for Interregional Knowledge Exchange.- PART V: Port Cities and Waterfronts.- The Impact of Planning Reform on Water-related Heritage Values and on Recalling Collective Maritime Identity of Port Cities: The Case of Rotterdam.- From HERITAGE to HERITAJE: How economic path dependencies in the Caribbean cruise destinations are distorting the uses of heritage architecture and urban form.- Using Heritage to Develop Sustainable Port-City Relationships: Lisbon's shift from Object-based to Landscape Approaches.- Towards A Cultural Heritage of Adaptation: A plea to embrace the heritage of a culture of risk, vulnerability and adaptation.
Four Reasons for Interregional Knowledge Exchange.- PART V: Port Cities and Waterfronts.- The Impact of Planning Reform on Water-related Heritage Values and on Recalling Collective Maritime Identity of Port Cities: The Case of Rotterdam.- From HERITAGE to HERITAJE: How economic path dependencies in the Caribbean cruise destinations are distorting the uses of heritage architecture and urban form.- Using Heritage to Develop Sustainable Port-City Relationships: Lisbon's shift from Object-based to Landscape Approaches.- Towards A Cultural Heritage of Adaptation: A plea to embrace the heritage of a culture of risk, vulnerability and adaptation.