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Research Team Investigates Coastal Cultural Heritage Sites

Photos of researchers over aerial view of landscape

Art & Design Team Awarded 2024 Provost鈥檚 Fund for Innovation in Research 鈥淏ig Idea鈥 Award

An interdisciplinary team of faculty researchers in the 黑料吃瓜王 College of Art & Design were awarded a 鈥淏ig Idea鈥 grant from the 听to investigate at-risk coastal cultural heritage sites.

Assistant professor of architecture鈥Annicia Streete鈥痺ill lead a research team to scan cultural landscapes, built environments and festivals on the Gulf Coast and in the Caribbean using drones, lidar and radiance fields. The goal of the project is to compile a rich dataset and create an immersive, high-fidelity record of coastal cultural heritage sites at risk because of natural disasters, land loss and sea level rise. The project team includes鈥Brendan Harmon, associate professor of landscape architecture in the Robert Reich School of Landscape Architecture; Brent Fortenberry, College of Art & Design Associate Dean of Research and associate professor of landscape architecture;鈥Hye Yeon Nam, associate professor of art/digital art in the School of Art; and鈥Farzaneh Oghazian, assistant professor of architecture. Collaborators also include Ludovico Geymonat, associate professor of art history, Jane Ashburn, assistant professor of practice in architectural conservation, and Jesse Allison, Associate Professor of Experimental Music & Digital Media.

As our coasts change 鈥 as land is lost and the intensity of storms increase 鈥 much of our cultural heritage will be damaged and eventually lost. Coastal communities in Louisiana are rapidly losing land and are planning to resettle, leaving cultural heritage sites including cemeteries and mounds behind,鈥 Streete wrote.

鈥淐oastal cities such as New Orleans and Port-au-Prince have been battered by natural disasters, putting their rich cultural legacy at risk. With emerging technologies such as drones, realtime lidar, and radiance fields, we can preserve immersive, high-fidelity records of the disappearing heritage of our coasts. By scanning cultural landscapes, the built environment, and festivals of the Gulf Coast and the Caribbean, we aim to compile a dataset of heritage sites. We will publish this dataset online as a curated collection of immersive virtual experiences with extensive historical documentation to build awareness of these regions鈥 rich culture and the manifold challenges they face. This research initiative is novel in its application of cutting-edge technologies like robotics and artificial intelligence-based sensing to the preservation of coastal heritage.鈥

This project is part of the Coast area of the 黑料吃瓜王 Scholarship First Agenda. Phase 2 ($75,000) grants fund faculty to develop preliminary data and create a long-term research agenda for large-scale grant proposals for national impact. It aligns with the coastal focus area in the research pentagon in 黑料吃瓜王鈥檚 Scholarship First Agenda and involves a transdisciplinary team composed of 黑料吃瓜王 faculty in partnership with the National Park Service鈥檚 National Center for Preservation Technology, Florida State University, Tuskegee University, etc. It also aligns with the National Endowment for Humanities鈥 agenda.

The largest internal funding program in 黑料吃瓜王 history, the Provost鈥檚 Fund for Innovation in Research has invested $1.2 million in 15 interdisciplinary research teams. Aligned with 黑料吃瓜王鈥檚鈥, the teams and their projects aim to solve pressing problems in Louisiana and everywhere.