Preserving the terraces of UNESCO’s Amalfi Coast Cultural Landscape is a highly topical issue, not only for people living in this area, but for the entire scientific and cultural world, as the hydrogeological fragility of the coastline risks leading to the loss of a unique heritage, threatened by recent climatic changes and inevitable economic and social transformations. The CITTAM interdepartmental research centre is dedicated to the study of traditional techniques in the Mediterranean area and, in recent years, the problem of maintaining the terraces of the Amalfi Coast has become an objective of our interdisciplinary research on rural landscapes, following the more frequent collapses and landslides, which often interrupt public roads. Considering that this is a hilly area, sloping steeply down towards the sea, with great interest for tourists because of this exceptional quality of landscape, it is essential that the roads remain clear to avoid increasing the problems for the agricultural economy and for inhabitants’ daily lives. Unfortunately, in recent years, extraordinary meteorological events have intensified, partly due to climate change, and the incessant rainfall, concentrated in a few hours, has seriously damaged the plots of land, which are often abandoned or poorly maintained resulting in a lack of vegetation that would contribute to water absorption. The terracing system on the Amalfi coast is a complex system of dry stone walls – màcere in the local language – and the land behind them, maintained by these stones, on which crops were grown; if farming is abandoned and the soils of the plots are no longer cultivated, it is clear that extraordinary rainfall, falling on arid land, becomes a problem. A solution to the problem of terracing must obviously be sought with a multidisciplinary approach, and CITTAM has the skills and potential to deal with this issue, since the interdepartmental research centre includes experts in geology, hydraulics, construction techniques, etc., as well as experts in the field of soil conservation.
Actually, CITTAM’s encouragement came from the territory itself, some time ago. The latest landslide episode in February accelerated the promotion of the first meeting, even if remotely with a webinar, held on 26 March. […]
SMC MAGAZINE SPECIAL ISSUE N. SIX/2021
001_COVER AND INDEX
005_Presentation
Marina Fumo
015_Conference speaker | Editors of the conference proceedings
022_ The architecture of being: a “best practice” to regenerate the terraced landscape
Anna Pina Arcaro
034_Malacoccola and Sant’Elia, history and anthropology of a timeless terraced landscape
Giovanni Gugg
046_The problem of terracing in Italy: analysis of an operating procedure applied in Piedmont
Francesco Pernice
058_ Water architecture: notes on some material and cultural elements of the Amalfi coast landscape
Pietro Santoriello
070_The cultural value of the Amalfi coast terracing. A legacy of the past and opportunity for the future
Giorgia De Pasquale
082_Terraces: examples of conservation and innovation
Maria Paola Gatti
098_The terrace cultivation of the Amalfi coast in the territorial planning scheme of the Sorrento-Amalfi area between protection and sustainable development
Maria Parente
110_The value of the technological footprint on the territory in bio-cultural landscapes: the terraces of the Amalfi coast
Marica Merola
126_A future for old terraces. Opportunities and suggestions for the recovery of abandoned agricultural terraces of the Amalfi coast
Ferruccio Ferrigni
138_Protection of the terraced landscape between rural culture, climate resilience and biodiversity
Gigliola Ausiello, Luca Di Girolamo, Francesco Sommese
159_LIDAR-based approach for the management of terraced landscapes
Pierpaolo D’Agostino, Giuseppe Antuono, Tomàs E. MartìnezChao,Lia Maria Papa
171_The school construction sites and the recovery of the dry stone walling of the Amalfi coast – Pontinpietra from academic training to the art of the master builder
Gianfranca Mastroianni, Amelia Maris
183_Experimental tilting plane tests for the ultimate shear estimation of perforated dry joint masonry panels
Gabriele Milani, Antonio Formisano
202_The contribution provided by geology and geotechnical engineering in the restoration of terraces on Amalfi coast
Paolo Budetta, Giovanni Forte, Marianna Pirone, Antonio Santo, Marialaura Tartaglia, Gianfranco Urcioli
218_Potential use of alkali-activated materials in naturalistic engineering
Gigliola D’Angelo, Ilaria Capasso, Antonio Santo, Barbara Liguori
232_Terraces and dry stone walls: history of unbound stones. Respect for tradition and innovative design for unprecedented socio-environmental challenges
Giuseppe Trinchese
252_Towards the definition of guidelines for the recovery and enhancement of terraces
Veronica Vitiello, Roberto Castelluccio