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Archaeological Site of Panamá Viejo and Historic District of Panamá

Panama
Factors affecting the property in 2023*
  • Financial resources
  • Ground transport infrastructure
  • Housing
  • Human resources
  • Identity, social cohesion, changes in local population and community
  • Legal framework
  • Other Threats:

    Severe deterioration of historic buildings ; Demolition of urban ensembles and buildings

Factors* affecting the property identified in previous reports
  • Severe deterioration of historic buildings
  • Conflicting interests of different stakeholders with regard to the use, management and conservation of the historic centre
  • Limited capacity for the rehabilitation and maintenance of historic structures
  • Deficiencies in the implementation of the legislative framework for protection
  • Lack of implementation of clear conservation and management policies for the property
  • Demolition of urban ensembles and buildings 
  • Forced displacement of occupants and squatters 
  • Urban development projects within the protected area (i.e. Cinta Costera)
  • Visual impact of the Cinta Costera project Maritime Viaduct
  • Inadequate long-term financial sustainability of conservation and management efforts
  • Financial resources
  • Housing
  • Human resources
  • Identity, social cohesion, changes in local population and community
  • Legal framework
UNESCO Extra-Budgetary Funds until 2023

N/A

International Assistance: requests for the property until 2023
Requests approved: 0
Total amount approved : 0 USD
Missions to the property until 2023**

March 2009: Joint World Heritage Centre/ICOMOS Reactive Monitoring mission; March 2010: on the occasion of the joint World Heritage Centre/ICOMOS Reactive Monitoring mission to Portobelo and San Lorenzo, a technical visit to the Archaeological Site of Panama Viejo and the Historic District was undertaken, as requested by the authorities of Panama; October 2010: Joint World Heritage Centre/ICOMOS Reactive Monitoring mission; November 2013: Joint High level World Heritage Centre/ICOMOS Reactive Monitoring mission

Conservation issues presented to the World Heritage Committee in 2023

In 2019, the State Party of Panamá submitted a nomination dossier with the aim to transform the “Archaeological Site of Panamá Viejo and Historic District of Panamá” into a serial property under the name of “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá”. The World Heritage Committee (Decision 43 COM 8B.40) deferred the request and asked for a resubmission. The Nomination was resubmitted in January 2023, and in March 2023 the World Heritage Centre confirmed the completeness check of the Nomination and sent it to ICOMOS for evaluation.

On 25 November 2022, the State Party submitted a state of conservation report, which is available at https://whc.unesco.org/en/list/790/documents/ and addresses the inscribed World Heritage property, taking as the baseline for the analysis the current Retrospective Statement of Outstanding Universal Value (OUV) (Decision 37 COM 8E). Progress on a number of measures requested by the Committee at its previous sessions is presented, as follows:
  • In November 2020, the General Law on Culture (Law No. 175) was adopted by the State Party and legal tools and the Law need to be regulated for its implementation. Nationwide consultations for drafting and approval of the regulation of this Law are ongoing. No timeframe is given for the completion of this process. The State Party submitted the text of the Law, without any detailed explanations of its expected impact;
  • Results of a 3D viewshed study and visual corridor analysis for Panama Viejo and the Historic District of Panamá are presented as part of the draft Management Plan of the nominated serial property “The Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá”;
  • Advancement of different planning tools was delayed due to the COVID-19 pandemic. Only the Land Use Plan for the District of Panamá was approved on 30 March 2021, which incorporates the two property components as “special planning zones” and includes height restrictions (between 4 and 8 floors) on new buildings in the buffer zones and wider urban context;
  • A draft of the regulation of the Heritage Impact Assessment (HIA) is in the process of internal approval and further consultation in 2023;
  • The Municipality of Panamá (MUPA) has developed a Plan of the City Centre, which includes a Mobility Plan for the Historic District of Panamá. The status of the Plan of the City Centre is unclear;
  • For the Archaeological Site of Panamá Viejo, no new project is reported and existing projects have been stagnant. In the Historic District, three projects are reported as active, the “Hotel Casco Viejo”, the “EDEM Building” and the “P.H. Casco View”, but no further information is supplied. A photo of the completed “Bay View Tower” is included (mentioned in the last report), but no mention is made of its impact on the values of the property;
  • The report also offers details on the state of conservation of different buildings in the two component parts of the property and highlights the improvement of the state of conservation of the buildings of the Historic District.
Analysis and Conclusion by World Heritage Centre and the Advisory Bodies in 2023

The State Party reports on some important advances, including the approval of the Land Use Plan for the District of Panamá, progress made on the inclusion of the HIA in the planning process, and the improved state of conservation of the buildings of the Historic District. However, some of the points mentioned in the report are not new (e.g., the Plan of the City Centre and the Project for Waste Recycling). Determining the differences between its previously reported state of conservation is difficult. Also, many of the points mentioned either lack detailed information or give only detailed information, without a summary to highlight the relevant points.

On several occasions the report refers to the new Management Plan for the “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá”, for which the revised Nomination/Significant Boundary Modification was submitted in 2023. This Management Plan will contain sections on Natural Disaster and Risk Management as well as Climate Change Mitigation and Adaptation for the entire Transisthmian Route. Parts of this draft document are included in the State Party’s 2022 report. However, it is difficult to judge the impact on the property discussed here, without evaluating the finished document.

A map taken from the Land Use Plan for the District of Panamá mentions a new buffer zone for the Historic District, but the changes to the previous or current buffer zone are not discussed in the state of conservation document. It is also unclear if the height restrictions that the Land Use Plan introduces have a bearing on the ongoing construction projects of the buildings with 12 floors that, as the report states, "may cause visual impacts".

Even though there are, as mentioned above, important advances concerning the legal protection and management of the site, many of these issues are pending final approval or sufficient regulation in order to become operative. It has to be recognized that the COVID-19 pandemic slowed many of these processes down, but it is of great importance to finalize them as soon as possible.

The report makes no mention of how the re-Nomination/Significant Boundary Modification will affect all of the above-mentioned issues, and how it will address the impact on the World Heritage values caused by the maritime viaduct that encircles the Historic District. It is to be hoped that the significant boundary modification document will refocus the work on this property and show a clear way forward.

Decisions adopted by the Committee in 2023
45 COM 7B.116
Archaeological Site of Panamá Viejo and Historic District of Panamá (Panama) (C 790bis)

The World Heritage Committee,

  1. Having examined Document WHC/23/45.COM/7B,
  2. Recalling Decision 44 COM 7B.168 adopted at its extended 44th session (Fuzhou/online, 2021),
  3. Notes that the State Party submitted a nomination dossier that would transform the sites into component parts of a serial property under the name of “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá” to the World Heritage Centre;
  4. Requests the State Party to provide reports on:
    1. The status of all planned, ongoing or recently finalized construction projects,
    2. The way these projects are affected by the new legal and planning framework,
    3. Their (potential) impact on the newly defined values of the property components within the framework of the “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá”;
  5. Also requests a detailed account of the state of conservation of the main elements of the two property components, with a clear definition of baseline data to which any changes can be compared and evaluated;
  6. Urges the State Party to finalize the processes necessary to make new laws, plans (Decision 44 COM 7B.168, paragraphs 7 a-d) and programmes operative and further requests a report on the advances;
  7. Finally requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 December 2024, an updated report on the state of conservation of the property and the implementation of the above, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 47th session.
Draft Decision: 45 COM 7B.116

The World Heritage Committee,

  1. Having examined Document WHC/23/45.COM/7B,
  2. Recalling Decision 44 COM 7B.168, adopted at its extended 44th session (Fuzhou/online, 2021),
  3. Notes that the State Party submitted a nomination dossier that would transform the sites into component parts of a serial property under the name of “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá” to the World Heritage Centre;
  4. Requests the State Party to provide reports on:
    1. The status of all planned, ongoing or recently finalized construction projects,
    2. The way these projects are affected by the new legal and planning framework,
    3. Their (potential) impact on the newly defined values of the property components within the framework of the “Colonial Transisthmian Route of Panamá”;
  5. Also requests a detailed account of the state of conservation of the main elements of the two property components, with a clear definition of baseline data to which any changes can be compared and evaluated;
  6. Urges the State Party to finalize the processes necessary to make new laws, plans (Decision 44 COM 7B.167, paragraphs 7 a-d) and programmes operative and further requests a report on the advances;
  7. Finally requests the State Party to submit to the World Heritage Centre, by 1 December 2024, an updated report on the state of conservation of the property and the implementation of the above, for examination by the World Heritage Committee at its 47th session.
Report year: 2023
Panama
Date of Inscription: 1997
Category: Cultural
Criteria: (ii)(iv)(vi)
Documents examined by the Committee
SOC Report by the State Party
Report (2022) .pdf
arrow_circle_right 45COM (2023)
Exports

* : The threats indicated are listed in alphabetical order; their order does not constitute a classification according to the importance of their impact on the property.
Furthermore, they are presented irrespective of the type of threat faced by the property, i.e. with specific and proven imminent danger (“ascertained danger”) or with threats which could have deleterious effects on the property’s Outstanding Universal Value (“potential danger”).

** : All mission reports are not always available electronically.


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