WMF is engaging the Indigenous community in preservation work at a spectacular Colombian "lost city" and supporting the development of sustainable tourism initiatives.
WMF is supporting the maintenance of this ethnic minority community's wooden buildings and craft traditions, combining cultural preservation with economic development.
Moseley Road Baths, an Edwardian time capsule still in use and serving a diverse urban community, is now at risk of closure due to cutbacks in government spending.
Sacred earthen shrines, among the last architectural vestiges of the Kingdom of Asante, face ongoing deterioration that call for new approaches to management and maintenance.
India’s earliest Chinatown is home to minority communities seeking recognition for their history and urban revitalization to support their way of life.
The Museo de Arte de Lima (MALI) is housed in the historic Palacio de la Exposición in Lima, built to host the Lima National Exhibition of 1872 and one of the earliest iron-built masterpieces of Peru.
WMF and the Ministry of Information, Cultural Affairs and Tourism are developing a plan for the preservation and reuse for the birthplace of the nation of Liberia, where freed slaves from America landed in 1822.
This temple, dedicated to the mother goddess Ninmakh in the sixth century, was first excavated by archaeologists of the Koldewey Expedition (1899–1914) and later re-excavated and reconstructed by Iraqi archaeologists.