Frequently Asked Questions
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Our heritage is our inheritance from the past. It includes the
natural environment, the built environment, artefacts (movable
cultural heritage) and our customs, language and beliefs. Communities
large and small can decide which parts of their inheritance they
value and wish to retain for the long term.
At one end of the scale, World Heritage listings protect and
conserve heritage of global importance, and then there are national,
State and local listings. More information on these different
levels of protection can be found at the end of this guide.
In South Australia, the South Australian Heritage Council and
the Heritage Branch of the Department for Environment and Heritage
are responsible for non-Aboriginal heritage of State significance,
with a focus on the built environment, but extending also to archaeological
heritage and to significant geological, fossil and cave sites.
Heritage of local significance is the responsibility of local
councils.
Heritage places are important reminders of where we have come
from. Each generation has a responsibility to protect significant
places for future generations. Built heritage provides us with
physical evidence of the past, and links communities with attitudes
and values that have shaped their environment.
Many current owners do care for their heritage places well, but
there is no guarantee that subsequent owners will place the same
value on their conservation. Heritage listing will help to ensure
places survive for future generations to appreciate.
The Heritage
Places Act 1993 provides a legal framework within which
the community can conserve its heritage of State significance,
relating in the main to non-Aboriginal history and settlement.
(Aboriginal heritage is protected by separate legislation administered
by the Department for Aboriginal Affairs and Reconciliation.)
The Act protects places of aesthetic, historic, architectural,
scientific or social significance by enabling their entry in the
South Australian Heritage Register. Objects that are intrinsically
related to the significance of a listed State Heritage Place can
also be protected, including objects that are not located at the
place or have a different owner.
The Act also provides for an independent South Australian Heritage
Council.
The Register lists the full range of South Australian heritage
places within one database, including World Heritage, Australian
Government listings, State Heritage Places, State Heritage Areas,
local heritage places and Historic (Conservation) Zones.
State Heritage Places are legally protected when the Heritage
Council enters them in the Register under the Heritage
Places Act 1993. All other categories listed in the Register
are protected by separate pieces of legislation, and are recorded
in the Register for convenience only. This Guide focuses on State
Heritage Places and the Heritage Places Act 1993.
The Heritage Places Act deals mostly with heritage that is part
of the built environment. This includes not only buildings but places
such as bridges, wells, monuments, mine sites and cemeteries.
Places of State significance may be entered in the Register if
they meet one or more of the criteria in section 16 of the Act.
For example, a place may reflect an important aspect of our history,
such as nineteenth-century copper mining in Burra; or may have a
special association with the life or work of a significant person,
as does Sir Hans Heysen's studio at Hahndorf.
Generally speaking, items of movable cultural heritage are
the responsibility of other government agencies including the History
Trust, the South Australian Museum, the State Library and State
Records. The exception is objects intrinsically related to the heritage
significance of a State Heritage Place - such objects can be protected
by the Heritage Places Act. In this way, objects that are not fixtures
or fittings - and are therefore not legally part of a place - can
be protected by entering them in the Register. Objects can include
archaeological artefacts and geological, palaeontological or speleological
specimens.
Precincts that possess coherent heritage significance on a broader
scale can be protected as State Heritage Areas. Examples include
the town of Mintaro and the Church Hill area of Gawler. They have
similar legislative protection to individual places, because legally
every place in a State Heritage Area is treated as a State Heritage
Place. However, the process for creating Areas is different.
State Heritage Areas are normally created after heritage survey
recommendations are supported by the SA Heritage Council. The
Planning Minister then needs to instigate a Plan Amendment Report
(under the Development Act) to include the Area and its relevant
planning policies ('objectives' and 'principles of development
control') in the relevant local council Development Plan.
The SA Heritage Council is an independent body of seven to nine
members with expertise in history, archaeology, architecture, the
natural sciences, heritage conservation, public administration,
urban and regional planning and property development. The Council
provides strategic advice to the Heritage Minister on heritage issues.
It also administers the SA Heritage Register, including the entry
and removal of State Heritage Places.
The Heritage Branch is part of the Department for Environment
and Heritage. It provides administrative and policy support to
the SA Heritage Council and is responsible for administering the
State government's program to identify and conserve heritage places
of State significance. The Heritage Branch is responsible for
administering the Heritage Places Act 1993, the South Australian
Historic
Shipwrecks Act 1981 and the Australian Government's Historic
Shipwrecks Act 1976.
A systematic survey program of the State's built heritage has been
underway since 1980, and many places have been recommended for entry
in the Register by these surveys.
Individuals can also nominate places for the Register. A nomination
should be accompanied by as much evidence as possible about a
place's significance. You can download the nomination
form (18Kb PDF) from the Heritage
web site or request one from the Heritage Branch. Criteria for
listing can be found in Section 16 of the Heritage
Places Act 1993 and at the end of this guide.
Staff from the Heritage Branch, acting on behalf of the SA Heritage
Council, discuss proposed heritage listings with property owners
well before the listing process is commenced.
A letter is first sent to the owner offering to discuss the proposed
listing. If the Heritage Council then decides to provisionally enter
the place in the Register, it must write to the owner setting out
reasons why it considers the place is of heritage significance.
The Heritage Council must also publicly advertise the provisional
entry and inform the Heritage Minister and the local council. After
a place is provisionally entered in the Register, a period of three
months is given to owners and other interested parties to consider
the proposal.
Any person may make a written submission for or against the entry
of a place in the Register, and may then be heard in person by the
Heritage Council if they wish.
If, after this process, the provisional entry in the Register is
confirmed against the owner's wishes, she/he can lodge an appeal
with the Environment, Resources and Development Court.
Naturally any place entered in the Register remains the property
of the owner. The public does not gain any right of access to
the place.
Heritage properties can be altered or developed, but it is necessary
to obtain development approval before doing so. This ensures that
the process of change is carefully managed, and that the heritage
significance of the place is protected. For any place, whether
heritage-listed or not, the Development Act requires that any
'development' must be approved by the relevant planning authority
(usually the local council). For a State Heritage Place, the definition
of 'development' includes demolition, removal, conversion, alteration
or painting of, or addition to, the place, or any other work that
could materially affect the heritage significance of the place.
Before making its decision on a development proposal concerning
a State Heritage Place, the planning authority is required to
refer the application to the Heritage Minister for advice. This
advice is provided by the local heritage adviser or by staff of
the Heritage Branch on behalf of the Minister. Adjacent development
which may materially affect the setting of a State Heritage Place
will also be referred to the Minister.
Probably not. Some people fear that heritage listing will reduce
their property's value. This may be the case when an old building
is being used for a purpose well below the most commercially valuable
use permitted by the zoning: for example, a cottage in a commercial
zone on a major road. These cases are not common.
A house in a residential zone should not suffer any loss in value.
It may even experience a rise because of the certainty of knowing
its heritage character is protected, and this benefit can flow
on to nearby properties because the listing helps to protect the
character of the streetscape.
Heritage status, on its own, should have no effect on insurance
premiums. Insurance cover should reflect the age, construction
and condition of the building, regardless of heritage listing.
It is a common misconception that if a heritage place is destroyed,
the owner will be required to rebuild it to its original form.
In reality, total destruction usually means its heritage value
will be lost, and will not be regained by building a replica.
There is no legal requirement to rebuild a place destroyed in
accidental circumstances.
In cases of partial damage, the Heritage Branch will encourage
retention of elements that contribute to a place's heritage value.
Each situation is evaluated according to its merits. Generally
speaking the value of a place will be best retained by carrying
out repairs in a manner sympathetic to the original construction.
Conservation architects from the Heritage Branch offer free
advice to owners of State Heritage Places on maintenance and repair
work. There are also heritage advisers in some council areas who
will assist owners of local or State Heritage Places with conservation
advice. Contact your local council or the Heritage Branch for
more information.
The Heritage Branch also produces publications containing practical
conservation advice on issues such as painting, rising damp, cleaning
stone masonry and devising a maintenance check list. Some publications
can be downloaded from the publications page
on the Heritage web site. Printed copies of some publications
are available through the Department for Environment and Heritage
Information Line on (+61 8) 8204 1910.
Owners of State Heritage Places can apply for grants from the
South Australian Heritage Fund. Assistance may be provided to
conserve those aspects of a place which contribute to its heritage
significance, but not for new development. Conservation Plans
can also be funded.
Other sources of funds and incentives become available from time
to time, so it is always worth phoning the Heritage Branch for
advice or checking the Grants page
on the Heritage web site.
The Heritage Places Act requires people to take 'reasonable
care' of a State Heritage Place. As with any property, it is in
the owner's interest to carry out ongoing maintenance and repair
work to protect the value of the property and avoid expensive
remedial work.
There is no legal requirement to do so. However, it makes sense
to use experienced professionals and tradespeople when undertaking
conservation work. This will protect the heritage significance
of the building and help to safeguard the property as a financial
investment. The Heritage Branch or local heritage adviser can
often refer owners to a skilled tradesperson.
Contact the Heritage Branch and your local council as soon as
possible. If a building is not structurally sound or secure the
owner will be given immediate approval for stabilisation and repairs.
Demolition of a State Heritage Place will not normally be approved.
If demolition was thought to be necessary, a development application
would need to be lodged with the local council explaining the
reasons in detail.
Demolition or other unapproved development, damaging or reducing
the heritage value of a place, or ignoring a Stop Order, are serious
offences. Penalties are provided for in both the Development
Act 1993 and the Heritage
Places Act 1993.
Local Government
Places of local heritage significance are managed
by local councils under the provisions of the Development
Act 1993 and are protected by being listed in a Council's
Development Plan through the preparation and gazettal of a Plan
Amendment Report (PAR). Enquiries about local heritage listing should
be addressed to the relevant council.
State Government
The entry of State Heritage Places in the South Australian
Heritage Register is administered by the Heritage Branch of
the Department for Environment and Heritage in conjunction with
the South Australian Heritage Council.
Australian Government
The Register of the National Estate was compiled by the
Australian Heritage Commission from 1976 to 2003. The Australian
Heritage Council is now responsible for keeping it.
The Commonwealth Heritage List comprises natural, indigenous
and historic heritage places on Commonwealth lands and waters or
under Australian Government control which are identified by the
Federal Minister for the Environment and Heritage as having Commonwealth
heritage values.
The National Heritage List is Australia's list of places
with outstanding heritage value to our nation. The Australian
Heritage Council assesses the values of nominated places and makes
recommendations to the Minister about listing. The final decision
on listing is made by the Minister.
World Heritage
This is a list of places that are important to all the peoples
of the world. The places on this list have special universal values
above and beyond the values they hold for a particular nation.
Only the Australian Government can nominate Australian places
for entry on this list. The World Heritage Committee assesses
nominated places against set criteria and decides which places
will be included on the World Heritage List. World Heritage sites
in Australia are fully protected under Australian Government law.
* All but the local heritage lists can be accessed through
the Australian
Heritage Places Inventory on the Australian Heritage Directory
web site http://www.heritage.gov.au
Prior to the creation in 1978 of the Register of State Heritage
Items (now the South Australian Heritage Register), the National
Trust of South Australia (a non-government organisation) maintained
its own Register of Historic Buildings. Once the South Australian
Heritage Register was well established the National Trust decided
in 1989 to close its Register. The files are retained at the National
Trust of South Australia's head office. Other lists are maintained
by the Royal Australian Institute of Architects and Engineers
Australia.
To be entered in the Register as a State Heritage Place, a place
must satisfy one or more of the criteria in Section 16 of the Heritage
Places Act 1993:
(a) It demonstrates important aspects of the evolution or pattern
of the State's history;
(b) It has rare, uncommon or endangered qualities that are of
cultural significance;
(c) It may yield information that will contribute to an understanding
of the State's history, including its natural history;
(d) It is an outstanding representative of a particular class
of places of cultural significance;
(e) It demonstrates a high degree of creative, aesthetic or technical
accomplishment or is an outstanding representative of particular
construction techniques or design characteristics;
(f) It has strong cultural or spiritual associations for the
community or a group within it;
(g) It has a special association with the life or work of a person
or organisation or an event of historical importance.
Section 14(2) provides that, in relation to a State Heritage Place,
an object can be entered in the Register if it has 'heritage significance',
which s16(2) defines as follows:
- it is an artefact (including an archaeological artefact) that
satisfies one or more of the above criteria; or
- it is a geological specimen, a fossil or part of a natural cave
formation that satisfies one or more of the above criteria; or
- it is intrinsically related to the heritage significance of
a State Heritage Place or Area.
The object does not have to be located at the place.
Further enquiries may be directed to:
The Manager
Heritage Branch
GPO Box 1047
Adelaide SA 5001
Australia
Phone: (61 8) 8124 4960
Fax: (61 8) 8124 4980
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