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Bryggen, the old wharf of Bergen, is a reminder of the town’s importance as part of the Hanseatic League’s trading empire from the 14th to the mid-16th century and is on UNESCO's list of the world's cultural heritage. For about 30 years large amounts of groundwater have leaked, threatening the survival of the ancient site. Sustainable water treatment and climate adaptation measures (involving the largest rain garden of Norway, swales etc.) at Bryggen have proven to have many advantages, and with an interdisciplinary approach, the water balance at Bryggen now have been restored. (Ref. 1) Develop measurements that stabilize the groundwater, improve the preservation opportunities of the cultural heritage and reduce the uneven subsidence under the buildings (Ref. 2). • Raising of the water table in the most badly affected areas to levels as close as possible to those existing prior to the hotel’s construction (ideally, up to 1 m below the surface) • Reducing groundwater flow to a minimum • Reducing the diffusion of oxygen into the ground • Reducing the rate of subsidence to 1 mm per year or less • Reducing the average annual temperature in the deposits to 9 degrees C or less • Ensuring a minimum of intervention in intact archaeological deposits • To ensure that the weight loss of solids does not exceed 0.001% per year as a result of decomposition and leaching • Securing, and if possible increasing, the supply of groundwater upstream (Ref. 1)
Installing swales and a 150m2 rain garden with 700 plants. (Ref. 1) Drilling pipes, pumps and tanks to reestablish groundwater's original height. Establishing rain gardens to let the water drain into the ground rather than be transported as runoff on dense surface areas. Having constructive meetings and close dialogue with, among others, the urban antiquary in terms of cultural-historical conditions Plant selection was based on historical perspective and water tolerance. Construction engineering of rainfall with the function of retaining water in order to preserve the cultural history, but at the same time allow for drainage. Structure of plant areas based on Norways Water and Energy Directorate's (NVE) report on the arrangement of rain gardens. Ongoing geotechnical assessments. (Ref. 2)
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1. Riksantikvaren (2015) Monitoring, Mitigation, Management, The Groundwater Project – Safeguarding the World Heritage Site of Bryggen in Bergen. ISBN 978-82-7574-087-6 2. Multiconsult (2010). Bryggen in Bergen, Groundwater Management - Rain Garden/Bryggen i Bergen Grunnvanshåndtering – Regnbed. 3. Prosjekt Bryggen (n.d.). Maintenance of the World Heritage Site, Actors/Forvaltning av verdensarvstedet, Aktørene. 4. Prosjekt Bryggen (n.d.). Project Bryggen/Prosjekt Bryggen. 5. City of Bergen (2016). Green Strategy. Climate and Energy Action plan for Bergen/Grønn strategi. Klima- og Energihandlingsplan for Bergen. Behandlet av Byråd 26. mai. 2016. 6. Norske lanskapsarkitekters forening (NLA) (n.d.). Rain garden Bryggen in Bergen/Regnbed Bryggen i Bergen.
Bryggen, Bergen, Norway