Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Historic Centre (Old Town) of Tallinn' has mentioned 'Tallinn' in the following places:
Occurrence Sentence | Text Source |
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Subdistrict of Tallinn in Harju County, Estonia | WIKI |
Vanalinn (Estonian for "Old Town") is a subdistrict (Estonian: asum) in the district of Kesklinn (Midtown), Tallinn, the capital of Estonia. | WIKI |
The Historic Centre (Old Town) of Tallinn is an exceptionally complete and well-preserved medieval northern European trading city on the coast of the Baltic Sea. | UNESCO |
The Outstanding Universal Value of the Historic Centre (Old Town) of Tallinn is demonstrated in its existence as an outstanding, exceptionally complete and well preserved example of a medieval northern European trading city that retains the salient features of this unique form of economic and social community to a remarkable degree. | UNESCO |
Criterion (ii): The Historic Centre of Tallinn, among the most remote and powerful outposts of the colonizing activities of the Hanseatic League in the north-eastern part of Europe in the 13th-16th centuries, provided a crucible within which an international secular-ecclesiastical culture resulting from the interchange of Cistercians, Dominicans, the Teutonic Order and the traditions of the Hanseatic League, formed and was itself exported throughout northern Europe. | UNESCO |
The boundaries of the inscribed World Heritage property and its buffer zone were modified in 2008 in order to bring the boundaries of the inscribed property in conformity with the boundaries of the Tallinn Old Town Conservation Area, recognized as a national monument in Estonia. | UNESCO |
The historic centre of Tallinn World Heritage property (thus increased from 60 ha. | UNESCO |
To date, Tallinn has maintained its characteristic skyline visible from both the sea and the land. | UNESCO |
The authentic setting of the inscribed World Heritage property includes some significant architecture from the late 19th century and early 20th century including theatres and schools as well as a number of exceptional wooden suburbs which form an integral part of the historic, urban fabric round Tallinn Old Town. | UNESCO |
The Tallinn Old Town conservation area established in 1966 by regulation Nr 360 of the Council of Ministers of the Estonian Socialist Soviet Republic (ESSR), and confirmed in 1996 by the Ministry of Culture of the Republic of Estonia, was the first conservation area established in the former USSR. | UNESCO |
Several contemporary legislative and local government documents also complement the protection of the values of Tallinn Old Town and regulate its administration. | UNESCO |
These include the Statutes of the Heritage Conservation Area of Tallinn Old Town (Historic Centre) based upon the Heritage Conservation Act of 2002 (amended in 2011). | UNESCO |
Responsibility for implementation of these regulations and statutes is shared between the National Heritage Board and the Tallinn City Government. | UNESCO |
Overall supervision is conducted by the National Heritage Board (state level), while the Tallinn Cultural Heritage Department (municipal level) is in charge of direct implementation of the statutes. | UNESCO |
Decisions concerning planning and building within the World Heritage property are made by consensus of the National Heritage Board and Tallinn City Government. | UNESCO |
The Tallinn Old Town Management Committee has been established in 2010 to strengthen cooperation and co-ordination among responsible organizations, NGOs, local community and other stakeholders.It is also responsible for approving, enhancing and monitoring implementation of the comprehensive management plan of the property (scheduled to be finalized by December 2011). | UNESCO |
The latter plan will replace the xe2x80x9cDevelopment Plan of Tallinn Old Townxe2x80x9d 2008-2013, enacted on 28 August 2008, and give prominence to protecting the Outstanding Universal Value of the property. | UNESCO |
Management strategies must attempt to balance residential use with other private/public uses which may threaten the authenticity of the affected structures.The threat to integrity from high rise development outside of the buffer zone is partly addressed in the thematic plan xe2x80x9cFramework for high-rise buildings in Tallinnxe2x80x9d (adopted by Tallinn City Council in 2008), which contributes to the protection of the skyline, and associated view sectors and view corridors. | UNESCO |