MaltaToday previous editions

MT 26 March 2017

Issue link: https://maltatoday.uberflip.com/i/803478

Contents of this Issue

Navigation

Page 55 of 67

maltatoday, SUNDAY, 26 MARCH 2017 News FLIMKIEN għal Ambjent Aħjar said yesterday it welcomed the restoration work to take place at the Mediterranean Conference Centre in Valletta, but expressed concern about the assessment of works to be carried out. The eNGO said that the Plan- ning Authority had granted the permit for the proposed work be- fore the Superintendence of Cul- tural Heritage had given its final approval. "This was compounded by the illegality of withholding informa- tion from the public, since the UNESCO report on the subject was not available to the public be- fore the hearing, while PA Board members were given incomplete information, as has happened in the past," FAA said in a statement. It insisted that a building like the Sacra Infermeria, "the Knight's hospital which was the embodi- ment of the Order's raison d'etre," did not need to be tampered with to convert its roof into a viewing platform. FAA questioned why the option of adapting under-used areas of St Elmo was not looked into. "While the roof is not to be used as a cafeteria, the hearing revealed that the roof is expected to hold up to 1,000 people, opening the way to mass events in the future," it said. "Serious concerns on safe- ty issues were raised during the hearing." FAA said it had not been reas- sured by the PA Board's claim that security was the responsibility of the architect. Architects' respon- sibility spanned 15 years, it ar- gued, while the country was duty bound to preserve such a noble structure for centuries. FAA asked whether the ICO- MOS/UNESCO report had been suppressed due to the embarrass- ing points it raised. "UNESCO has alerted the World Heritage Centre about a lack of a Heritage Impact Assessment in the case of a number of major pro- jects in Valletta – Lower Fort St Elmo, the inter-Harbour Sea Link, the Landfront Ditch and Triton Square, National Museum of Fine Arts as well as the Mediterranean Conference Centre – which would have allowed all parties to assess the projects' impact on the Val- letta World Heritage Site. FAA claimed that the UNESCO report stressed the need for Val- letta to complete its management plan in order to sustain its Out- standing Universal Value. It also urged the Planning Au- thority to guard against intrusive additions to buildings within the Valletta World Heritage roofs- cape, and called for clear policies on strict building height controls in order to protect the city's sky- line and streetscapes. "Valletta's protection includes that of its immediate surround- ings, with the report calling for the protection of views from and to the city, as well as information on proposed large-scale projects in the area," FAA said. "The Planning Authority is re- ported to have assured UNESCO that a long-standing commitment to a Views and Vistas analysis would be honoured, however the granting of a permit for the Town- scape high-rise project that falls within the Valletta buffer zone, shows otherwise." FAA noted that the ICOMOS re- port's conclusion was particularly telling, warning all those involved in the development process to fos- ter awareness and understand the values that must be preserved if the Valletta World Heritage Site is to continue to be enhanced and not endangered. The Sacra Infermeria built by the Order of the Knights of Malta in 1574 is now a conference centre FAA criticises assessment of proposed work at Sacra Infermeria

Articles in this issue

Archives of this issue

view archives of MaltaToday previous editions - MT 26 March 2017