Improving the act of the population to support tradition sites is one of the most main contemporary issues. This research aims to find the relationships and correlations 'tween the impact of the heritage scene on the local population, participation hesitation-making, and their negative or positive stance towards the sites. Which eventually influences whether they are in favour of the tradition site's continuation, development, or demolition. For the elements of population support and the incident of the Mansoura Culture Palace site in Egypt, the study working a theoretical model. A questionnaire was attended, and structural equating modeling (SEM) had checked for the lawfulness of the relationships. The equivalence discovered between the components of the model that included ranges: (population satisfaction accompanying the way of handling heritage sites, their regional character, the involvement of community appendages in the decision-making operation, and between the two variables of the beneficial or negative attitude of the public, as well as support the heritage scene. To determine the scope to which theoretical models of calculation match accompanying field data and to reach actual development to support tradition sites through the local community, the methods had been clarified and allure statistical signs had been presented utilizing the CFA, SPSS, and AMOS software. The paper decided that the residents' support for the survival of the tradition site and allure development was positively overwhelmed by the inhabitants' positive stances toward heritage sites, and vice versa. Population vindication and sense of place had an affect both positive and negative stances, but only involvement had an affect positive sentiments. These judgments may present image of a catalyst for the sustainable growth of heritage sites.
Author(s) Details:
Ghada A. Ragheb,
Architectural Engineering Department, Pharos
University in Alexandria, Egypt.
Amany
Ragheb ,
Architectural
Engineering Department, Delta University for Science and Technology, Gamas,
Mansoura, Egypt.
Rasha El-Ashmawy,
Architectural Engineering Department, Delta University for Science and
Technology, Gamas, Mansoura, Egypt.
Please see the link here: https://stm.bookpi.org/RPST-V4/article/view/9438
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