Emergency Drills in Cultural Heritage
As a result of research projects on risk analysis and emergency management in cultural heritage, the team has organized and coordinated, in collaboration with other partner institutions, various emergency drills to implement emergency response protocols and procedures, as well as to develop tools designed to facilitate the management of such situations.
Below, you can find informational videos about the simulation exercises conducted by the PAI TEP 199 group.
Emergency Drill at the Museum of Fine Arts in Valencia:
Simulation of the integration of the cultural heritage rescue unit within the territorial emergency response plan of the Generalitat Valenciana (GVA) at the Museum of Fine Arts in Valencia. July 5th, 2022.
This exercise is part of the I+D+i Retos de Investigación project “Artificial Intelligence and new technologies applied to the prevention and management of fires and natural disasters in movable and immovable Cultural Heritage. FENIX PID2019-107257RB-I00”.
This video is part of the I+D+i project PID2019-107257RB-I00, funded by MICIU/AEI/10.13039/501100011033.
Emergency Drill at the Museum of the City of Antequera and the Municipal Historical Archive:
Multiple emergency drill exercise conducted at the Museum of the City of Antequera and the Municipal Historical Archive. November 15th, 2022.
This exercise is part of the PYC20-RE-034 project funded by the Regional Government of Andalusia and FEDER funds: “New technologies applied to the prevention and management of emergencies in cultural heritage and emergency response during pandemic conditions. RESILIENT TOURISM”.
Emergency Drill at the Royal Monastery of San Zoilo in Antequera (Church of San Francisco and Municipal Public Library):
This exercise was carried out as part of the FENIX 4.0 project: “Feasibility analysis and end-user testing of apps for fire prevention and disaster management in the conservation of movable and immovable Cultural Heritage (PDC2022-133157-I00),” funded by Ministry of Science and Innovation and State Research Agency with Next Generation EU funds through the Spanish Government’s Recovery, Transformation, and Resilience Plan (MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033 and Next Generation EU/PRTR).