WMF is engaging the Indigenous community in preservation work at a spectacular Colombian "lost city" and supporting the development of sustainable tourism initiatives.
Osmania Women’s College has a gripping history and an important modern function, but years of decline and faulty repair put its structural stability at risk.
In April 2022, the first professional gold leaf craftsmanship program in Kanazawa and Japan was launched in a partnership between WMF and Tiffany & Co.
More inclusive tourism planning and visitor management at an iconic archaeological park can help address economic challenges facing surrounding communities.
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.
Intended to improve the management of seven World Heritage Sites across Tunisia, the Tunisia Site Management Planning Training program is also designed to facilitate the preparation of future World Heritage nominations.
One of the most important rock-hewn churches in the Tigray Region of Ethiopia, Debre Tsion suffers from water infiltration that threatens the fourteenth and fifteenth-century wall paintings that decorate the interior.
Although Aba Jifar Palace is a highly important structure in Oromia, and a protected historic monument in Ethiopia, its condition is a cause of serious concern.
Conservation interventions, site management improvements and training opportunities were part of an award-winning project that protected Quasyr ‘Amra and its surrounding complex.