Occurrence of Attributes in Original Text
The text related to the cultural heritage 'Liverpool – Maritime Mercantile City' has mentioned 'World Heritage' in the following places:
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Liverpool xe2x80x93 Maritime Mercantile CityUNESCO World Heritage SiteAlbert Dock at nightLocationLiverpool, North West England, England, United KingdomCriteriaCultural:xc2xa0(ii), (iii), (iv)Reference1150Inscription2004 (28th session)Endangered2012xe2x80x93...Area136xc2xa0ha (340 acres)Bufferxc2xa0zone750.5xc2xa0ha (1,855 acres)Websitewww.liverpoolworldheritage.comCoordinates53xc2xb024xe2x80xb224xe2x80xb3N 2xc2xb059xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf53.40667xc2xb0N 2.99444xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 53.40667; -2.99444Coordinates: 53xc2xb024xe2x80xb224xe2x80xb3N 2xc2xb059xe2x80xb240xe2x80xb3Wxefxbbxbf / xefxbbxbf53.40667xc2xb0N 2.99444xc2xb0Wxefxbbxbf / 53.40667; -2.99444Location of Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City in North West of EnglandShow map of North West of EnglandLiverpool Maritime Mercantile City (the United Kingdom)Show map of the United Kingdom | WIKI |
The Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City is a UNESCO designated World Heritage Site in Liverpool, England. | WIKI |
UNESCO received the city council's nomination for the six sites in January 2003 and in September of that year sent ICOMOS representatives to carry out an evaluation on the eligibility for these areas to be given World Heritage Status. | WIKI |
In March 2004 ICOMOS recommended that UNESCO inscribe the Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City as a World Heritage Site. | WIKI |
The area was inscribed during the 28th session of the World Heritage Committee in 2004 under cultural criteria ii, iii and iv. | WIKI |
In July 2017, UNESCO warned that the city's status as a World Heritage Site was at risk of being rescinded in light of planning and development proposals, with English Heritage asserting that the proposed Liverpool Waters development would leave the setting of some of Liverpool's most significant historic buildings xe2x80x9cseverely compromisedxe2x80x9d, the archaeological remains of parts of the historic docks xe2x80x9cat risk of destructionxe2x80x9d, and xe2x80x9cthe cityxe2x80x99s historic urban landscape ... permanently unbalancedxe2x80x9d. | WIKI |
Upon completion of their evaluation, ICOMOS returned to UNESCO with the recommendation that the area be inscribed as a world heritage site. | WIKI |
[2] As a result, the Liverpool Maritime Mercantile City was inscribed as a world heritage site at the 28th session of the World Heritage Committee in 2004, under the cultural criteria ii, iii and iv:[26] | WIKI |
It is essential that future development within the World Heritage property and its setting, including the buffer zone, should respect and transmit its Outstanding Universal Value. | UNESCO |
A Townscape Heritage Initiative for Buildings at Risk in the World Heritage site and its buffer zone is successfully encouraging and assisting the restoration of buildings within designated areas of the property. | UNESCO |
Its implementation is overseen by the Liverpool World Heritage Site Steering Group, which includes most public bodies involved in the property. | UNESCO |
At the time of inscription, the World Heritage Committee requested that the height of any new construction in the property should not exceed that of structures in the immediate surroundings; the character of any new construction should respect the qualities of the historic area, and new construction at the Pier Head should not dominate, but complement the historic Pier Head buildings. | UNESCO |
A Supplementary Planning Document for Development and Conservation in and around the World Heritage site addresses the management issues raised by the World Heritage Committee in 2007 and 2008 and was formally adopted by the Liverpool City Council in October 2009. | UNESCO |