[[wiki-architecture]] · [[Buildings and Structures]] · [[ARCHITECTURE]] · [[000]] # Conservation Plan The Conservation Plan is an important publication written by James Semple Kerr in 1982 and revised many times. It was a landmark in Australian conservation. The document "...outlines the logical processes of the Burra Charter, and how to prepare a Conservation Plan to guide and manage change to a heritage item appropriately". Subtitled "a guide to the preparation of conservation plans for places of European cultural significance", it has guided building conservation in Australia and around the world. The Conservation Plan is widely used by heritage practitioners and property owners in Australia, and worldwide as a primary guide to the process of researching, documenting and managing historic places in accordance with the Burra Charter, through a logical process. First published by the National Trust of Australia (NSW) in 1982, it has subsequently been reprinted in expanded form over seven editions and twelve printing impressions. The concept has been adopted worldwide as a critical process for conserving heritage places, for example in the British Heritage Lottery Fund guidance note Conservation Plans for Historic Places, Wales and British Columbia. == References == - [[Professional Practice/Codes & Standards/National Building Code of India/Part 10 - Landscape and Signs/Section 1 - Landscape Planning]] - [[Design/Architectural Design/Space Planning]] - [[Interior Architecture/Renovation and Conservation/Heritage Conservation]] - [[Professional Practice/Construction Management/Project Planning]] - [[Environmental Design/Water Conservation]] - [[Interior Architecture/Renovation and Conservation]] - [[Urban and Planning/Master Planning]] - [[Urban and Planning/Town & Country Planning]] - [[Urban and Planning/Transportation Planning]] - [[Urban and Planning/Urban Design and Planning]] == External links == Conservation Plan online edition, Australia ICOMOS > Publications, 2013 Understanding The Burra Charter: Excerpts from an Australia ICOMOS brochure explaining the principles of heritage conservation. Retrieved 15 August 2011].