by David Edwards-May | Jun 24, 2012 | Cultural & industrial heritage, Waterway funding, Waterway restoration
A report commissioned by former prime minister François Fillon has delivered its verdict on the scale of works required to restore the Canal du Midi’s priceless tree canopy. The 42,000 plane trees (82% of the trees lining the banks) are being decimated by canker...
by David Edwards-May | Jun 14, 2012 | Cultural & industrial heritage
Canal historian William E. Trout III* will attend the World Canals Conference in Yangzhou, China, this September with an agenda. He hopes to find out what happened to the Emperor’s lock model, taken from England to China in the late 18th century. This mystery is...
by David Edwards-May | Jun 8, 2012 | Cultural & industrial heritage, Waterfront development, Waterway restoration
What does Lille, the historic capital of Flanders, have in common with Milan and Tokyo? Or even with The Hague, featured in this blog a few days ago? It is a city that is determined to revive its historic intimacy with water, or what our Lombardy friends elegantly...
by David Edwards-May | Jun 6, 2012 | Waterway restoration
‘Small is beautiful’ could be a motto for canals, especially in cities. And this simple precept is now being followed in the Netherlands with spectacular results. This was the main lesson learned during the EU Waterways Forward partnership meeting in The...
by David Edwards-May | May 29, 2012 | Cultural & industrial heritage
Edo Bricchetti, a member of IWI’s Council and The International Council for Conservation of Industrial Heritage (TICCIH), has been tirelessly defending the priceless heritage of Lombardy’s historic canals, the navigli, working closely with the responsible...